Community Corner
Judge Tells Madonna To Stop Bugging Her Upper West Side Neighbors
A judge ruled the star needs to stop "harassing" neighbors while trying to fight a change in her lease, the New York Post reported.

UPPER WEST SIDE, NY — A judge ruled Madonna needs to stop "harassing" neighbors in her pricey Upper West Side co-op after constantly seeking records from the board, the New York Post reported.
The pop star was ordered by Manhattan Supreme Court Judge Gerald Lebovits to halt her investigation on her 1 W. 64th St. co-op board to fight a change in her lease that requires her to be in her pad while family or staff are there, the Pose reported.
Madonna first sued the co-op in 2016 two years after they amended her lease to force her to be "in residence" if her family or help stayed at the $7.6 million, apartment, according to the paper.
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Lebovits ruled that the singer filed the suit too long after the lease change and tossed it out of court. Madonna tried to get records from the board to help challenge the decision, but Lebovits ruled against it.
"Plaintiff does not need those materials anymore to prove a case that, by law, she is no longer allowed to prove," Lebovits wrote in the decision, according to the Post.
Find out what's happening in Upper West Sidefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Image: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images
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