Libtard Mark Zuckerberg sues native Hawaiian families to get them to sell their land to make his 700-acre $100 million property more secluded, builds wall to keep them out
Mark Zuckerberg sues to protect HIS privacy: Facebook CEO in legal battle to force hundreds of native Hawaiians who have ancestral rights to patches of his vast $100m estate to sell up
-Facebook co-founder has filed lawsuits against a few hundred people, Honolulu newspaper reported Wednesday
-Some Hawaiian citizens own land via law dating back to 1850 called Kuleana Act
-About a dozen parcels on Zuckerberg's 700-acre estate belong to such families
-CEO now wants these families to sell their patches during a public auction
-Using the law to induce land sales is thought to be problematic because it severs the link between native community and their land
By CLEMENCE MICHALLON FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 21:32 EST, 18 January 2017 | UPDATED: 04:38 EST, 19 January 2017
Mark Zuckerberg is suing Hawaiian families in an attempt to get them to sell their land to make his 700-acre property more secluded, a Honolulu newspaper reported Wednesday.
Almost a dozen of small parcels on the Facebook co-founder's $100 million Kauai property belong to Hawaiian citizens who acquired them through legislation dating back to 1850, called the Kuleana Act, according to the Star Advertiser.
As such, these land owners are allowed to walk through Zuckerberg's domain. But the billionaire is believed to have filed lawsuits against a few hundred people in the hope that they will sell their parcels at a public auction.
Using the law to induce land sales, which isn't uncommon in Hawaii, can be viewed as problematic because it severs the native Hawaiian community's link to ancestral land.