Wife’s lover to pay for stealing her affections
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CHICAGO — Stealing someone’s heart can cost you. Just ask German Blinov.
A jury has ordered Blinov to shell out $4,802 after he was sued by a husband from a Chicago suburb for stealing the affections of the man’s wife.
Arthur Friedman used a little-known state law to mount the legal attack against Blinov.
The alienation-of-affection law lets spouses seek damages for the loss of love.
Only a handful of states still have such a law.
But Natalie Friedman, the woman at the center of it all, says her husband asked her to have sex with other women and men -- including Blinov -- to spice up their relationship.
Natalie Friedman supposedly began having feelings for Blinov, prompting her husband to file the lawsuit.
“This guy ruined my life -- he backstabbed me,” Arthur Friedman said. “What he did was wrong. And I did what I had to do to get my point across.”
Blinov does not deny having a relationship with Natalie Friedman while she was married. But he was surprised to learn he could be sued for it.
“German was not a pirate of her affections,” said Blinov’s lawyer, Enrico Mirabelli. “Her affections were already adrift.”
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