The Daily Bootie Newsletter for New Parents

Octomom Gets New House




Article Courtesy of People.com

As they grow stronger in the hospital, Nadya Suleman’s octuplets are getting closer to coming home to a larger, recently purchased house – where it looks like they’ll have a free fleet of skilled nurses.

The Suleman family is buying a house in Orange County, Calif., that’s nearly twice as large as the one where Nadya, 33, the mother of the U.S.’s longest-surviving octuplets, lives with her six older children in Whittier.

“She’s excited,” Suleman’s mother, Angela, tells PEOPLE. “This is an old house and this new one will have a lot more space.”

The 2,583-foot four-bedroom, three-bathroom house in La Habra is “a good house for kids,” with a huge yard, Mike Patel of Prudential Realty tells PEOPLE. “It’s a good house for a big family and there is room to add on more rooms.”

The house, listed at $564,900, has a short escrow that should close later this week, Patel says. He adds he represents the owner, who didn’t know the Suleman family before the deal came together. “They just happened to like this house,” Patel says. The official buyer is Nadya’s father, Ed Doud.





There Are 2 Responses So Far »

  1. Who bought her a house. I am just appaulled at this woman and her doctor. Her kids should be taken away.

  2. You really have to love the article on CNN where this moronic woman claims that she somehow earned the house. People who are receiving any sort of government assistance shouldn’t have enough money lying around to pay for any type of medically assisted conception. The very fact that she continued to have more children and lived at home while receiving welfare should have disqualified her from government assistance a long time ago since she has mooched off the government as well as her parents who didn’t have the guts to say enough is enough and tell her she could no longer continue to take such irresponsible actions and expect to live in their home.

    In fact if anything this whole situation highlights the fact that there are people out their who could afford health insurance but put other luxuries ahead of providing healthcare for themselves and their families since they for the most part they can still go to an emergency room. It is one of those things that is never addressed in the whole discussion about healthcare.

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