科技大佬 Andrew Chen被曝了, 不过他的这个新婚老婆长得真漂亮,不愧是Beauty Queen
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楼主 (北美华人网)
Tech Investor, Former Beauty Queen Trash Utah Landmark, Face Blowback After Wedding BY DAVID WETZEL
Tech investor Andrew Chen and his new wife, a former beauty queen, are being criticized after they allegedly trashed a beautiful landmark in Utah while hosting their wedding there. Knewz.com has learned that Chen, a tech investor for hedge fund Andreessen Horowitz, and Emma Waldron, a former Miss Ireland, hosted their wedding at the base of the Castleton Tower near the city of Moab on Labor Day, and left bags of trash, furniture and garbage behind.
Local officials say tech investor Andrew Chen and now-wife Emma Waldron trashed the Castleton Tower during their wedding. By: X/Andrew Chen
SFGATE reported that Castle Valley council member Pamela Gibson found the area trashed while taking a walk on September 3. Gibson said a truck was boxing up furniture, smashing vegetation and leaving tread marks on soil. Gibson reportedly was so angry she was shaking.
Local officials say trash and furniture were left behind. By: Pamela Gibson
Gibson said she returned the next day to see the furniture gone, but trash and other items still littered the area. “It was a commercial event — small by L.A. standards, I’m sure, but still, it should not have happened,” Gibson told SFGATE. “And they’re not being responsible for it, that’s what really galls me.” Officials are asking the Bureau of Land Management to stop allowing such events at the Castleton Tower. By: Pamela Gibson
Gibson said the wedding also made it so others could not enjoy the picturesque setting for four days.
“It was effectively four days where the public could not enjoy what it should be able to enjoy because of these people that have no qualms about misrepresenting something just so they can have their pretty little wedding," Gibson said, adding that two months after the event she was still finding broken glass in the dirt. Bureau of Land Management rangers wound up cleaning the area. The Castleton Tower is world famous. By: MEGA
According to the New York Post, the couple had gotten permission from the BLM to host a "simple wedding ceremony with one small tent." However, Gibson and other residents described the event as being much larger, noting the photos that the couple posted before deleting them.
The outlet said the couple could not be reached for comment. On October 2, Castle Valley Mayor Jazmine Duncan and Gibson sent a letter to the bureau, requesting that it no longer allow wedding receptions at the base of the Castleton Tower. The wedding was held at the base of the Castleton Tower. By: MEGA
The officials explained that the couple''s petition to use the site for their wedding omitted the fact they would be using a generator and a catering service that would set up tables and chairs.
According to Duncan and Gibson, the couple also failed to mention they would be putting up a 24-foot cabana while lining the road with candles, installing a toilet facility service and leaving behind garbage and other items.
Duncan and Gibson requested that the bureau make more stringent requirements for those requesting to use the area if it would not agree to ban such events.
Tech investor Andrew Chen and his new wife, a former beauty queen, are being criticized after they allegedly trashed a beautiful landmark in Utah while hosting their wedding there. Knewz.com has learned that Chen, a tech investor for hedge fund Andreessen Horowitz, and Emma Waldron, a former Miss Ireland, hosted their wedding at the base of the Castleton Tower near the city of Moab on Labor Day, and left bags of trash, furniture and garbage behind.
Local officials say tech investor Andrew Chen and now-wife Emma Waldron trashed the Castleton Tower during their wedding. By: X/Andrew Chen
SFGATE reported that Castle Valley council member Pamela Gibson found the area trashed while taking a walk on September 3. Gibson said a truck was boxing up furniture, smashing vegetation and leaving tread marks on soil. Gibson reportedly was so angry she was shaking.
Local officials say trash and furniture were left behind. By: Pamela Gibson
Gibson said she returned the next day to see the furniture gone, but trash and other items still littered the area. “It was a commercial event — small by L.A. standards, I’m sure, but still, it should not have happened,” Gibson told SFGATE. “And they’re not being responsible for it, that’s what really galls me.” Officials are asking the Bureau of Land Management to stop allowing such events at the Castleton Tower. By: Pamela Gibson
Gibson said the wedding also made it so others could not enjoy the picturesque setting for four days.
“It was effectively four days where the public could not enjoy what it should be able to enjoy because of these people that have no qualms about misrepresenting something just so they can have their pretty little wedding," Gibson said, adding that two months after the event she was still finding broken glass in the dirt. Bureau of Land Management rangers wound up cleaning the area. The Castleton Tower is world famous. By: MEGA
According to the New York Post, the couple had gotten permission from the BLM to host a "simple wedding ceremony with one small tent." However, Gibson and other residents described the event as being much larger, noting the photos that the couple posted before deleting them.
The outlet said the couple could not be reached for comment. On October 2, Castle Valley Mayor Jazmine Duncan and Gibson sent a letter to the bureau, requesting that it no longer allow wedding receptions at the base of the Castleton Tower. The wedding was held at the base of the Castleton Tower. By: MEGA
The officials explained that the couple''s petition to use the site for their wedding omitted the fact they would be using a generator and a catering service that would set up tables and chairs.
According to Duncan and Gibson, the couple also failed to mention they would be putting up a 24-foot cabana while lining the road with candles, installing a toilet facility service and leaving behind garbage and other items.
Duncan and Gibson requested that the bureau make more stringent requirements for those requesting to use the area if it would not agree to ban such events.