Actually the person I was referring to never went to court. He spent maybe 250-350 days in New York during that ten-year period. New York was questioning from 12 prior to 2 years prior to the point where they had contacted him (they had not looked at the most recent two years yet).
Remember, this is not English Common Law where you are innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. He had not kept grocery, gas station, dry cleaning, and fast food receipts for that period to prove how much he was there. He had not even kept business logs for more than the normal three-year period. New York knew they had him over a barrel and he knew that he would have a hard time documenting his whereabouts. Even his phone bills would not have been much help since most of his calls were local calls which were not itemized. He might have had some help there had he called his family every day, but he was not that kind of guy (also, it was before cell phones and unlimited long distance, so the calls home were a tad expensive).
Beyond that, he was unable to prove that he had permanently moved to Florida and that he had no intention of returning. He and his wife were not considering divorce, yet there was insufficient room for his wife and family in the Florida condomium, making it difficult for him to prove he intended to bring them there (and he probably did not intend to). He had not really looked at other homes that would have been suitable for his family during those years. That plus his regular returns to see family and friends in New York made the state believe that he would return to New York if the job he had in Florida were eliminated (and that also was probably true).
New York is good at this stuff.
Remember, this is not English Common Law where you are innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. He had not kept grocery, gas station, dry cleaning, and fast food receipts for that period to prove how much he was there. He had not even kept business logs for more than the normal three-year period. New York knew they had him over a barrel and he knew that he would have a hard time documenting his whereabouts. Even his phone bills would not have been much help since most of his calls were local calls which were not itemized. He might have had some help there had he called his family every day, but he was not that kind of guy (also, it was before cell phones and unlimited long distance, so the calls home were a tad expensive).
Beyond that, he was unable to prove that he had permanently moved to Florida and that he had no intention of returning. He and his wife were not considering divorce, yet there was insufficient room for his wife and family in the Florida condomium, making it difficult for him to prove he intended to bring them there (and he probably did not intend to). He had not really looked at other homes that would have been suitable for his family during those years. That plus his regular returns to see family and friends in New York made the state believe that he would return to New York if the job he had in Florida were eliminated (and that also was probably true).
New York is good at this stuff.
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