Augger

January 14th, 2015 at 3:01 PM ^

Mr. Johnson I presume?

It's one thing to lose the house or car your lottery ticket child gave you, but to actually erase his entire net worth is a special kind of evil. It's one thing to screw up your own life, but you have to do right by your own children at very least. Nice or not, this is a terrible person. They didn't do this by accident, the dad was buying Ferraris for god sake...

I have no idea how you can even begin to defend him.

But hey he's nice!

Don

January 14th, 2015 at 3:17 PM ^

A series of thoroughly intentional terrible decisions that they knew were draining Jack's finances. It's not like choosing the veal when the chicken is the better option.

The fact that they were nice people doesn't change the ethical nature of their actions; it just made it easier for them to pull it off for as long as they did. The most successful scammers and grifters have the ability to get people on their side.

East German Judge

January 14th, 2015 at 3:48 PM ^

Seriously curb the moralizing!  It is one thing to make bad decisions on your child's behalf, but another thing to be engaged in theft, lies, deception, fraud and embezzlement.  If they were not capable of handling his finances, then why did they fire all the others who could?  No way to rationalize this, I would LOVE to hear the parents side of the story, would make for great theater and comedy.  I can not imagine a puishment that is worthy of these people.

JamieH

January 14th, 2015 at 5:36 PM ^

I almost always agree with you, but I've gotta disagree on this one.  I don't care how "nice" the Johnsons have been when you were around them.  Any people who f*** their own child over like this are Grade A assholes.  This isn't like they stole a little bit of his money or something (which would still be terrible).  They basically stole his future away from him.   What they did was utterly reprehensible and pretty much unforgivable.

There are almost no people in this world that you can fully trust.  Your parents should be people you can fully trust.  For his parents to rip him off like this is just sickening. 

CarrIsMyHomeboy

January 14th, 2015 at 2:55 PM ^

Judge the behavior, not the person. It'd be a dour mistake to spend life thinking everyone is precisely what you see and no more. Especially given that, each time you make a mistake or fail, you are sooner to appeal to circumstances ("if only...then I wouldn't have...") than flatly call yourself a lifetime failure.

/Fundamental attribution error'd

 

Having said that: Yes, they are people with recently deplorable BEHAVIOR as it relates to their son and his money. 

CarrIsMyHomeboy

January 14th, 2015 at 4:29 PM ^

I totally understand that. It's so common as to be the convention.

But your happiness has nothing to do with the standards and thresholds of logical coherency. Judging people on the basis of their behaviors may feel good and many times it may even pay off in terms of predicting the future. But that doesn't change the truth that it is a strictly incoherent way of reaching conclusions. 

JamieH

January 14th, 2015 at 5:40 PM ^

I was nervous about giving my wife POA for me to sign for our new house when I couldn't fly in for the final closing. The realtor made sure it was a POA that only applied to real-estate transactions that occurred on that specific day. Still made me nervous, not that I don't trust my wife. Just dangerous to give anyone POA unless you are incapacitated

Don

January 14th, 2015 at 2:30 PM ^

but I have no doubt that a major factor in so many collegiate athletes leaving college early for the pros is that they're surrounded by vultures and parasites who can't wait to spend the money they think they have a right to.

Closer to home, every time Red loses another highly-touted recruit to the OHL and the kid says "It's always been my dream to play in the National Hockey League" what that translates into is "It's always been my parents' dream to spend the money they think I'm going to make in the NHL."

Don

January 14th, 2015 at 3:09 PM ^

I'm one of the very few who's cynical about how so many elite UM hockey recruits have used Red and the Michigan program over the past 15 years or so, and it's not a popular opinion. I really do believe that most of these kids—as well as kids at other programs in other sports—are responding to their parents' desires as much or more than their own.

 

Njia

January 14th, 2015 at 2:48 PM ^

That my son's app development business is going to fund my retirement, I'm joking. I wouldn't imagine doing something like Jack Johnson's parents did to him.

I mean, 15-20% off the top is the most I'd skim.... You know, to cover power of attorneys fees.

treetown

January 14th, 2015 at 6:45 PM ^

I don't know why - maybe it is seasonal affective disorder hitting but reading this just makes me really sad. I don't really follow hockey closely but do know that a lot of kids basically play semi-pro like hockey in Canada but I guess I had a polly annish view of college hockey. I hope that the kid has enough time to build back up some money for his later post-hockey life and that it doesn't make him too bitter about life.

Maybe I've become enured to seeing how entourages of so-called "pals" will rip off and leech off a sports star who hit it big especially if he came from a poor background, but somehow this is just depressing - maybe because the bond between the parent and child is suppose to be something different than just friends - even close ones. Many parents scrimp and save and sacrifice for their kids and seeing them do well and happy is all they want in return.

I guess I shouldn't be surprised because there have been long stories of stage parents ripping off kid actors (I think there is a law named after the guy who played uncle Fester on the old B&W TV show, The Addams Family - hard to believe when you see him as Fester but as a kid evidently he was very photogenic and made a lot of money which his parents ripped off. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_Child_Actor%27s_Bill)

I guess I got to get one of those natural sunlight lamps now.

Keel

January 14th, 2015 at 6:57 PM ^

New of the bankruptcy, but not of how it actually occurred. This was hard to read, I just cannot fathom how a parent could do this to their child.  I hope they get what they deserve.