Last week, Thomasi McDonald gave us an update on the saga involving a Guilford County couple who says they were wrongfully evicted from a building they were renting for their selfie photo booth business, Bull City Selfie Museum. 

The buildingโ€™s landlord, retired Durham judge Jim Hardin Jr., says the couple owes him hundreds of thousands of dollars in rent and other expenses. Now a new selfie business is operating out of the buildingโ€”using the coupleโ€™s original photo booths and the same business model. Readers on Instagram had thoughts.

Reader @d.moses.l says no judges should own rental property and explains the reasoning thusly:

If you own property *and also* are in charge over the enforcement of laws related to it, that is called feudalism. Thereโ€™s no winning against that, unless you appeal to a higher authority, but that shouldnโ€™t ever even be necessary. Itโ€™s unconscionable that a chief justice could use the power of law to unjustly evict the tenants and then enrich themselves on their displacement. Period. If you like/want that, there is no room for justice in that system.

From reader @bdajour:

The fact that they are using this family hard work, time, construction, and work doesnโ€™t sit right with me. They really created another selfie studio using her new renovation while evicting them.. is evil!! We will not stop til their is justice!! @erica_r_b_ @bullcityselfiemuseum so sorry youโ€™re going through this!!!

From reader @doubl_a_ron:

*sarcasm* I donโ€™t see any questionable business practices here.

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Jane Porter is Wake County editor of the INDY, covering Raleigh and other communities across Wake County. She first joined the staff in 2013 and is a former INDY intern, staff writer, and editor-in-chief, first joining the staff in 2013.