A billionaire founder of Google created a website to tell his alien wife after texting her and inflicting “domestic terrorism” on her.
The bitter break-up came in 2014, when technical genius Scott Hassan, who wrote much of Google’s initial code, sent a text message to Allison Huynh, his 13-year-old wife, saying he wanted a divorce. -se. For the past seven years, the couple has been caught up in a nasty battle for divorce that revolves around how to split billions of dollars into assets.
Huynh, a Vietnamese immigrant who attended Stanford on a full scholarship, is looking for half of the couple’s assets. .
“In my experience, it’s the longest court case in California history,” said O’Donnell, who has been practicing for 50 years. “It’s unusually full and controversial, because Scott takes the stand in court that his 13-year-old wife (with three children, who gave up his life, who loved him, trusted him and helped him) has no right to nothing “.
Hassan did not respond to DailyMail.com’s request for comment, but told the New York Post that the claims he wanted to leave her penniless were not “accurate.”

Allison Huynh and billionaire investor Scott Hassan, portrayed in happier times, were married in Las Vegas in 2001 without a prenup,

An impostor website shared Huynh’s sexual harassment lawsuit with wor

Huynh said his ex abruptly ended the 13-year marriage by text message, sparking a seven-year dispute over the couple’s $ 1.8 billion fortune.

Huynh has accused his ex of “domestic terrorism” after he discovered he had set up a website to reveal details of a 1999 sexual harassment case.
Monday’s trial in Santa Clara County, California, will offer the public an intimate look at the split, including details of a ‘divorce terrorism’ campaign launched by Hassan against his 46-year-old ex, which culminated with threats to bury her. “and make sure you don’t get anything,” the New York Times reported.
The billionaire bachelor intentionally lengthened court proceedings, according to his ex-judge.
Hassan also launched a revenge website in February, AllisonHuynh.com, that shared court documents of three unflattering lawsuits related to her ex, O’Donnell said.
Huynh, herself a Stanford student and a member of the university’s robotics lab, learned of the website on August 5th. He informed his lawyers, but when his technology department could not definitively determine who created it, he used his own technology. smart to break the code.
“She was the one who found out it was Scott,” her lawyer, Pierce O’Donnell, told DailyMail.com. “They call him the Silicon Valley computer genius.” He did not expect his wife – his wife – to understand him. So this super genius who co-founded Google … was overtaken by his wife who has his own computer ribs. For me, it’s a delicious story, and it’s true. “
The website banner featured a photo of Huynh and while much of the content was complementary, it also contained documents related to previous lawsuits in which she was involved, including a sexual harassment case she won.

Hassan developed most of the coding for Google and earned much of his fortune by becoming a prime investor in the search engine giant.
The judge on Friday ordered Hassan to post all records on the website, which Huynh’s lawyer said was used to spread the decades-old allegations of a boss who responded to Allison’s claim that he sexually harassed her because of the victim in her cross-complaint. “
Huynh’s main concerns were for his Internet-savvy teenage children to discover the site, his lawyers said.
“How [Hassan] you know, the children of the parties are active online and would almost certainly find the site, review the pleas of decades and be left with the impression that their mother is not who they thought she was, that she has a hidden and dirty past . life, ”the law firm representing Huynh wrote in a lawsuit to remove the site.
“In fact, contrary to Scott’s lawyer’s blatant assertion that Allison informed the three children of the imposter’s position – he didn’t – one of Allison’s children sadly learned of Scott’s and questioned her mother about the “bad things” she had in place .. This is precisely what Allison feared: that the children of the parties would be emotionally healed by their father’s attack on their mother and the content of the instead, it would drag them deeper into their parents’ conflict and alienate them.

Hassan bought 160,000 shares of Google for $ 800. When the company went public in 2004, the value of these shares amounted to $ 200 million
Although he does not have the same name recognition as Steve Jobs or Bill Gates, Hassan played an indispensable role in the creation of Google, as he wrote an important part of the code used to run the search engine while working as an assistant. of research at Stanford. University.
When Google launched in 1998, Hassan bought 160,000 shares for $ 800, The New York Times reported. Three years later, in 2001, she married Huynh in Las Vegas after a one-year courtship. There was no prenup.
The New York Times estimates that Hassan’s Google shares would be worth more than $ 13 billion today. He also helped found eGroups, which was sold to Yahoo for $ 432 million in shares, according to the Times.

Huynh’s divorce lawyer Pierce O’Connell believes this is one of the longest divorce proceedings in California history.

Hassan reportedly tried to reach a post-nuptial agreement with his wife after amassing a fortune through Google’s initial public offering.

His lawyer says Hassan, considered a coding genius in Silicon Valley, was baffled by his wife when he discovered he was behind a malicious website.
There were some disputes over who supported whom in the early years of their marriage, with Huynh claiming he paid many of the bills during a time when Hassan had $ 60,000 in debt, the Times reported.
Hassan denied these claims, saying he had been financially insured at the time.
After Google went public in 2004, bringing the value of Hassan’s shares to more than $ 200 million, the investor tried to reach a post-nuptial agreement, The Times reported. Huynh reportedly turned down his $ 20 million offer in Google shares and split the three properties they shared.
They separated in 2015 and have been in contention in court for the past seven years.

The four-week divorce process for Hassan and his ex could be the final chapter in a concise legal battle
The next trial is expected to last four weeks.
“Allison wants to get on with her life, but she wasn’t going to capitulate,” O’Donnell said, adding that the label of “divorce terrorism” is the one I agree with. He burned her with litigation and had absolutely no will to settle for anything reasonably remote.