04/18/26 Albert the Alligator & HOA Battles: Emotional Support Laws, City Rules, and Property Disputes
Podcasts > Where You Live
"Where You Live" with Gene Sullivan - The show that's all about owning, buying, selling, renting and association management. If it involves a home, we'll talk about it. Here's a chance to get your homeowner questions answered.
Saturday, April 25, 2026
On this episode of Where You Live on AM 1280 The Patriot, Gene opens with a striking and unusual story out of Buffalo, New York involving a man known as Tony C. and his 12-foot alligator, “Albert,” who was reportedly designated as an emotional support animal. The situation escalated into a legal dispute between Tony C. and the city after authorities intervened and removed the alligator, citing safety and regulatory concerns.
Gene walks listeners through the unusual details of the case, including the ongoing legal battle that has stretched on for nearly two years over custody of Albert. The story raises broader questions about emotional support animal regulations, municipal authority, and where the line is drawn between individual rights and public safety when unconventional situations arise.
From there, the conversation transitions into current issues surrounding homeowners associations (HOAs), touching on disputes, governance challenges, and the growing frustration some residents feel over enforcement decisions and board authority. Gene connects these HOA concerns back to the larger theme of how rules are interpreted, enforced, and sometimes contested at both local and community levels.
Throughout the episode, listeners are taken from an extraordinary courtroom-style dispute involving an alligator to the everyday realities of neighborhood governance—highlighting how questions of authority, rights, and regulation play out in very different but equally complex ways.