A particularly vicious person might wonder how long he and his girlfriend have been living together, whether that has an implications under common law marriage, and whether or not that could be used to go after her assets
Going after assets to pay off debts is notoriously hard in common law states. All of the following is in generalities because I haven't looked into the specific laws of individual states. Since I
assume Greg's debts were incurred
before he started shacking up with his Asian sugar mama, his creditors couldn't go after her to satisfy his debts, even the government. In fact, unless a creditor
now uses both their credit scores to determine if he can have a loan or the like, anything he incurs after the fact is his alone, and the same is for her
unless they jointly sign the contract. Debts for one spouse are considered that spouse's unless they meet those requirements, and even the "using both credits scores to make a determination" is dubious because there's an argument to be made that since the other person's name isn't on the paperwork they shouldn't have been considered and that's the fault of the company. The same thing applies to property such as houses and cars: unless both names are on the title/deed, that property belongs to that individual, which means when she finally leaves Greg he's got no part of the house since only her name is on the deed.
When does Casey’s drinking start?
Objection: assumes facts not in evidence.
If you don't think Casey hasn't been drinking heavily throughout this entire thing you should get your head checked out.