




Pei Chung, the self-proclaimed influencer with a taste for fine dining and a habit of allegedly dodging the bill, has just been booted from her ritzy Brooklyn pad.
Chung, currently behind bars for reportedly stiffing upscale eateries, was evicted from her luxury apartment in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on Dec. 2, 2025, after racking up a mountain of unpaid rent and ignoring the end of her lease, Fox News reported.
This saga starts with Chung’s tenancy at 416 Kent Ave., a high-end building owned by none other than former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer, where she reportedly played fast and loose with rent payments for months.
By the time her lease expired in August 2024, court records show Chung already owed around $8,000, a figure that ballooned to potentially over $50,000 as she squatted in the $3,350-a-month unit long after the deadline.
Neighbors, fed up with her antics, painted a picture of chaos—outbursts, hallway garbage, and relentless noise, as if living next to a reality TV meltdown wasn’t bad enough.
Building manager Bob Jenny didn’t hold back, noting, “We are very aware of the situation and have a very active legal case against this Resident. NYPD has been here multiple times... with little long-term improvement.”
Fast forward to Dec. 2, 2025, when the eviction warrant was finally executed without a hitch, though Chung wasn’t even there to witness her downfall.
City Marshal Robert Renzulli confirmed, “The apartment was vacant. The young lady was not there. The eviction is completed.”
Renzulli spent roughly an hour changing the locks, leaving Chung’s belongings—furniture, clothing, and bedding—still inside, awaiting their fate under city rules that require landlords to hold items for 30 days.
While Chung’s high-end fashion items, flaunted on social media with brands like Cartier and Louis Vuitton, might still be in that apartment, one wonders if she’ll ever reclaim them while sitting in jail.
Her alleged dine-and-dash schemes, reportedly pulling the wool over restaurant staff by posing as a food influencer and racking up lavish tabs with no intention of paying, have landed her in hot water with at least 10 arrests.
Posting those meals on Instagram as if they were sponsored gigs, Chung’s behavior raises eyebrows about the culture of entitlement that seems to thrive in certain online circles—a trend that grates on those of us who value accountability over clout.
Spitzer’s team, contacted for comment, has yet to weigh in, but it’s hard not to see this as a lesson in personal responsibility, something sorely missing in today’s obsession with image over substance.
Chung’s eviction isn’t just a landlord-tenant spat; it’s a snapshot of a broader societal shift where hard work and honoring commitments often take a backseat to flash and fakery, though one can’t help but feel a twinge of sympathy for someone spiraling so publicly.



