Nadya Suleman essentially said “thanks, but no thanks” to the non-profit group Angels in Waiting Monday when the octuplets’ mother informed them that their free-of-charge infant-care services were no longer needed, reports People.
“It was a poor fit from the start,” says Jeff Czech, Suleman’s attorney and spokesman.
Suleman, explains Czech, could never quite shake the fact that attorney Gloria Allred, who was responsible for pairing Angels with Suleman, initially filed a complaint with Child Protective Services about the mother of 14. Allred later threatened that, without proper nursing care, Suleman’s children might be doled out to foster homes.