Alec Bohm Parents Move to Dismiss $528,618 Fight

Alec Bohm Parents Move to Dismiss $528,618 Fight

Alec Bohm’s parents have moved to dismiss his lawsuit and are fighting a request that would force them to return more than $500,000. Daniel and Lisa Bohm say they were protecting their son’s money, not misusing it.

Daniel Bohm said Alec had never challenged how the family handled his finances until October, when the two discussed the issue for hours. In that filing, he said his son repeatedly stepped away to take phone calls and had "asked to collect and report information to someone else."

Daniel Bohm Filing

The dispute now sits over control of money and assets tied to a professional baseball player’s earnings. Court documents say Daniel and Lisa Bohm had overseen Alec Bohm’s finances since 2019 through a series of LLCs that managed those earnings.

That structure is central to the lawsuit because Alec Bohm has alleged multimillion-dollar mismanagement of his financial affairs. His parents are not just defending past decisions; they are trying to block the court order he wants, including the preliminary injunction tied to the money transfer.

Florida Condominium Dispute

The parents’ filing also ties the money fight to where they were living. Bohm’s attorneys instructed them to leave his Florida condominium in February, and they said they were living in a recreational vehicle used to travel to their son’s baseball games around the country.

By last week, they said they still had not found permanent housing. They also said Alec Bohm withdrew funds from accounts linked to the LLCs in early March, disrupting payments for condominium fees, rent for an apartment in New Jersey and rental insurance.

$528,618 Transfer

Days after that dispute escalated, Daniel and Lisa Bohm said they transferred $528,618 from a money market account in one LLC’s name to their attorney’s trust account. Daniel Bohm said some bills remained in Lisa Bohm’s name, including an electric bill for the New Jersey apartment and a security bill for Bohm’s Texas property.

For Alec Bohm, the immediate issue is whether the court will order the return of the money while the lawsuit moves forward. For his parents, the filing sets up a sharper defense: they say the money was handled to protect his earnings, and they want the suit thrown out before the deeper fight over the LLCs and the alleged mismanagement gets any larger.

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