RZA was tough to find – especially if you wanted to serve him with documents related to child support. But back in the mid-2000s, the Staten Island rapper was finally pinned down at a book signing at Barnes & Noble in Union Square.As fans lined up for autographed copies, Byran McElderry, casually but neatly dressed, mixed in with the crowd. He even had a book ready for RZA’s signature. “I was told to get him to sign the book and then to serve him,” McElderry, 60, one of NYC’s more dogged process servers, told The Post. “There was a big crowd around him. I handed him the book, he signed it, gave it back to me and I gave him the papers. RZA laughed it off but he was shocked.”When Jason Sudeikis served Olivia Wilde with custody papers late last month while she was on stage at CinemaCon in Las Vegas, it brought to light the murky world of process servers, who find sneaky ways to put legal papers in the hands of rich, famous, highly protected people. Wilde, according to Page Six, “was confused when she was handed the envelope, and she was even more confused when she opened it,” a source told Page Six. A source close to her ex-husband Sudeikis, with whom she shares two children, later said that he did not know “the time or place that the envelope would be delivered.”
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