Immigrant legal service providers call for funding boost
/A group of legal service providers rallied virtually Wednesday to urge the city to boost funding legal services for immigrant New Yorkers.
Read MoreA group of legal service providers rallied virtually Wednesday to urge the city to boost funding legal services for immigrant New Yorkers.
Read More“New York City will not give a single inch in the fight against COVID-19.”
Read More“If somebody doesn't come to court the worst thing that happens is the warrant squad has to go find them and the worst thing that can happen to them if we lock them up before they're ever convicted is they can die.”
Read More“We must do everything within our legal powers to make sure everyone gets vaccinated.”
Read More“It is extremely unusual, perhaps unprecedented, for all of these bar associations to join together to file a complaint.”
“If we're going to say lived experience and perspective has value, we have to acknowledge a mismatch between format and people who own that lived experience.”
Read More“The mayor and the police commissioner were the ultimate decision makers.”
Read MoreA SLAPP in the face to plaintiffs attempting to stifle free speech.
Read More“I want you to know that we are laser-focused on the safety and security of everyone who works in and visits our courthouses.”
Read MoreCOVID-19 has forever changed the way we live. It has also forever changed the concept of a “work-life balance.”
Read More“A justice delayed need not be justice denied.”
Read MoreThe city will host a public meeting tonight at 6 p.m. inside Borough Hall to review plans to close Rikers Island jails and redevelop the Queens House of Detention to house roughly 1,500 detainees moved off the island.
Read MoreBy Bernard Condon
Associated Press
The Kushner family real estate company was fined $210,000 by New York City regulators on Monday following an Associated Press investigation earlier this year that showed it routinely filed false documents with the city claiming it had no rent-regulated tenants in its buildings —including three sites in Queens — when, in fact, it had hundreds.
Separately, a watchdog group said Monday that former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen has engaged in the same practice, perhaps in a more brazen way, by telling the city that buildings he owned were empty, though tax records showed they were filled with tenants, many rent-regulated.
The city’s buildings department fined the Kushner Cos. for filing 42 false applications for construction work on more than a dozen buildings when presidential adviser Jared Kushner ran the business. The AP report showed that the false paperwork allowed the Kushners to escape extra scrutiny designed to stop landlords from using construction to make living conditions for low-paying, rent-regulated tenants unbearable and get them to leave.
For three buildings in Astoria, the Kushner Cos. checked a box on construction permit applications in 2015 that indicated the buildings had zero rent-regulated tenants. Tax records filed a few months later showed the company inherited as many as 94 rent-regulated units from the previous owner, the AP reported in March.
The Kushner Cos. said it relied on “third party consultants” to prepare its applications for construction permits and the errors “have been corrected or will be.”
“In no case did the company act in disregard of the safety of our tenants,” said company spokesperson Christine Taylor. “We look forward to presenting the facts before an administrative law judge and until then no amount is due.”
After the AP report in March, the New York City Council and the New York state attorney general said they would look into the issue. Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn issued a subpoena to the company for documents.
The AP found that in three Kushner buildings in Queens for which false construction applications were filed, tenants believed the banging, drilling, dust and leaking water during construction were part of a targeted campaign to get them to leave. Many tenants did just that, and the number of protected rent-regulated units fell sharply in a little over a year, clearing the way for higher paying renters and making the buildings far more valuable.
The Kushners sold the Queens buildings in 2017 for $60 million, nearly 50 percent more than they had paid for them two years earlier.
In March, the Queens Chronicle reported that that the city’s Tenant Harassment Task Force had been investigating two of the Kushners’ Astoria properties located at 23-05 30th Ave. and 23-15 30th Ave. since 2016. The third former Kushner property to come under investigation was located at 21-80 38 St. in Astoria.
In a letter, State Sen. Michael Gianaris urged the DOB to issue stop-work orders for all Kushner Cos. properties.
“Bad actors should not benefit at the expense of their tenants when they flout rules designed to protect residents,” Gianaris said in a statement.
In Monday’s report about Cohen, the watchdog Housing Rights Initiative said the former Trump lawyer and his partners submitted more than 20 false applications for construction at three buildings claiming they were unoccupied and there were no rent-regulated tenants when, in fact, there were dozens. Housing Rights Initiative said tenants were posting complaints to the city about living conditions during construction, proof that there were indeed people living there.
“In order for Cohen to substantiate these claims, he would need to prove that ghosts exist,” said Aaron Carr, executive director of Housing Rights Initiative, which also compiled the false filings by the Kushners earlier this year that led to the AP report.
Carr said that Cohen eventually sold the three buildings for $27 million, nearly triple what he had paid for them a few years earlier.
“Cohen commenced a deliberate campaign to systematically harass tenants out of their apartments using destructive, hazardous and illegal construction practices, so he could dramatically raise rents,” he said.
Cohen’s lawyer, Lanny Davis, declined to comment.
In one building at 237 Henry Street in Manhattan, tenants filed complaints about excessive noise and dust and construction beyond the scope of what was permitted by the city, according to the Housing Rights Initiative report. All 20 units in the building were protected by special rent regulations limiting rent increases and preventing tenants from getting pushed out, the report said, but once construction was done that number fell to five, which made it much more attractive to potential buyers.
In December 2014, about a year and a half after buying the building, Cohen sold it for $9 million, nearly triple what he and his partners had paid for it. That is gross profits, however, without subtracting for construction costs.
The other Cohen buildings in the report were at 172 Rivington Street and 235 East 27th Street, both in Manhattan.
Department of Buildings spokesman Joseph Soldevere said the agency “aggressively investigates” all complaints of improper construction.
Soldevere said nearly all of the permit applications for the Cohen properties include “tenant protection plans” designed to safeguard residents during construction.
He added that the agency issued a “stop-work” order at the Henry Street building and imposed fines of $16,090. He said six complaints at the other two buildings were investigated but no violations of city construction rules found.
Members of the South Asian and Indo-Caribbean Bar Association joined Judge Ushir Pandit-Durant and U.S. Rep. Joe Crowley, the Queens Democratic Party leader for an event at the Lawrence Yacht and Country Club in Long Island Wednesday.
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