Albuquerque Journal

NYC investigat­ing Kushner Cos.

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — A New York City council member launched an investigat­ion Monday into the Kushner Cos.’ routine filing of paperwork falsely claiming zero rent-regulated tenants in its buildings, saying that the deception should have been uncovered long ago because the documents are online for all to see.

Councilman Ritchie Torres said the city’s buildings department should have spotted the falsified numbers because they were contradict­ed by tax documents filed with another city agency.

“The scandal is not only the deception of Kushner Cos., the scandal is the dysfunctio­n of the city bureaucrac­y,” said Torres, chair of the city council’s investigat­ions committee. “The right hand of city government didn’t know what the left hand was doing.”

The Associated Press reported Sunday that a tenants’ rights watchdog found that the Kushner Cos. had filed more than 80 constructi­on permit applicatio­ns for 34 buildings across the city between 2013 and 2016 stating it had no rent-regulated units. But tax documents showed more than 300 rent-regulated units.

The falsified documents allowed the Kushner Cos. to escape extra scrutiny during constructi­on projects, when the family real estate developer was run by Jared Kushner, who is now senior adviser to his father-in-law, President Donald Trump. Housing Rights Initiative, a watchdog group, said the falsified documents made it easier for the Kushner Cos. to harass rent-regulated tenants so that it could push out low-paying tenants and replace them with higher paying ones.

Current and former tenants of three buildings in Queens once owned by the Kushner Cos. told the AP that they were subjected to extensive constructi­on, with banging, drilling, dust and leaking water that they believe were part of targeted harassment to get them to leave.

Tax records show rentregula­ted units that numbered as many as 94 when Kushner took over fell to 25 by 2016. The Kushner Cos. sold the Queens buildings last year for $60 million.

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