Baltimore Sun

Trump kin’s firm sued

Md. alleges Kushner company violations, ‘infested’ apartments

- BY KEVIN RECTOR

Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh has sued an apartment management company owned by senior White House adviser and presidenti­al son-inlaw Jared Kushner, alleging it routinely used “unfair or deceptive” rental practices while running rodent-infested apartments in Baltimore and the surroundin­g region.

Attorneys in the Consumer Protection Division of Frosh’s office argued in a statement of charges filed Wednesday that Westminste­r Management and 25 other companies whose properties it managed have “victimized consumers, many of whom are financiall­y vulnerable, at all stages of offering and leasing” their rental units in Maryland.

The companies committed “hundreds of thousands of violations” of consumer protection laws along the way, the statement said.

Kushner Cos. CEO Laurent Morali said the company would fight the claims.

“We refuse to be extorted by an ambitious Attorney General who clearly cares more about scoring political points than fighting real crime and improving the lives of the people of Maryland,” he said in a statement to The Baltimore Sun.

“We look forward to defending ourselves against these bogus allegation­s.”

Morali had announced last month that his company had rejected a settlement offer from Frosh’s office after two years of negotiatin­g.

In an interview about Wednesday’s filing, Frosh called “ridiculous” the company’s assertions that his efforts are politicall­y driven. He said the statement of charges outlines “an extraordin­ary panoply of violations of the rights of tenants.”

“What we are claiming in this lawsuit is that they were cheating tenants before, during and after their tenancy, and when I tell you there were hundreds of thousands of violations of the Consumer Protection Act, it just begins to convey the seriousnes­s of the charges,” Frosh said. “They caused serious harm and suffering to the people who lived in their units.”

The filing is the latest volley in a politicall­y charged, yearslong legal battle between Frosh, the state’s top law enforcemen­t official and a Democrat, and Kushner, who is married to Republican President Donald Trump’s daughter Ivanka and heir to his family’s real estate firm, Kushner Cos.

Kushner stepped down as the firm’s CEO when he became a senior adviser to his father-in-law in 2017 but did not divest from some of its properties — including Westminste­r Management, the company at the center of Frosh’s complaint.

The firm first acknowledg­ed it was under investigat­ion by Frosh’s office after articles in The Sun and ProPublica in 2017 detailed complaints from tenants and other housing advocates alleging Westminste­r was violating consumer protection rules for renters. The treatment of Baltimore-area tenants by the Kushner company, and particular­ly the degree to which they have struggled with rodents in their homes, garnered renewed attention in July after Trump called Baltimore a “rat and rodent infested mess.”

The filing is unlike traditiona­l lawsuits in state or federal court. Under Maryland regulatory statutes, the state filed the charges within the Consumer Protection Division of the Attorney General’s Office, to then be put before an administra­tive law judge in the Office of Administra­tive Hearings in Hunt Valley. The administra­tive judge will determine facts and make legal conclusion­s in the case before kicking it back to the Consumer Protection Division, where personnel walled off from the initial investigat­ion will adjudicate the findings and assess damages, if any, for victims.

Any decision then could be appealed in state court.

Frosh estimated the damages could swell to many millions of dollars given the volume of alleged violations, but the filing does not specify an amount sought.

“We’re not arguing yet what the penalty might be, but we will at the end, and obviously the number of violations will play a big role,” Frosh said.

Frosh’s statement of charges claims the Kushner-linked companies operated without proper licenses and charged tenants illegal and other “sham” fees while renting out “distressed, shoddily maintained” apartments and townhomes under “conditions that can adversely impact consumers’ health and well being.”

Many tenants, the statement says, “have had to endure living in units that are infested by rodents and vermin, plagued with water leaks that have caused mold and other issues, and, at times, lacking in basic utilities.”

Some “have experience­d rodent infestatio­ns so severe that they have rodents living and dying in walls and kitchen appliances; damaging carpeting; chewing holes in drywall and screen doors; and leaving droppings on floors, counter tops, and furniture,” the statement alleges.

The companies named in the lawsuit represent 17 apartment complexes in Maryland controlled by the Kushner Cos. or managed by Westminste­r, its affiliate. The complexes collective­ly have about 9,000 units in Baltimore, Baltimore County and Prince George’s County. Many are listed in Frosh’s complaint as being associated with JK2 Westminste­r LLC, of which both Jared Kushner and his brother Josh have been identified as members in past court filings.

Tenants from some of those same complexes previously alleged the company improperly used rent payments to pay overdue fees for other services, prompting more late fees and threats of eviction. An investigat­ion by The Sun also found entities affiliated with the firm’s apartment complexes sought the arrest of more than 100 former tenants for failing to appear in court over allegation­s of unpaid debts.

In addition to restitutio­n for tenants, Frosh’s office is seeking an injunction preventing the companies from charging illegal fees, requiring them to upgrade conditions and forcing them to acquire the needed licenses.

In addition to rodent infestatio­ns, the charges allege sewage backups, appliances in disrepair and a failure by management to respond to myriad complaints from residents. On top of the physical degradatio­n of the properties, the statement alleges a slate of unfair practices in which management inappropri­ately collected applicatio­n fees, misapplied late fees, improperly took security deposits and collected on debt without a license to do so.

Frosh said the case was not inspired by or related to any case his office has pursued against the Trump administra­tion, nor by Kushner’s associatio­n with the president or his administra­tion.

“It has nothing to do with the administra­tion. This is purely a Maryland issue: a Maryland management company and landlords that we feel have repeatedly and consistent­ly violated our Consumer Protection Act,” Frosh said. “It doesn’t make any difference who owns it.”

Frosh said his office has been involved in “lots of similar cases where a landlord will charge fees that are inappropri­ate or withhold security deposits in a way that is inappropri­ate,” but none of “this magnitude.”

He encouraged tenants of Westminste­r properties to call a consumer protection hotline at 410-528-8662.

“We would encourage any tenant that has experience with any of these entities to get in touch with us to let us know if they have had a good experience, a bad experience or something in between,” he said.

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