Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Landlords have forced some of Clark County’s poorest renters to pay thousands in fraudulent fees.

Housing agency urged to investigat­e illegal fees

- By Michael Scott Davidson

Landlords have forced some of Clark County’s poorest renters to pay thousands in fraudulent fees in recent years, but the government agency tasked with stopping the abuse has done little to investigat­e the accused.

Instead of receiving help from the Southern Nevada Regional Housing Authority, renters have turned to a nonprofit law firm for aid.

The nexus of the complaints is the federal housing choice voucher program, a subsidy formerly known as Section 8 that helps more than 11,000 very low-income families in Clark County lease privately owned homes. The local housing authority and landlord sign a contract that sets the rent, part of which the government pays.

Nevada Legal Services attorney Ron Sung has seen cases where voucher recipients have paid hundreds of extra dollars each month in unauthoriz­ed fees and rent increases. Tenants who

refuse to pay can be threatened with eviction.

“These are private landlords who are preying on the poorest members of our community just for an extra buck,” Sung said. “Every landlord in the Section 8 program knows that if they are able to evict the tenant, then the tenant will lose their housing choice voucher. They rely on the voucher to avoid homelessne­ss, and landlords use that as a sword of Damocles.”

Housing authority officials say they have not launched more investigat­ions because they have not received complaints. That’s despite efforts to educate both tenants and landlords about what is deemed an illegal side payment.

“We can’t investigat­e if we don’t have the informatio­n,” said Brenda Fonseca, director of housing programs for the authority. “If we don’t receive informatio­n, what do we act on?”

Legal battles

Since 2013, Nevada Legal Services has filed federal lawsuits for eight families in the voucher program who claim they were charged illegal side payments.

North Las Vegas resident Lakeysha Holmes was charged $840 in unauthoriz­ed property management and homeowner associatio­n fees over the course of a year.

Christina and Jonathan Ellis forked over an extra $300 each month for almost two years to rent a three-bedroom home in Southern Highlands.

Norma Benitez paid an extra $197 a month for more than two years while renting a four-bedroom home in Summerlin. An employee for her property manager said the fees were for “sewer and trash” services.

“Since she worked with the government’s Section 8 program, I trusted her,” Benitez said in an interview translated from Spanish. “I never thought she would rob me.”

Lawsuits filed by Benitez, Holmes and the Ellises resulted in judgments totaling more than $500,000 in fines, damages and reparation­s. Other cases were settled for thousands of dollars, Sung said.

Many more are resolved without a lawsuit, Sung said.

“I’ve cut deals with landlords that we’ve promised not to blow the whistle on if they settled quickly with our clients,” he said. “They (voucher recipients) don’t have the resources to wait for these cases to take years in the courts.”

Investigat­ions

Federal law gives housing authoritie­s the power to disqualify landlords from participat­ing in voucher programs if they charge illegal side payments.

That policy has never been exercised by the Southern Nevada Regional Housing Authority, the agency that has managed the voucher program in Clark County since 2010. When asked for specific examples of investigat­ions into illegal side payments, housing authority employees could only point to one.

They launched an investigat­ion into Benitez’s property manager and landlord, Golden River Realty and Galliano LLC, in February at the request of Nevada Legal Services. Investigat­ors at a local law firm are reviewing the files of 44 families who are renting or have rented with the company since Jan. 1, 2016. The housing authority has deleted tenant files prior to that date.

“This case is in its infancy stage and informatio­n is still being gathered,” Parker, Nelson & Associates attorney Shana Weir wrote in an email.

But Sung said Nevada Legal Services has done the heavy lifting. The probe was announced days after a federal judge ordered Galliano LLC and Golden River Realty to pay more than $250,000 in damages and penalties.

“A federal judge has explicitly stated Benitez’s landlords committed fraud on the Section 8 program, so I don’t understand why there’s a delay in barring the landlords,” he said.

He’s also concerned that none of the other lawsuits have led to housing authority investigat­ions.

Housing authority officials say tenants or Nevada Legal Services must file complaints directly with the agency. The authority has no complaints about illegal side payments for other companies Nevada Legal Services has sued.

“We’re in constant communicat­ion with them (Nevada Legal Services), so I’m just surprised they’ve been defending these cases and haven’t said anything,” said Amparo Gamazo, the housing authority’s interim executive director.

Sung said he and his colleagues have tried to instigate housing authority investigat­ions before to no avail.

“Our experience with SNRHA is that we need to obtain court orders before SNRHA acts,” he said.

Different definition­s

In two lawsuits, landlords and property managers have argued housing authority employees approved leases authorizin­g the companies to charge illegal side payments.

Yet another lawsuit casts doubt on whether housing authority employees have always understood what constitute­s an illegal side payment.

Johnnie and Lana Mathis weren’t allowed to move into their Sunrise Manor rental in May 2013 until they signed a new lease requiring $150 a month in unauthoriz­ed pool maintenanc­e fees, according to court documents. Seven months later, the couple was evicted.

The Mathises sued their landlord for charging illegal side payments. Sung said their complaint fell apart after housing authority employee Malandria Watson signed a letter stating she had told the landlord that charging pool maintenanc­e fees was OK.

“That shot our case to pieces,” Sung said. The Mathises settled for $6,500.

In 2015 the housing authority updated its voucher program policies to specifical­ly state pool fees are considered illegal side payments.

Sung said it is common for tenants to be confused about what landlords can and can’t charge.

Nevada Legal Services only discovered Benitez was being overcharge­d after Golden River Realty tried to evict her for nearly $6,000 in disputed late fees. If not for that kerfuffle, Benitez said she would have continued paying more than $2,000 in fraudulent charges each year.

“I tell people they have to be careful with the landlords,” she said. “They think because it has to do with the government, people have to remain silenced. It shouldn’t be like that.”

 ?? Richard Brian Las Vegas Review-Journal @vegasphoto­graph ?? Nevada Legal Services attorney Ron Sung, right, speaks to a housing choice voucher recipient Friday before an eviction hearing in Las Vegas Justice Court.
Richard Brian Las Vegas Review-Journal @vegasphoto­graph Nevada Legal Services attorney Ron Sung, right, speaks to a housing choice voucher recipient Friday before an eviction hearing in Las Vegas Justice Court.

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