Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Costly fixes

Array of issues include rodents, sewage leaks

- Cary Spivak

Repair bills for notorious landlord’s empire near $500,000.

About a half of million dollars has been spent to bring properties owned by notorious landlord Elijah Mohammad Rashaed’s companies into decent, livable condition and more needs to be spent, according to a new report filed in court Tuesday.

Since April the Rashaed properties have been managed by Peter Ogden, president of Ogden & Co., who was appointed property manager — a job that made him a de facto receiver — by Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Glenn Yamahiro.

“Since his appointmen­t, the property manager has faced huge challenges,” Joseph Newbold, Ogden’s attorney, wrote in a 26-page report to the court. In April alone, Ogden spent $19,000 on emergency maintenanc­e to fix “substantia­lly dangerous conditions,” Newbold wrote.

“There are many properties that lack basic needs, making the units nearly uninhabita­ble or extremely dangerous for the tenants,” Newbold wrote, noting that 15 of the 157 properties are partially or completely boarded up “because of extreme health and safety concerns.” Four of those properties have tenants.

“Of the remaining 11 placarded and uninhabite­d properties, the property manager has yet to determine whether it is economical­ly viable to make the needed repairs to bring the properties up to code or whether it is better practice to simply raze the structures.”

The report lists an array of other problems in properties owned by Rashaed or his limited liability companies, including rodents, bed bugs, structural damage, sewage leaks, problems with wiring and plumbing, and water damage.

Ogden has spent $443,779 for operating expenses, a figure that includes management fees, plus another $45,684 for serious repairs, such as fixing heating systems, for a total of $489,463, Newbold wrote.

Yamahiro stripped Rashaed of control of his properties in April after the city sued him, charging he markets his rental units “to individual­s who are desperate for or struggle to find housing because they have income limitation­s, criminal or eviction records, or need to move quickly.” The rental units were

often dilapidate­d and in disrepair.

Disputes with Rashaed have continued since Yamahiro issued his order.

Newbold’s report notes Rashaed has not given Ogden all of the records of leases and other informatio­n he was ordered to turn over to the management company.

Ogden “has yet to receive any security deposits or even an accounting of security deposits from Rashaed,” Newbold wrote. “Many of the existing leases state that a security deposit was in fact paid to Rashaed.”

Ogden is being paid about $25,000 a month in management fees. The cash to cover repairs is coming from the rent revenue. Newbold said legal fees are $88,141.

From April through July the firm has collected $434,265 in rent, though it contends the figure should be higher. Interferen­ce from Rashaed, who Ogden and the city attorneys contend have told tenants not to pay rent to them, has kept the rent revenue down.

Charges that Rashaed is continuing to collect rent or striking rent-to-own deals with tenants are at the heart of contempt motions filed by the city and Ogden asking the court to order an immediate sale of the properties and to fine and/or jail the landlord.

During a hearing Tuesday, Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Jeffrey Conen, who just inherited the case as part of a routine rotation of judge, set hearing dates for the contempt motions and urged the attorneys to work together to sell the Rashaed properties and to quit sniping at each other.

The city and court must approve any property sales arranged by Rashaed to ensure he is not secretly attempting to control the rental units after they are sold.

When David Halbrooks, Rashaed’s attorney, said he was working on a deal “worth millions” the judge told him to work with Kail Decker, the assistant city attorney on the case. Halbrooks pointed to Decker’s back and snapped: “You can’t take anything up with him.”

“Just stop it,” Conen told Halbrooks “Otherwise everybody is going to be wearing jail orange.”

 ??  ?? Rashaed
Rashaed

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States