Author Archives: Beanie
GEORGIA – Residents outraged by car booting over HOA fees
DEKALB COUNTY, Ga. — Neighbors in a DeKalb County condominium complex were upset after they say management arranged for their cars to be booted over outstanding homeowner’s association fees. “I can’t even sleep at night, I get up and come look over the banister to see if I got more boots,” a resident who didn’t want to be identified told Channel 2’s Amy Napier Viteri.
She said she got a flat tire after her car got booted at the Ridge Creek condos in Clarkston. Several people said the same thing happened to them. Heritage Property Management, which maintains the complex, sent a letter to residents telling them anyone with outstanding HOA dues would be bootedu June 18. The neighbor told Viteri her boyfriend owns the unit and showed emails saying the HOA Board approved a payment plan for his dues. Read more:
FLORIDA – Colony Beach and Tennis Resort goes to auction
Claims related to the shuttered Colony Beach & Tennis Resort will be the subject of an auction in federal court in Tampa on Thursday. Colony Beach & Tennis Club Ltd., the partnership that was the former operator of the resort, is attempting to auction claims it has against the Colony Beach & Tennis Club Association Inc., a nonprofit corporation representing condominium unit owners at the property, according to Jeff Warren, the lawyer representing the unit owners. Read more:
NEVADA – HOA case defendant gets yearlong federal prison term
The first defendant sentenced in the massive scheme to take over homeowners associations was given 366 days in federal prison Friday. Kenneth Allen, 69, a former HOA board member who did not have a deal to cooperate with federal prosecutors, also was ordered to pay $139,106 in restitution. Chief U.S. District Judge Gloria Navarro gave Allen until Sept. 18 to surrender to prison authorities. He pleaded guilty earlier this year to one felony count of wire fraud. Thirty-three other defendants who cooperated in the high-profile case are waiting to be sentenced in January after the federal fraud trial of former construction company boss Leon Benzer, the accused mastermind of the scheme, and five other defendants. The trial is to start Oct. 14 before U.S. District Judge James Mahan.
In his plea agreement, Allen admitted that he bought a condominium in 2007 with Benzer’s money at Sunset Cliffs and submitted a false loan application that hid Benzer’s involvement in the $177,000 purchase. Then, according to prosecutors, Allen got elected to the HOA board, joining two other Benzer-planted board members who were in a position to help Benzer land lucrative construction defect contracts. On Friday, Allen admitted that he committed mortgage fraud and was sorry for what he did. But he insisted he was duped by Benzer and wasn’t part of the takeover scheme at Sunset Cliffs in 2008. “I trusted him,” Allen told Navarro. “I thought he was on the up and up. It turned out he was a scam artist.” Read more:
SOUTH CAROLINA – Tow-truck driver gets 26 years in death over parking boot
COLORADO – HOA Fines Resident For Flying ‘His’ American Flag
LITTLETON, Colo. (CBS4) – On this Flag Day there is controversy in a neighborhood in Littleton. A man says he’s in a battle with his homeowners
association to fly what he calls his American flag. The HOA has now fined David Renner twice. “It
doesn’t say how the pattern of stars is to be,” Renner said. Renner knows his flags — their history and what they represent. “In April I was flying my Gadsden flag,” he said. Neighbors complained and he got a warning.
“I went ahead and took down my Gadsden and i put up what i thought was the least offensive flag I could think of, and that was my Colorado flag,” Renner said. But that flag wouldn’t fly either and a month later he got a $100 fine. “I mean it’s like, ‘What state do they think we live in?’ ” he said. Read more:
COLORADO – Condo owners in showdown with HOA over plans for $15k charge for repairs
NORTHGLENN, Colo. — An emergency community meeting in Northglenn Tuesday night pits condo owners against their homeowner’s association (HOA) in Westminster. Owners of homes at Prospector’s Point are upset with their HOA, which they say has mismanaged their dues—and now they’re forced to pay the price. CAP Management says homeowners will have to come up with between $5 to $7 million to pay for serious repairs that could affect residents’ and visitors’ health and safety. There’s the peeling paint, the crumbling sidewalk and disintegrating drywall.
“The property has been neglected for the past 10 years. Partly because of the recession, partly because of poor construction, initially. But now the community is at a state where the city is requiring we do $5 million dollars of work,” says Chris Crigler, of CAP Management, which took over managing the HOA about a year-and-a-half ago. Read more:
FLORIDA – Controversy over gun-toting security guards at Lauderhill complex
National – Condo towers rise again in U.S. rebound
FLORIDA – “Threatened” Boynton Beach condo owners sue takeover company
NATIONAL – Condominium Ownership Is Becoming the American Nightmare
Condo boom gone bust
Like other types of housing, condos experienced buyer popularity during the housing boom. But the housing crash put an end to that party, too, and numerous condominium owners are still being negatively affected by the housing crisis. Many are finding themselves stuck as stringent lending regulations make selling nearly impossible – even as condo rules stop them from renting their homes as a stopgap measure.
Part of the problem concerns changes made by the Federal Housing Administration over the past few years. In an effort to protect taxpayers from risk, the FHA has tightened condo lending rules to the point where obtaining a mortgage for such a purchase is almost impossible.
Because the FHA rules apply to the entire development, even buyers who would qualify for such a loan won’t be able to get one. FHA loans are often used by first-time homebuyers, a group particularly apt to buy less-expensive condo units as a starter home. Though other types of credit are available, these potential buyers may not qualify. Read more: