Tag Archives: HOA Embezzlement

Wild Corruption In Nevada!!!

OK folks! I’ve been an investigative reporter for forty years. And during that time thousands upon thousands of documents have been released to me. Oh, there’ve been two or three that were held back, but always because of some extraneous circumstance usually relating to a name a prosecutor or a judge wanted held back for personal or political reasons. And we usually found a higher judge who ordered the documents released.

But Damn it! Political reasons don’t apply here! Personal reasons don’t apply.  Nevada homeowners lost hundreds of millions of dollars when this organized crime ring crashed Homeowners Associations all over Nevada. Property values there still haven’t recovered. It wasn’t just a few dozen homeowners who were hurt in this monstrous scam. Millions were hurt. Taxpayers paid for this years-long investigation. Families went broke. Many lost their homes. Lives were lost. People killed themselves.

Who are you trying to protect by illegally keeping these files secret? A scummy judge who was able to escape indictment? Perhaps a scummy bigtime politician who, with his son, have become multi-millionaires investing in phony land deals based on illegal insider knowledge about housing trends in Nevada?

You found 100 “people of interest” in this case, but didn’t prosecute them because you thought it would be too expensive? Isn’t that a sneaky way of letting your friends and political boosters off the hook? Wouldn’t a thorough vetting of this whole slimy affair be a way for you to crawl out this greasy morass?

Federal Judge Mahan, there’s a lot you ought to be ashamed of including the awesome lack of meaningful prison time you handed out to these mobsters.

Now, you should be ashamed of letting your political cronies talk you into not releasing documents that you feel might shame your pathetic state and your miserable bench even further. I’ve learned over the years that when something doesn’t smell right, you start looking for the source. Something real close to where you’re standing, Judge Mahan, doesn’t smell just right.

(crooked lawyer gets ten years for swindling homeowners)

 

 

Intriguing Massachusetts Court Decision

I’m not smart enough to figure out all the implications of this decision. It has to do with collections of HOA and Condo fees by law firms and how they may violate the letter of federal law governing Fair Debt Collection.

If you’re as attention deficit disordered as I am, you can quickly skip down to the section entitled “Implications of the McDermott decision to get a general sense of what this decision could mean nationally.

If this decision spreads to other states, it might be a ticklish time for HOA lawyers to get into the collection business. They just might find themselves hit with massive damage suits.

Two for the Price of One? The First Circuit Holds that a Violation of the FDCPA is a Per Se Violation of the Massachusetts Consumer Protection Statute | JD Supra

 

 

Lemons And Float Away Living

guest blog by Nila Ridings

It’s been awhile since we took a break from HOAs and let our thoughts float out to Tiny House living. If living in a Tiny House is not your dream the tremendous energy those who are putting it in the spotlight should be motivation to keep going as an HOA Warrior. It hasn’t been all that long ago only a handful of people knew anything about Tiny Houses. But the promoters of their movement have waved their magic wands and today it’s rare to meet someone that has never heard of them. Proof positive that perseverance produces exposure for options on housing sources!

A few months ago, I talked to a man involved with Lemon Cove Village in California. We had a nice visit. Of course, after the friendly ‘howdy and how are yous’ I asked if his Tiny House village had an HOA? He chuckled and asked if I didn’t like HOAs? His first clue to my answer was probably the fire that shot out the speaker on his phone! I told him I despise them!!! He was delighted to tell me there is no HOA at Lemon Cove Village. If this location is successful will there be others around the country, I asked? Indeed there will be if all goes well.

So, if you’re looking for a place to land when you’re HOA-Free you might want to check-out Lemon Cove Village where you could be sipping on sweet lemonade and laughing like a prisoner escapee

If you’re looking for some Tiny House floating and boating this uniquely designed waterworthy hotel just might suit your taste. I’m envisioning the perfect setting for this concept on the Ruedi Reservoir. That would be nothing short of amazing.

With wheels or floats there are ways to live maintenance-free, escape the HOAs, and maintain your money and your sanity.Check out Lemon Cove Village.

(link to Lemon Cove Village)

(link to Floating Hotel)

 

Just Another HOA Thief

guest blog by Nila Ridings

No surprises here. HOAs and condo associations are nothing more than a thieves’ paradise. A simple internet search or glancing through neighborsatwar.dot com will reveal the massive numbers of thefts by HOA board members and HOA managers. The penalty…maybe a few days of community service and a little “talking to” by the judge and they are punishment free.

Here’s one in Still Meadows Condominium Association in Severn where Wanda Brooks could hardly shuffle into the courtroom with her walker but she was able to dine out, get her hair done, pay utilities, and buy gas on the HOA credit card.

Makes me wonder how many Mercedes have been purchased? How many kids have gone to college? (on a fully-paid HOA “scholarships”) How many luxury vacations have been taken? How much real estate has been purchased? How many bottles of booze have been consumed? How much jewelry has been bought? How many kids have had orthodontics? And how many boxes of diapers, dog food, and cigarettes have HOA dues paid for? Far more than we know about, I’m sure of that. Hundreds of millions of dollars per year are being stolen from homeowners and they don’t even know it.

The massive corruption in HOAs is beyond words. Yet, we have 1 in 5 Americans living inside of these hellholes under the belief their property values are protected by signing up for the HOA. What a joke!

Isn’t it interesting how people get so upset when somebody robs them of their wallet in a parking lot and it has $20 in it, but think nothing of all the years of being robbed blind by their volunteer HOA board member neighbors and paid property managers?

The more HOAs that are built in America should reduce the number of bank robberies, I would think. One comes with time in the federal penitentiary, the other with best wishes kisses from the judge.

(read it and weep, another embezzlement case)

Raisin Farmers, Homeowners Associations & The Supreme Court

guest blog by Deborah Goonan

When I read Evan Bernick’s (Assistant Director at the Institute for Justice) summary of the latest Supreme Court decision involving property rights of raisin farmers, I was taken aback by the parallels to a decades-long battle to protect property rights of homeowners in private, mandatory Homeowners Associations.

In HORNE ET AL. v. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, family farmers Marvin and Laura Horne of California were ordered to surrender 30% of their raisin crop to the federal government. Based upon a New Deal Era law, as part of an effort to control raisin prices, the Raisin Administrative Committee would take a portion of the growers’ crops, without immediate compensation. Once the raisin reserve was sold many months later, on terms negotiated by the Committee, any remaining proceeds would be distributed back to the farmers. Seems unfair, right?

When the Hornes refused to turn over their raisins, the government fined them $480,000, the claimed value of the raisins, plus a $200,000 “disobedience” penalty. The matter ended up in court. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals found in favor of the federal government. As Bernick explains:

“It reasoned that the Takings Clause affords more protection to real property (land) than it does to personal property (in this case, raisins). In addition, it characterized the reserve requirement as a “condition” imposed in exchange for a government benefit (that is, the privilege of engaging in commercial activity), rather than a taking, adding that the Hornes could always avoid the requirement by “planting different crops.”

Let me pause for moment and point out the parallels faced by HOA property owners.

With regard to HOA issues, courts thus far have reasoned that the Takings Clause affords more protection to real propertyoutside of a mandatory association than it does to real property inside an HOA, where mandatory association membership is required. In addition, payment of assessments, imposition of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions (CC&Rs)  – no matter how unnecessary, unconscionable, or unreasonable – and resulting fines or other penalties imposed for violations of those CC&Rs, are conditions imposed in exchange for the special “privilege” and “benefit” of owning a home in a Developer-designed architectural utopia. And, as we hear over and over again, homeowners unhappy with that arrangement are free to avoid CC&Rs by buying a home that is not burdened by a mandatory HOA.

But in many major real estate markets in the US these days, buyers with price and location constraints have few non-HOA alternatives. The choice is to purchase a home in a mandatory HOA, or give up the American Dream of homeownership.

OK, now read on for the good news.

The Supreme Court reversed the Ninth Circuit’s decision, recognizing that the conditions imposed by the federal government were an unconstitutional Taking without just compensation.

To quote Evan Bernick, the court’s decision rested on three principles:

“The Supreme Court began by roundly (and rightly) rejecting the Ninth Circuit’s distinction between personal and real property. The language of the Takings Clause is broad and categorical and reflects the Framers’ appreciation of the centrality of all private property to a free and thriving civil society. It requires “just compensation” whenever the government appropriates “private property” for a “public use…”

 “The Court … found that the Raisin Committee’s deprivation of the growers’ rights in their property was total–they lost the rights to possess, use, and dispose of their raisins … Once there is a taking, the Court held, there is a duty to pay just compensation that the government may not evade.”

“Finally, in response to the argument that the Hornes could always avoid the reserve requirement by planting other crops, the Court affirmed an essential principle: engaging in commerce is not a “special governmental benefit that the Government may hold hostage, to be ransomed by the waiver of constitutional protection.”

For 5 decades, local governments have strongly encouraged or mandated the establishment of over 333,000 HOAs across the US. Mandatory homeowners’ associations are regarded as “mini-governments” by many state and local politicians. Indeed, they serve the public purpose of maintaining infrastructure and governing use of private property, thereby relieving local governments of those duties. Government has created homeowners associations by virtue of statute, mainly for its own benefit.

In Florida alone, many owners continue to endure takings of their homes without just compensation. For several years, we have witnessed hostile HOA Board takeovers, often resulting in termination of condominium associations for the purpose of redevelopment or de-conversion to rental apartments.  The terminations have resulted in the forced sale of tens of thousands of units at artificially low appraised values – unjust compensation following inadequate due process for owners to contest the terms of the sale.

Why have homeowners have been forced to accept this injustice? Because the courts have failed to recognize link to Florida Statute 718.117 as a state-sanctioned taking by private investors for the supposed public purpose of “rescuing” distressed condo associations, thereby preserving the property tax base for local governments. By allowing private developers to exploit condo owners, local governments are also relieved of their duty to intervene when HOAs fail miserably. These are the very same HOAs that were approved by local land use planning agencies.

And, in a more broad sense, what about other rights to use property that have been taken by HOAs? For instance, HOAs commonly restrict the right to rent to tenants, or operate a home-based business. Where is the just compensation to homeowners? How is it that HOAs, essentially state-endorsed substitute mini-governments, are not obligated to honor the Constitutional rights of Americans to full use and enjoyment of their property?

Owning a home is not a “special government benefit” that the Government – or its agent HOA – can “hold hostage,” at the cost of giving up one’s Constitutional rights.

Are we yet another step closer to obtaining equal protection for all Americans, whether they live inside or outside the boundaries of an HOA?

Aren’t our homes at least as valuable as a farmer’s raisin harvest?