Category Archives: racketeering

What do you do with a Naked Neighbor?

guest blog by Dave Russell (Arizona community manager)

While HOAs are usually the most disastrous organizations ever created, can they ever really be useful? Well the residents in the Cardinal Glenn Homeowners Association, in North Charlotte, NC are hoping their HOA will soon come to the rescue.

Seems this HOA has a major issue with one of their kookie residents and can’t get any help from city leaders or the police. It seems that one of Cardinal Glenn’s residents likes to wear his birthday-suit while standing outside of his home talking on his cellphone. This, according to the neighbors.

           Edited version of photo neighbors took of the man standing at his door.
Unfortunately, North Carolina law doesn’t prohibit neighbors from running around in the buff, as long as they stay on their own property. That’s right, it’s perfectly legal to expose yourself to the children in North Carolina.

But City Councilman Gregg Phipps, who has to be an HOA board member somewhere, came up with a great solution. The esteemed councilman says the HOA should go after the cell phone streaker because they can enforce some nuisance provision in their CC&R’s. Have I mentioned that the naked guy has been doing this for ten years? This HOA is fully aware of the situation.

Now, depending on how receptive the HOA is to the councilman’s ‘solution,’ it’s going to cost the homeowners plenty of money to take their nudist to court. With NC saying it’s perfectly legal to display your ‘goods’ on your own property, it’s going to be a stiff fight.

I’m now thinking that Councilman Phipps is just as big a nut-job as this naked weirdo. Does Phipps even know how much those legal fees can add up to? When the dust clears, homeowners could be hit with a huge special assessment.

You’d think a problem solving councilman could have come up with a new ordinance prohibiting naked cellphone calls.

 

Another On-duty Serviceman gets the HOA Shaft!

Until HOAs get massive financial fines for screwing over on-duty service members, this kind of crime will never stop. The federal law is incredibly clear…you can’t foreclose on a member of the U.S. Armed Services if he is on active duty and cannot appear in court.

Yet the Monte Viejo Community Association in San Antonio, Texas felt they were above the law. In 2011, they simply reached out and snatched the home of U.S. Navy Petty Officer Richard Miller. He was stationed in Japan at the time. In a case eerily similar to the confiscation of another Texas serviceman’s home, Miller’s wife kept all of his mail for him to read when he was home for the holidays. Miller says he never got any mail from his HOA, and thus didn’t know his dues were not being paid.

Miller’s dues were only 200 bucks a year. The HOA jacked that up to more than $15,000 and then liened and foreclosed on Miller’s home.

The good news is that Miller has a pro-bono attorney who’s fighting for his rights. There’s a hint that the Monte Viego board knows how badly they messed up because they’re finally communicating with Miller.

(link to Stars and Stripes article on Miller’s fight)

 

HOA Embezzlement Hits All, From High & Mighty to Small & Weak

guest blog by Deborah Goonan

Some readers may be under the impression that embezzlement of HOA funds only happens to Homeowners’ Associations (HOAs) with hundreds or thousands of units and elaborate amenities that translate to big operating budgets. I’ve talked to some people that think these cases are limited to certain parts of the country such as the Sunbelt states or major cities.

Nothing could be further from the truth. Even modest HOA communities in small towns are at risk for theft of funds by rogue Board members, community managers, or Developers.

Take Skyview Estates, for example. Skyview is a relatively small townhouse community of a few dozen homes located in Richland, PA, a town with a population of less than 1600. The nearest city is Johnstown, PA, with a population of about 20,000. There are no amenities such as a pool, and houses are located on one street named after the company that developed the community.

Three members of the family owned business, Julz Development Group LLC, were recently arrested for stealing nearly $80,000 in HOA assessments over a period of five years. Dennis Michaels, his wife Julie Michaels, and daughter Juliana Zamias constructed Skyview Estates beginning in 2006. As is typical of HOAs, the developer controlled its Board of Directors during construction. Homeowners elected a Board of volunteer owners beginning in 2013, and that’s when Board President, David Mishler, discovered that money was missing. The Board authorized a forensic audit, which resulted in charges being filed against Juliana Zamias and her parents. The audit found that numerous checks were written for “cash” and money was transferred to personal accounts with no explanation.

Active real estate listings for homes in Skyview Estates, priced between $130,000 – $160,000, note HOA fees of $125 per month, to cover lawn maintenance and snow removal.  For an HOA of less than 50 homes, $80,000 probably exceeds the amount of assessments it collects in an entire year.

As is often the case, theft of HOA funds can occur for several years before it is discovered, and those perpetrating the crime are usually considered to be trustworthy. (See Characteristics of Embezzlers, linked below)

The management and political structure of HOAs provides ample opportunity for mishandling of funds, because only a few individuals have access to the collective assessments of the community. In the case of Skyview, it was the Developers. But even after the developer turns over control to volunteer homeowners, it is all too common for the Board of Directors to place control of the money in the hands of one Officer or a hired Community Manager. In some cases, two or more people can work together to defraud homeowners, a little bit at a time, over many months or years.

In Pennsylvania, where Skyview Estates is located, the penalty for embezzlement of cash or property worth more than $2000 is a fine of up to $15,000, up to 7 years in prison, or both. (18 Penn. Con. Stat. § 3903.)

However, most local law enforcement agencies lack adequate funding and training to fully investigate white-collar crime. That means quite often, even after discovered and prosecuted, those who steal from HOA coffers end up with light sentences. Although convicted individuals may be required to provide restitution, the HOA is often unable to fully recover the loss. Even if the HOA carries a valid fidelity insurance policy to cover loss from theft, there is usually a deductible and a subsequent increase in insurance premiums. Sometimes insurance companies drop coverage altogether, leaving the neighborhood completely unprotected.

By contrast, embezzlement of more than $1000 from the federal government or a federal agency results in a fine of $250,000, up to 10 years in prison, or both. For amounts under $1000, the fine can be up to $100,000, up to a year in prison, or both. (USCA §641)

Small communities provide big opportunities for embezzlers, mainly because everyone knows and trusts the individual or individuals with access to HOA bank accounts. And with relatively little accountability, even after being caught, it is no wonder we read several reports of HOA embezzlement on a weekly basis.

(link to WJAC TV report of HOA embezzlement charges)

(characteristics of embezzlers)

(link to Pennsylvania embezzlement laws)

(link to federal embezzlement laws)

Corruption in Pennsylvania HOA

There’s so much official corruption in Pennsylvania that it’s not surprising when the corruption model goes all the way down to private Homeowners Associations. After all, when judges face prosecution for such things as bribery and selling kids to perverts for cash, where is the moral standard?

What official in public office is setting the example for honest and decent conduct? Apparently, moral leadership is severely lacking in that state.
Now, an entire family has been arrested for embezzling from the Skyview Homeowners Association in Richland Township, Pennsylvania.

(link to latest HOA embezzlement case)

 

Benzer Testimony Gets Interesting!

Guns? Organized crime? Fear of winding up in the desert? Major law firms involved? The HOA racketeering trial in Nevada is producing some interesting testimony from witnesses in the scheme to takeover Homeowners Associations across the valley.

This trial continues to be a travesty because 37 of the criminals involved were allowed to plead guilty in order to get lighter sentences. The sentences won’t be announced until after the current trial is over. But I’ll take a reporter’s wild guess that the average sentence for these mobsters won’t be greater than 18 months, with much of that time off for good behavior.

This is the one instance where I’d be all in favor of debtors’ prisons. Keep these animals locked up until every Nevada homeowner is made whole.

That’ll never happen.

I know there are some FBI people who read this blog. Have some guts and start investigating racketeering in HOAs all over the country!

(link to ReviewJournal article on Las Vegas HOA racketeering)