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“I don’t like the fact that they’re all —
the speed in which it is — the speed in which
the transactions take place,” said Dick Egan, a
former FBI investigator. “How did a property
that couldn’t sell all of the sudden sell so
quickly?”
Well, we asked the buyers. Pierre said, “talk
to Leo Desire, he was in charge.” What’s more,
most the condo buyers we could reach had ties to
Desire. But when we caught up to him, he didn’t
want to talk.
“Sir, you asked me several times and I said,
‘No comment,’ ” Desire said. “Have an
appointment with my attorney, then we will
talk.” Desire’s attorney said refused that.
So no answers there, but I’m not sure
I understand — who was selling the condos off,
Choo or Desire?
That’s what’s bizarre about this. Neither
Choo nor Desire shows up on the condo sales
documents.
Choo says that Desire convinced him to do
something that’s fairly unusual — to put the
condos into a legal entity, and then instead of
selling the property, just transfer ownership of
that entity. Choo says Desire’s attorney
“handled everything.”
What’s the significance?
It’s unusual. What it also means is that the
ownership transfer didn’t have to be recorded at
the Registry of Deeds, where all of the condo
sales were being filed. And what’s really odd is
the records say some condos sold before Choo had
given up ownership. That shouldn’t be possible,
but that’s what the records say. For his part,
Choo denies knowing anything about any of these
other sales.
For at least some of the condos, not a single
mortgage payment was ever made to the bank.
Who moved into the condos?
Here’s where the story gets even stranger.
Judana Smith is in a new apartment now, but she
used to rent one of the Cobden Street condos.
“I just loved the apartment,” Smith said.
“Two bathrooms, stainless steel appliances,
granite countertops.”
At the time, Smith was unemployed and getting
Section 8 housing assistance. Many places don’t
want those tenants; they won’t take their
vouchers. But this place didn’t seem to mind.
And then one day, she got mail. She didn’t,
actually. It was addressed to the owner,
apparently. And other tenants in the building were
getting similar mail: first mortgage bills, then
foreclosure notices. Turns out, the whole property
was going into default, condo by condo.
So where was her rent going?
We don’t know. In fact we know for sure that
for at least some of the condos, not a single
mortgage payment was ever made to the bank.
However, the property manager for Smith’s condo
and all the others told us he was working for
Desire.
So: A bunch of condos change hands at
prices and at a clip that doesn’t seem
consistent with the market. Then the condos are
rented out, but that cash flow — partly funded
by taxpayers — may not have been going toward
the mortgage.
Exactly. The gigantic losers here are the
mortgage lenders. They financed the nine condos,
some at over $400,000 each. But now, for instance,
one condo sold recently at auction for only around
$80,000. Some of those mortgage lenders are now
out of business.
Of course this hasn’t been great for Roxbury,
either. Squatters moved into some of the Cobden
Street condominiums.
Was this a case of straw buyers, where someone
uses someone else to get financing to buy a
property, and then sells it for more? We don’t
know. Desire did lose his mortgage broker license
in a civil suit — a separate case — that
involved an apparent straw buyer and inflated
deed. But as far as we know, no authority has ever
investigated this case on Cobden Street.
The New
England Center for Investigative Reporting,
based at Boston University, is one of the
nation’s first nonprofit investigative reporting
collaboratives focused on local and regional
issues. Primary reporters on this story are Andrea
LePain, of New
England Cable News, and Joe Bergantino,
NECIR’s director.
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