Rogers Park Slumlord Brought to Justice
Dear Neighbor,
I'm pleased to report that notorious Rogers Park slumlord
Michael Kakvand pleaded guilty yesterday in federal court to fraud stemming
from a series of fraudulent condominium conversions involving 30
A Chicago Sun-Times account of the guilty plea is below. The story highlights the fraudulent activity, which consisted of setting up phony condo conversions, selling the "converted" condominiums to "straw" buyers, and then defrauding banks of mortgage loans.
Kakvand exercised no tenant screening and did little to upkeep the buildings. The buildings became some of the worse sources of crime in the neighborhood. Tenants were victimized by the poor conditions and many were forced to leave their homes when lenders foreclosed on their units.
Other Kakvand buildings remained vacant and began to fall into disrepair, with broken windows and entry locks, overgrown grass and shrubbery and accumulating trash. Many became home to squatters, creating a serious public safety concern for the neighborhood.
Kakvand's scheme was first uncovered in 1999 by Mary Jane Haggerty at the Rogers Park Community Council, who noticed that units in several of Kakvand's buildings had changed hands multiple times in a very short time period, and that the same individuals were purchasing numerous units at his various buildings.
Mary Jane contacted my office, and together we began to look
more closely at Kakvand's buildings. It
soon became apparent that some fraudulent scheme was at work.
My office notified the authorities, and I immediately convened a task force of neighborhood residents, community organizations and city officials to explore the extent of the looming problem, and arrive at solutions. The group consisted of my Chief-of-staff Kevin Cosgrove, Police District police officers, representatives from the Community Policing Office, the 49th Mary Jane Haggerty, attorneys form the Gang and Drug House Division of the City's Law Department, 24th Ward Streets and Sanitation Ward Superintendent, representatives of block clubs, and several 49th Ward residents.
Eventually, the Task Force expanded to include the Community
Investment Corporation, representatives from Banks that held mortgages on these
properties, responsible developers and landlords, and outside attorneys with
expertise in condominium and property transfer law.
City attorneys obtained court orders to vacate and board up
properties that were illegally occupied and not properly secured. The Department of Streets and Sanitation
devoted extra resources to keeping the areas around these properties from
becoming eyesores, and members of the 24th Police District devoted
extra personnel to ensure that the community was protected from criminal
activities.The case was complicated by the fact that it involved 153
individual apartment units with mortgages spread throughout the country. In order to secure these properties it was
necessary to control at least half of the units in each of the properties.
The task force worked with representatives of the various
banks, and with responsible developers. The banks were very cooperative
with my task force once they realized
what had occurred. Over the course of
one year, we made sure the buildings were acquired by responsible
landlords and
developers, and now all of Kakvand’s former buildings are neighborhood
assets.One prominent real estate attorney who donated time to work
with my task force estimated it might take up to three years to
properly secure
the properties. We accomplished that
goal in under a year.
Mr. Kakvand and his associates were forced to spend several weeks in jail, pay tens of thousands of dollars in fines, and perform community service work clearing garbage with employees of the Department of Streets and Sanitation.
Thanks to those efforts, Kakvand now faces the possibility of serving as much as 30 years in prison.
Our successful effort against Kakvand is a prime example of community policing at its best, with all branches of government and community residents and organizations working together. We rid our neighborhood of a notorious slumlord and brought him to justice.
Congratulations to everyone involved!
Joe Moore
Guilty
plea in mortgage scam
(http://www.suntimes.com/business/254101,CST-FIN-fraud13.article)
BY MARY WISNIEWSKI Business Reporter
Mohammad "Mike" Taghie Kakvand,
the ringleader in a mortgage scheme that resulted in abandoned
Kakvand bought 33 apartment buildings in
Rogers Park and on
"There is no punishment too severe for
Michael Kakvand," said Ald. Joe A. Moore (49th). "He preyed on our
neighborhood, he took advantage of people, and the damage he did took years to
unravel."
Kakvand, 54, of
Also charged were Syed Ali Mohammed Razvi, a
fugitive, and real estate appraisers Thomas M. Groh, Eric L. Dorsey and Britt
J. Pierre, who have already pleaded guilty.
The scheme took place between 1997 and 2004.
According to the government, Kakvand would buy apartment buildings with the
stated intention of converting them to condos. Then he and others recruited
individuals to buy condos in the buildings.
The buyers were promised they would not have
to use their own money, and were offered at least $1,000 for each condo they
agreed to buy.
Kakvand and others prepared false mortgage
applications, listing incorrect job titles and incomes for the applicants,
according to the government. False appraisals misrepresented the condition of
the condos, making it seem they had been rehabbed.
Relying on the false documents, lenders such
as Washington Mutual and Wells Fargo issued loans on the condos. The money went
to the defendants. Meanwhile the "buyers" defaulted, and the
buildings became vacant.
People who had rented apartments in the
buildings suddenly found no one was collecting their rents, and they had to
leave when lenders foreclosed on the units, according to Mary Jane Haggerty,
housing action program director at the Rogers Park Community Council. She
started taking calls from angry renters in 1999, and the council became
suspicious when it found that the same names bought up so many condos in
troubled buildings.
"You could go and look at these
buildings and know that no person in their right mind would have paid condo
prices," according to Haggerty, who said the units were being sold for up
to $175,000.
"It was a complete and total
mess,"
Haggerty said one of the continuing legacies
of the scheme was the artificial inflation of home prices in Rogers Park and
the related increase in property taxes. The scheme also decreased the amount of
rental housing available.
Kakvand has not yet worked out a sentencing
agreement with the government. The maximum sentence is 30 years in prison, plus
fines and restitution. He will be sentenced May 9.

