Chinese Drywall, the U.S. Housing Bubble, and Civil Justice – The Pop Tort

January 06, 2010

The “hot mess” that is the Chinese drywall fiasco seems to be getting hotter by the day—at least according to blockbuster investigative piece by Tim Elfrink in today’s Broward-Palm Beach New Times.

While the story is striking on numerous levels, what particularly caught our attention was the blatant culpability of developers and builders, who were so eager to cash in on the late 1990s/early 2000s housing boom, that consumer safety was essentially tossed out the window.  In fact, until then, Chinese drywall manufacturers like Knauf Tianjin “rarely exported drywall to the States.”  But when the U.S. housing market “exploded”, Chinese companies started supplying drywall that “the company eventually knew was faulty.”

Home­owners immediately reported problems, but that didn’t stop the builders.  As Richard Kampf, a former EPA chief who was one of the first homeowners to raise a red flag about Chinese drywall (in 2007) discovered, some manufacturers and builders knew as early as 2006 that something was wrong with the drywall.  “They knew this stuff was bad, and they kept right on shipping it.  And Florida builders kept right on using it.”

Meanwhile, the government’s reaction, whether due to a lack of coordination or the considerable political influence of developers who, are “the most politically connected industry in Florida,”  has been anything but stellar.  Said state Senator Dave Aronberg, “The government has dragged its feet on testing, the state has not acted… and there’s been no real legislation….It’s inertia, and it’s a sheer lack of political will holding us back.”  In fact, said Aronberg, “The only people taking any initiative are trial lawyers.” 

Lawsuits against “the builders, the importers, the manufacturers, and the distributors” have now been filed in Florida, Virginia, and Louisiana, which are “the three states most affected by the drywall.”  Many are class actions and in one, “Knauf, the German-owned company that seems to have imported the most Chinese drywall to Florida, has agreed to be tried in Louisiana.”  That’s a good start.

thepoptort

A letter to the NAA regarding an email they deleted without reading – please retract your amicus in the Abad case in Arizona – it is fraud by a political action committee, the National Apartment Association, that is furthering another fraud by another political action committee, the US Chamber of Commerce

Political Action Committee – NAA – files Amicus Brief in mold case (two infant deaths in mold filled apt – Wasatch Prop Mgmt) citing US Chamber/ACOEM ‘litigation defense report’ to disclaim health effects of indoor mold & limit financial risk for industry

“Changes in construction methods have caused US buildings to become perfect petri dishes for mold and bacteria to flourish when water is added. Instead of warning the public and teaching physicians that the buildings were causing illness; in 2003 the US Chamber of Commerce Institute for Legal Reform, a think-tank, and a workers comp physician trade organization mass marketed an unscientific nonsequitor to the courts to disclaim the adverse health effects to stave off liability for financial stakeholders of moldy buildings. Although publicly exposed many times over the years, the deceit lingers in US courts to this very day.” Sharon Noonan Kramer

Information on Riverstone Residential knowingly exposing tenants to extreme amounts of mold toxins at Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments in Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments managed by Riverstone Residential

Riverstone Residential Litigation

Mold Inspection Reports

Photos of Mold in Apartment

Attorney Malpractice

Posted in Civil Justice, Environmental Health Threats, Politics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

BlackRock’s Black Mark: Stuyvesant Town – PEU Report

January 9, 2010

Twenty thousand New York apartment dwellers are in limbo as complex owners, BlackRock Realty and Tishman Speyer Properties, defaulted on their loan. Efforts to renegotiate $3 billion in debt have been unsuccessful to date. They anticipated missing a $16 million loan payment on Friday.

Is this the same BlackRock advising the U.S. Treasury on complex mortgage backed securities? They have a web page devoted to real estate. It says:

BlackRock believes that successful real estate investing is a result of establishing a strategic advantage in portfolio exposures to property sectors and markets, and in the speed and quality of executing those exposures. This focus on strategy and execution is the cornerstone of BlackRock’s investment philosophy. BlackRock’s real estate investment strategy is guided by its proprietary research tools and the combined knowledge, experience and market expertise of its senior investment professionals.

However, BlackRock believes knowledge of a superior mix of sectors and markets is an advantage only if the portfolio can move to establish exposure in those sectors and markets quickly. The firm is therefore organized for maximum opportunity flow. The firm expands its acquisition flow by teaming its skilled transaction team with the experience and relationships of its portfolio and asset management teams to source investments and investment partners.

Except in the case of Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village. The partnership may be an equal opportunity shafter. DealBook reports:

Aside from the $3 billion in mortgages, there is an additional $1.4 billion in secondary, or mezzanine, loans and almost $1 billion in equity invested by the partners, a Florida pension fund, the Church of England and others.

Weren’t financial CEO’s crashing Church of England pulpits to proclaim their doing God’s work? How does losing money for the Church square with that assertion?

Also in the mix are the government-controlled mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which together hold a bond that is secured by as much as $2 billion of debt on the property. Those two companies will get paid first with whatever revenue comes from the property, but they are not involved in the negotiations.

BlackRock and Tishman Speyer may hand the keys over to the Mac siblings, Fannie & Freddie. What BlackRock can do for the U.S. taxpayer, given its abandonment of New York apartment residents, remains to be seen.

peureport

An Apartment Complex Teeters – High-Profile Tishman/BlackRock Property in New York in Danger of Default

Riverstone Residential makes the ‘Top 10 Multifamily News Stories of the Decade’ (3rd place) – BlackRock won 1st place!

BlackRock Realty Engages Riverstone Residential to Manage Residential Real Estate Property Portfolio 

 
Information on Riverstone Residential knowingly exposing tenants to extreme amounts of mold toxins at Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments in Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments managed by Riverstone Residential

Riverstone Residential Litigation

Mold Inspection Reports

Photos of Mold in Apartment

Attorney Malpractice

A letter to the NAA regarding an email they deleted without reading – please retract your amicus in the Abad case in Arizona – it is fraud by a political action committee, the National Apartment Association, that is furthering another fraud by another political action committee, the US Chamber of Commerce

Political Action Committee – NAA – files Amicus Brief in mold case (two infant deaths in mold filled apt – Wasatch Prop Mgmt) citing US Chamber/ACOEM ‘litigation defense report’ to disclaim health effects of indoor mold & limit financial risk for industry

“Changes in construction methods have caused US buildings to become perfect petri dishes for mold and bacteria to flourish when water is added. Instead of warning the public and teaching physicians that the buildings were causing illness; in 2003 the US Chamber of Commerce Institute for Legal Reform, a think-tank, and a workers comp physician trade organization mass marketed an unscientific nonsequitor to the courts to disclaim the adverse health effects to stave off liability for financial stakeholders of moldy buildings. Although publicly exposed many times over the years, the deceit lingers in US courts to this very day.” Sharon Noonan Kramer

Posted in Politics, Riverstone Residential | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Stimulus funds aiding companies fined for pollution (Boeing), accused of fraud (Granite Construction) & AIMCO – a major apartment owner based in Denver – offered $13 million in tax credits – paid $3 million to settle a lawsuit over complaints that it operated mold and rodent-infested buildings

Resident Dorothy Peterson said she was considering protesting the stimulus assistance to AIMCO. “If they really wanted to make sure that low income housing was built properly and for residents that were going to be treated like human beings, then they would not give it to an AIMCO,” she said.

By Will Evans
Posted:  01/08/2010

Large corporations working in California have reaped tens of millions of dollars in new federal stimulus funds, despite previous pollution violations, criminal probes, and allegations of fraud, a California Watch investigation has found.

Residents in Ventura County say they are dismayed that airplane and defense giant Boeing received a $15.9 million stimulus contract for environmental monitoring at the same site near Simi Valley where the company was fined for polluting a creek with chromium, dioxin, lead and mercury.

A local resident and opponent, Dawn Kowalski, called the new contract “the fox guarding the hen house.”

Watsonville-based Granite Construction received $6.4 million in stimulus contracts to work on airport runways in Salinas and Monterey, and to repair roads in San Bernardino, Riverside and Butte counties. Yet the company faces three federal probes, including a criminal investigation into whether it fraudulently overcharged the city of San Diego in the wake of the devastating 2007 wildfires.

And AIMCO, a major apartment owner based in Denver, stands to benefit from $13 million in stimulus tax credits to rehabilitate its housing complex in Los Angeles. This federal assistance comes after the company paid $3 million in 2004 to settle a lawsuit from the city of San Francisco over complaints that it operated mold and rodent-infested buildings that posed serious safety hazards to residents. Residents continue to complain about AIMCO’s management.

To government watchdogs, these contracts and others raise concerns about the way the massive federal stimulus program is being administered. Although most major companies in America face lawsuits and regulatory action, these government reformers say a contractor’s entire history should be considered before doling out more money to the same firms.

“It is very upsetting that the government doesn’t do more due diligence before it hands money out,” said Laura N. Chick, California’s inspector general for stimulus funds. “We’ve gotten very used to handing out taxpayer dollars and not so good at overseeing to whom are we giving them and how they are being spent.”

Boeing contract under fire

One stimulus contract through the Department of Energy is causing consternation in the rugged foothills above Simi Valley in Ventura County.

The toxic contamination at the Santa Susana Field Laboratory has been a painfully sore subject to locals for decades. Since the 1940s, the lab was operated by divisions of North American Aviation, which eventually became Rockwell International. It was the site of rocket engine testing and nuclear power development that led to toxins leaching into the dirt and groundwater and a partial nuclear meltdown in 1959.

Boeing acquired the aerospace divisions of Rockwell International in 1996, but community activists said Boeing has been fighting its responsibility for pollution that occurred before and after the purchase. A group of local residents sued Boeing, contending that the pollution had caused cancer. The company settled for $30 million in 2005.

The regional water quality board fined Boeing $471,000 in 2007 for 79 pollution violations that let wastewater and storm runoff from the site ooze toxins into various creeks, flowing downstream to the Los Angeles River.

Boeing had discharged 118.5 million gallons of water laced with pollutants like chromium, lead and mercury, according to the water board. At one point, the company exceeded the allowable concentration of cancer-causing dioxin by 6,900 times. The water board said the chronic violations created a risk to public health and, given Boeing’s resources and sophistication, were “exceedingly serious.”

Dan Hirsch, president of a California nuclear watchdog group, doesn’t believe Boeing should have been rewarded with federal stimulus money for environmental monitoring there. The contract for Boeing, which made $2.7 billion in profits in 2008, was not bid competitively. “How can one have federal taxpayer money going to a company that is responsible for the contamination and is resisting the cleanup?” Hirsch said.

Boeing said it has made significant progress on the cleanup. “Boeing is fully committed to cleaning up the site in a manner that fully protects public health and the environment,” wrote spokeswoman Kamara Sams in an e-mail to California Watch. She said Boeing, NASA and the Department of Energy are responsible for cleaning up portions of the property.

And Jen Stutsman, an Energy Department spokeswoman, responded by e-mail that Boeing has the expertise to perform the work and a good track record of working with the agency. “Changing contractors would only cost the taxpayer additional money as a new contractor arrived and took over the work for Boeing,” she wrote. The project was reported to have created 11 jobs.

At the same time, Boeing is trying to overturn a California toxic cleanup law. On Nov. 13, Boeing sued in federal court to invalidate SB 990, which holds the Ventura County cleanup to especially strict standards. Boeing claims the California-mandated standards are unnecessary and the excavation required would further destroy the “ecological habitat.”

State Assemblywoman Julia Brownley, who represents nearby residents, said she’s concerned that Boeing is getting stimulus money and “almost in the same breath” suing against California cleanup standards. “Something just seems not right in that picture,” she said.

Boeing also won $892,000 in stimulus money from an Air Force contract to help design energy-efficient aircraft of the future. The work is being done at Boeing’s Huntington Beach facility in Orange County. Yet just last August, the company paid the government $25 million to resolve allegations that it performed defective work – and overcharged the government – on an entire fleet of Air Force refueling planes built in Texas.

Boeing disagrees with the government’s allegations and “has far exceeded Air Force contractual quality requirements,” according to a spokesman.

Under investigation

Granite Construction picked up several stimulus contracts – which were distributed through Caltrans and various local agencies – despite being at the center of a fraud scandal in San Diego, where many residents feel the company took advantage of the city in a time of crisis.

“As a taxpayer, I would be more than a little frustrated with that, given the track record here in this city,” said Jan Rasmussen, a San Diego resident and outreach coordinator of Rancho Bernardo United, a community group that helps victims of the 2007 wildfires.

The city of San Diego sued Granite Construction and another company, A.J. Diani, in 2008 for separately allegedly overbilling for their debris removal services after the disaster. The city claimed both companies billed with “falsified records” that overestimated the amount of debris they had cleared, and inflated their costs. The lawsuit is on hold pending a criminal probe by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

Granite also faces two U.S. Department of Justice investigations. One targets an Oregon construction project where storm runoff dumped dirt into various creeks, possibly harming the fish population. The other focuses on allegations that a joint venture run by Granite in Minnesota failed to hire enough minority businesses as subcontractors and misrepresented those efforts.

A Granite spokesperson, Jacque Fourchy, said the company is open about its legal problems in corporate filings and disputes wrongdoing in San Diego. “It’s unfortunate,” Fourchy said, “that this investigation continues to plague us because we really feel like we didn’t do anything wrong.”

Apartment owners sued

The federal government has directed stimulus funds, in the form of tax credits, to create low-income housing across the state. Denver-based AIMCO – in a joint venture with the nonprofit Foundation for Affordable Housing – was offered $13 million in tax credits to help fix up its senior housing apartment complex in Los Angeles. An AIMCO spokeswoman said the company has yet to accept the stimulus tax credit and contends the project “represents the company’s continued commitment to meeting the critical need for affordable housing.”

But in the Bayview-Hunters Point neighborhood in San Francisco, residents have complained for years of slumlord conditions and bad management at the AIMCO apartment complexes. “We trust them as far as we can throw them – that’s the general rule when it comes to AIMCO,” said Sara Shortt, director of the Housing Rights Committee of San Francisco, a nonprofit tenants-rights organization.

The city of San Francisco sued AIMCO, saying that the company ignored more than two dozen orders to fix scores of health and safety hazards, including stairways and landings collapsing from dry rot as well as moldy, water-damaged ceilings and walls. Inspectors cited a blocked fire escape and lack of smoke detectors. They also found broken windows and doors and faulty plumbing. AIMCO settled the suit for $3 million in 2004.

Resident Dorothy Peterson said she was considering protesting the stimulus assistance to AIMCO. “If they really wanted to make sure that low income housing was built properly and for residents that were going to be treated like human beings, then they would not give it to an AIMCO,” she said.

But AIMCO’s partner on the Los Angeles project vouches for the company. “They’re huge,” said Deborrah Willard, president of the Southern California-based Foundation for Affordable Housing. “When you’re huge and you own this many units, you’re bound to make somebody unhappy somewhere along the line.”

To search a database of $18.5 billion in stimulus funds awarded in California go to californiawatch.org

ocregister.com

See also –

More mold complaints against apartment complex – Follow up to – Jacksonville mom says apartment mold, asbestos caused son’s asthma death – Village of Baymeadows Apartments – AIMCO

Information on Riverstone Residential knowingly exposing tenants to extreme amounts of mold toxins at Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments in Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments managed by Riverstone Residential

Riverstone Residential Litigation

Mold Inspection Reports

Photos of Mold in Apartment

Attorney Malpractice

A letter to the NAA regarding an email they deleted without reading – please retract your amicus in the Abad case in Arizona – it is fraud by a political action committee, the National Apartment Association, that is furthering another fraud by another political action committee, the US Chamber of Commerce

Political Action Committee – NAA – files Amicus Brief in mold case (two infant deaths in mold filled apt – Wasatch Prop Mgmt) citing US Chamber/ACOEM ‘litigation defense report’ to disclaim health effects of indoor mold & limit financial risk for industry

“Changes in construction methods have caused US buildings to become perfect petri dishes for mold and bacteria to flourish when water is added. Instead of warning the public and teaching physicians that the buildings were causing illness; in 2003 the US Chamber of Commerce Institute for Legal Reform, a think-tank, and a workers comp physician trade organization mass marketed an unscientific nonsequitor to the courts to disclaim the adverse health effects to stave off liability for financial stakeholders of moldy buildings. Although publicly exposed many times over the years, the deceit lingers in US courts to this very day.” Sharon Noonan Kramer

Posted in Environmental Health Threats, Health - Medical - Science, Politics, Toxic Mold | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Riverstone Residential to manage upscale apartments planned for O’Fallon, Ill


By Terry Hillig
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
01/08/2010

O’FALLON, ILL. — Balke Brown Associates of St. Louis plans to start work this spring on a 232-unit, high-end apartment development near the intersection of Green Mount Road and Frank Scott Parkway East.

The CEO, Steve Brown, said he thinks Parkway Lakeside Apartment Houses will be the premier upscale apartment complex in the St. Louis area.

Brown said the $27 million project makes sense because of its location. He said there is a strong market for luxury apartments in the area around Scott Air Force Base, which employs about 15,000 people and is largely unaffected by the current recession.

“(Many) people don’t understand that Scott Air Force Base is the Number 3 employer in the St. Louis area,” Brown said. “Scott is growing and adding people.”

The apartments will be built on a 20-acre site on the north side of Frank Scott Parkway, about 2,000 feet west of Green Mount Road. It will be adjacent to Green Mount Lakes Apartments, built by Balke Brown Associates five years ago and later sold. The two projects are at the edge of a booming restaurant and retail district and about a minute’s drive from Interstate 64. The company owns five acres of adjacent land planned for commercial development.

The building contractor will be Holland Construction Services of Swansea. Riverstone Residential of Dallas will manage the property for Balke Brown.

Humphreys & Partners of Dallas designed it, using the “big house” concept pioneered by that firm.

The 20 two-story apartment structures will have 10 to 14 units and be designed to look like large houses. The buildings will have only single front entrances with no breezeways or exposed stairways. Many units will have enclosed parking. Other amenities will include fireplaces, patios, balconies, a clubhouse, a swimming pool, a putting green, a walking trail and a recreational lake.

Prices will range from $950 monthly for a one-bedroom apartment to $1,650 for a two-bedroom unit with two-car garage.

Some aldermen questioned the company’s proposal to make some parking spaces a foot shorter than the city’s 19-foot requirement, but the City Council ultimately agreed to variances that will allow 11 fewer parking spaces than the 476 that otherwise would be required by city code. RELATED LINKS
 Get more business news, blogs and opinion

Brown said the council agreed that 60 percent of those could be 18 feet rather than 19 feet deep and said the variances will allow a design that will feature 45 percent open or green space.

“We made the argument that green is better than black,” he said. “I think the project would have been less eco-friendly” if built to the letter of the code.

Ted Shekell, O’Fallon’s planning and zoning director, said city officials welcome the project.

“Balke Brown has been a great part of our town so far,” he said. In addition to the earlier apartment development, the company also built an office building on the other side of I-64.

Shekell said he thinks the new development will be “a good fit for O’Fallon and this area. In a tough economic environment, we’re happy to have them interested in our community. I think it’s the kind of project you need for people who aren’t looking to buy (single-family houses) right now.”

Shekell said development has slowed in O’Fallon, but the city of 30,000 still had 110 new houses started in 2009. That’s down from a 15-year average of 240, but house building is a near standstill in many area communities and around the country.

“Scott is a leveling influence on the economy of this area,” Shekell said. There has been a downturn but investment has not stopped.”

Brown said the area “feels like a young Chesterfield” to him.

“There is no recession there,” he said.

stltoday.com

A letter to the NAA regarding an email they deleted without reading – please retract your amicus in the Abad case in Arizona – it is fraud by a political action committee, the National Apartment Association, that is furthering another fraud by another political action committee, the US Chamber of Commerce

Political Action Committee – NAA – files Amicus Brief in mold case (two infant deaths in mold filled apt – Wasatch Prop Mgmt) citing US Chamber/ACOEM ‘litigation defense report’ to disclaim health effects of indoor mold & limit financial risk for industry

“Changes in construction methods have caused US buildings to become perfect petri dishes for mold and bacteria to flourish when water is added. Instead of warning the public and teaching physicians that the buildings were causing illness; in 2003 the US Chamber of Commerce Institute for Legal Reform, a think-tank, and a workers comp physician trade organization mass marketed an unscientific nonsequitor to the courts to disclaim the adverse health effects to stave off liability for financial stakeholders of moldy buildings. Although publicly exposed many times over the years, the deceit lingers in US courts to this very day.” Sharon Noonan Kramer

Information on Riverstone Residential knowingly exposing tenants to extreme amounts of mold toxins at Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments in Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments managed by Riverstone Residential

Riverstone Residential Litigation

Mold Inspection Reports

Photos of Mold in Apartment

Attorney Malpractice

Posted in Riverstone Residential | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Interesting story for the Louisiana Housing Finance Agency to check out – Concerns about Eastbrook apartments – Wilmington Housing Authority – High levels of mold prompted authority to move residents out

Note – Millions of dollars went to Jefferson Lakes Apartments in Baton Rouge, Louisiana even AFTER mold reports confirmed mold infestation in many apartments.  More information at the end of this article.  katy

Submitted by WWAY on 6 January 2010

In tonight’s Troubleshooters Report, we’re looking into viewer concerns about Eastbrook apartments.

The Wilmington Housing Authority purchased the Eastbrook apartment complex on Princess Place drive back in 2005, to provide affordable housing.

Instead, the apartments sit empty, because environmental experts say they aren’t safe to live in.

High levels of mold at Eastbrook prompted the authority to move residents out. City Councilman Ron Sparks inspected the property for the housing authority, and recommended they buy it.

The authority is suing his engineering firm for negligence, but we’ve now learned that even if the housing authority wins its case, Sparks does not have enough insurance to cover the damages.

“It’s a lot of money that the housing authority has lost,” Gary Shipman said.

Gary Shipman is the attorney representing the housing authority. He says the losses are well over a million dollars and that includes the money the authority borrowed to buy Eastbrook, as well as the loss of rental income.

“Certainly the revenue losses, those losses have had to be sustained or absorbed through other ways. So look, the taxpayers have a legitimate concern about the closure of Eastbrook,” Shipman said.

So how did this happen?

The WHA paid Ronald Sparks engineering firm about $10,000 to inspect the apartments. In his inspection report, Sparks noted moisture problems at Eastbrook, but said his overall opinion was that the property was in good condition, and even went on to recommend the purchase.

The housing authority relied on Sparks’s recommendation when they signed off on the purchase, but it didn’t take long before Eastbrook tenants started complaining about moisture problems.

“On the basis of the inspection that he conducted, he shouldn’t have recommended the purchase.” Shipman added.

Sparks’ contract with the housing authority required that he carry a million dollars worth of liability insurance just in case he missed something, but News Channel 3 has learned that Sparks did not hold up his end of the bargain.

He only has $500,000 worth of coverage, no where near the amount necessary to cover the authority’s losses.

www.wwaytv3.com

Video

Information on Riverstone Residential knowingly exposing tenants to extreme amounts of mold toxins at Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments in Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Toxic Mold Infested Jefferson Lakes Apartments managed by Riverstone Residential

Riverstone Residential Litigation

Mold Inspection Reports

Photos of Mold in Apartment

Attorney Malpractice

A letter to the NAA regarding an email they deleted without reading – please retract your amicus in the Abad case in Arizona – it is fraud by a political action committee, the National Apartment Association, that is furthering another fraud by another political action committee, the US Chamber of Commerce

Political Action Committee – NAA – files Amicus Brief in mold case (two infant deaths in mold filled apt – Wasatch Prop Mgmt) citing US Chamber/ACOEM ‘litigation defense report’ to disclaim health effects of indoor mold & limit financial risk for industry

“Changes in construction methods have caused US buildings to become perfect petri dishes for mold and bacteria to flourish when water is added. Instead of warning the public and teaching physicians that the buildings were causing illness; in 2003 the US Chamber of Commerce Institute for Legal Reform, a think-tank, and a workers comp physician trade organization mass marketed an unscientific nonsequitor to the courts to disclaim the adverse health effects to stave off liability for financial stakeholders of moldy buildings. Although publicly exposed many times over the years, the deceit lingers in US courts to this very day.” Sharon Noonan Kramer

Posted in Environmental Health Threats, Louisiana Housing Finance Agency, Mold and Politics, Mold Litigation, Riverstone Residential, Toxic Mold | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment