Retiree Jesus
Rodriguez was on the verge of losing his home to foreclosure
in January.
After missing maintenance fees and six $307 monthly payments
for a special assessment at the Star Lakes condo complex in
north Miami-Dade County, he pleaded for a payment plan. At
first, he said association leaders seemed amenable to the
idea. But then a lien popped up in Rodriguez’s mailbox,
forcing him into the foreclosure process.
The 75-year-old felt that the board was trying to seize his
unit.
“They knew I had no mortgage,” he said, adding that a lender
would have first priority in a foreclosure. “When you are on
your own, it’s easy for them to target you and take your
property.”
Rodriguez is among the dozens of owners who suspect fraud by
leadership of Star Lakes, a 55-and-older complex on the
northeast corner of Northeast 187th Street and Northeast
Second Avenue, between Miami Gardens and North Miami Beach.
The buildings were completed between 1965 and 1969.
In lawsuits filed against the association and in interviews
with The Real Deal, unit owners claim association leadership
illegally imposed $3 million in special assessments, but
failed to make promised and required repairs. Unit owners
suspect some former and current association leaders of a
self-enrichment scheme, as many of the 17 buildings remain
in poor condition, residents say.
“Does this look like $3 million has been spent?” unit owner
Kareen LeCorps said, gesturing toward some of the
pastel-colored low-rise buildings.
Star Lakes is not an anomaly. Across South Florida,
residents who live in association-governed communities have
been sounding the alarm about allegedly nefarious dealings
by board members. This has intensified following the
uncovering of major fraud at the Hammocks, the largest
homeowners association in South Florida.
At some properties, residents have claimed they live under a
tyrannical-type governance, riddled with opaque financial
records. Those who speak out face retaliation.
Some Star Lakes leaders deny the allegations. They counter
that the complex, like many others, is dealing with years of
deferred repairs and skyrocketing insurance premiums.
Following the deadly Surfside condo collapse two years ago,
the state is requiring that associations fully fund their
financial reserves and has tightened regulations for
repairs. The latter has prompted the need for assessments
that many owners can’t afford.
At Star Lakes, more than 200 unit owners, or about half, are
delinquent on their dues, while roughly half the buildings
are past due on the legally required recertification, said
board president Francis Jacob.
The buildings are up to 58 years old. Miami-Dade requires
condo buildings to be recertified when they turn 40 years
old, and every decade afterwards.
“A lot of the [allegations] that are being thrown around are
very, very serious allegations by people who don’t know what
is going on,” he said. “Most of the people who are
dissatisfied are the ones that are not paying.”
A study completed last year showed the association needs $10
million to fully fund its reserves to complete needed
repairs.
Board members were poised to take out a line of credit to
cover the costs at a 9.5 percent annual interest rate. But
this month the financier, like many others before it,
decided against lending to Star Lakes, according to Beshoy
Rizk, the association’s attorney.
Now, the complex needs to determine how it will raise the
funds to make the required repairs, or risk being deemed
unsafe by the county.
Unit owners, who say they can’t afford a new assessment,
aren’t sold on the $10 million amount. They fear it’s a ploy
by board members to force residents into foreclosure and
embark on bulk unit buyouts, residents and their attorneys
allege.
James Walter, an attorney for some of the owners, points to
the property’s value as a redevelopment.
“My guess is these people [said] ‘Let’s see if we can
purchase enough units to try to decertify the condominium'”
Walter said. “Everything they have done to date has been
questionable.”
All roads start at Building 12
In December 2017, a fire broke out at Building 12, forcing
residents to move out.
The association collected $1.5 million in insurance funds
and imposed a $700,000 levy, as part of a bigger $1.3
million assessment for repairs in 2020, records show.
No one in the 24-unit building has been able to move back
in.
“I’ve been telling my friends. ‘I’ll never get back in
there,’” said unit owner Lee Blount. The board and property
manager “just keep making excuses.”
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Construction didn’t start until late 2020, despite the
association previously presenting invoices for repairs,
according to lawsuits filed by residents. Some owners claim
the association comes up with repair costs without showing
proof it bid out the work. The board imposed the assessment
on all units, even though each building should carry its own
costs, the suits claim.
In court filings, the association countered that it has
completed most of Building 12’s repairs. It said it can
charge all unit owners to fix one building because it
operates as a unified association.
Walter said the association only started to begin repairs
after he filed to amend a lawsuit that residents previously
lost. “The board and the property manager knew they were
doing things incorrectly and then tried to hide it,” he
said.
Denise Brooks, Star Lakes’ property manager since 2016,
disputes many of the owners’ allegations.
“If you look at it from an outside point of view and be
impartial, you’ll understand that this is a very litigious
community,” Brooks said, deferring a number of questions to
the association board’s attorney, who didn’t respond to a
request for comment.
Brooks denied that she does not provide requested records,
and blamed residents for being rude.
“The only time I will not respond is when you get derogatory
and call me names,” she said. “I’m not paid for people to be
disrespectful.”
Rizk, the association’s attorney, who has been representing
the association on day-to-day matters since July, said
Building 12’s repairs were held up because of slow insurance
disbursements and construction delays that are now common.
TRD reached out to many of the board members who led the
association when the assessment was imposed in 2020. None
returned requests for comment.
Christopher Saia, who served on the board in 2018, said the
association had offers to repair Building 12 from two
reputable contractors, but other board members rejected the
proposals.
While he declined to disclose who stood in the way, he
described an issue that isn’t as clear-cut as unit owners
pitted against board members. Some board members who shot
down contractor approvals were cronies of the very residents
now alleging fraud, Saia claimed.
“That place is so screwed up,” Saia said. “The real answer
is [there is] a lot of deferred maintenance, and the folks
can’t afford to take care of it. That place is a disaster …
absolute disaster.”
Murky shell game?
A recent revelation that’s at the crux of residents’
allegations of a self-enrichment scheme is that some former
and current board members own multiple units at Star Lakes.
Purchasing a second or additional units as an investment is
a violation of the condo declaration, said Walter, the
attorney for some unit owners.
Entities tied to ex-board president Jonathan Rothman bought
seven condos in 2019 and 2021, records show. Other entities
tied to former board secretary Raymond Aleman bought four
condos from 2018 to last year.
In some cases, entities tied to Rothman, Aleman and their
family members bought units, according to records. An
affiliate managed by Rothman and Aleman owns a unit in
Building 12 that the company purchased in 2019.
Some condos traded at a gain, records show: Andover Property
Group, tied to Rothman’s wife, Marina Mallmann, paid $46,500
for a unit in 2018, and later transferred it to a company
led by Aleman. In May, that entity sold the unit for $90,000
— nearly double the previous purchase price.
“Those entities are constantly changing and shifting,”
Walter said, calling it “just another version of a shell
game.”
Rothman, Aleman and Mallmann didn’t return requests for
comment.
Bad guys or amateurs
Attorney Faudlin Pierre, who has represented owners who sued
Star Lakes, called the “years and years of mismanagement” a
“rare case.”
Yet, he stopped short of saying it was intentional. Instead,
Pierre said it could be an issue common among condo
associations where volunteer board members are simply in
over their heads. Many serving on boards don’t have the
relevant experience needed and at the same time are dealing
with backlash from residents.
“I think you can plead ignorance for a certain amount of
time,” Pierre said. “But I am not confident enough to say
there’s been criminal activity.”
In the meantime, Rodriguez, the 75-year-old owner who owed
the association months of fees, considers himself fortunate
because he was able to borrow $10,000 from his brother to
stave off the foreclosure judgment.
“I spent a year without cable and Internet to pay for that,”
he said. “It’s really tough.”