A Florida homeowner
said her former property manager ran her community like a
'dictatorship' for over a decade, while accusing him of
allowing maintenance issues to fester for years.
Michael Christopher Curtis, 38, has now been accused of
stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from three condo
associations in Broward County.
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Police say Curtis has stolen just under $600,000 from the complex's HOA board, allegations he denies |
She claimed members of the HOA fundraised
to build a new gate that was never installed. She also said
complex's clubhouse and outdoor pool fell into disrepair
years ago and remain closed to this day. The pool area
appears to be growing some sort of mildew or mold on the
concrete, pictures shared with the Daily Mail show.
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A view of the outdoor hot tub at the Windmill Lakes Condominium Community in Pembroke Pines on Friday. The surrounding concrete appears to have a growth of a black mildew or mold |
The former board members, one of whom
sold his home at Windmill Lakes in December 2019, signed
sworn statements that they had not signed the checks, police
said.
These checks totaled just over $1 million, money that went
to Curtis's various companies, per the affidavit.
Of that, investigators were able to establish that nearly
$600,000 was definitively fraudulent, said Amanda Conwell,
the public information officer for the Pembroke Pines Police
Department.
Detectives began the multi-year investigation after they
received complaints from Windmill Lakes residents.
Police also found evidence of 'lapsed insurance coverage'
and Curtis allegedly fabricating management fees of $46,000.
This is the most recent criminal case filed against Curtis,
who pleaded not guilty to first degree grand theft and two
counts of criminal use of personal identifiable information.
Prosecutors in Broward County have also charged Curtis in
two separate cases, alleging he has stolen more than
$500,000 from two other condo complexes he managed.
Curtis was arrested and arraigned for these active cases,
which involve insurance settlement money that was supposed
to cover damages caused by Hurricane Irma in 2017.
'This is Mr. Curtis’ third arrest, tied to the same personal
vendettas and the same underlying dispute,' Elias R Hilal,
Curtis's attorney, told the Miami Herald in a statement.
'He unequivocally denies wrongdoing, and we will be
litigating aggressively to defend his name. When the
evidence is laid out, the allegations won’t hold,' Hilal
added.
Hilal did not return a request for comment from the Daily
Mail.
On December 16, 2020, Curtis wrote his company, BDM Property
Management, an $87,500 check from the Colonies II Condo
Association's bank account, according to state
investigators.
Instead of depositing the check into his business bank
account for free, investigators say that he went to a check
cashing establishment and paid a $1,750 fee, something he
allegedly did to 'conceal the transaction.'
Nearly a year before, prosecutors maintain that Curtis
committed a similar act of fraud against Fairways of
Sunrise, allegedly pocketing $439,000 in insurance proceeds
meant to cover Hurricane Irma damage.
In October 2025, a jury sided with Curtis and BDM Property
Management, finding that they did not breach their fiduciary
duty to the HOA for Fairways of Sunrise.
Widespread accusations of misconduct have led to Curtis's
community association manager license to be officially
revoked by the First District Court of Appeal on January 7,
2026.
The equivalent license for BDM Property management was also
revoked, court records show.
This means Curtis cannot legally manage condos, HOAs or any
type of cooperative associations in the state of Florida.
Daily Mail reached out to Mendez for comment.

