📄 Extracted Text (1,483 words)
From:
To:
Subject: [EXTERNAL EMAIL) - FW: Fwd:
Date: Thursday, October 8, 2020 1:14:52 PM
From:
Sent: Thursday, October 8, 2020 12:55 PM
To: USAMA-VictimAssistance USAMA)
USACT-CITIZENSCOMPLAINT
Subject: Fwd:
Saudi; Mack; Apollo; Black; PCVST Tenant Association;...
These bidders on the property all have a stake in Ghislaine Maxwell et al's illegal money made
in, on and by StuyTown leaseholders. Included are Saudis, the now subpoenaed USVI AG
Epstein case Apollo / Mack. I am forced to investigate, research and endure continued planted
evidence by parties in the below investments. It is causing me stress, fear, terror. Yesterday's
announcement of Maxwell hiring Stemheim and her history of defending the world's most
dangerous criminals that have ties to the StuyTown deal terrifies me. The 2 documents of
planted evidence has ties to the below parties including Apollo, Leon Black, William Mack.
Please God, please all protect me from this and any and all further planted evidence and the
likes.
Thank you
------- Forwarded message
From:
Date: u, Oct 8, 2020 at 12:52 PM
Sub' •
To:
https://www nvtimes.com/2006/10/04/nyregion/04stuwesant html
More Than 17 Fxperted try
Rid fnr enmplexec - The
New York Times
More than a dozen groups, including one
aligned with the tenants at Stuyvesant
Town and Peter Cooper Village, are
expected to deliver bids in what promises
to be the largest real estate deal in ...
www nytimec aim
3501.537-002
Page 1 of 6
SUBJECT TO PROTECTIVE ORDER PARAGRAPHS 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, and 17
EFTA_00076807
EFTA01250256
SECTIONS
SEARCH
$KIP TO CONTFNTSKIP TO SITE INDEX
NEW YORK
Continue reading the main story
More Than 12 Expected to
Bidfor Complexes
By Charles V. BagI(
)ct. 4, 2006
More than a dozen groups, including one aligned with the tenants at Stuyvesant Town
and Peter Cooper Village, are expected to deliver bids tomorrow to buy the sprawling
complexes for anywhere from $4.3 billion to more than $5 billion in what promises to
be the largest real estate deal in American history.
The opportunity to buy 8o acres and 11O buildings overlooking
the East River has drawn widespread interest from investors. But
the pending sale of this leafy enclave for generations of teachers,
graphic artists, police officers and Con Edison workers has also
become a lightning rod for public anger over skyrocketing
housing prices in recent years, which have put Manhattan
apartments outside the grasp of so many middle-class New
Yorkers.
3501.537-002
Page 2 of 6
SUBJECT TO PROTECTIVE ORDER PARAGRAPHS 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, and 17
EFTA_00076808
EFTA01250257
Metropolitan Life, the largest life insurer in North America, built
the complexes for returning veterans in 1947 and announced
earlier this year that it would auction them off. The
announcement upset many of the 25,000 residents. Nearly three
quarters of the apartments still have regulated rents at roughly
half the market rate. Tenants fear the changes that will come with
a new owner seeking more higher-paying tenants.
The plain, red brick buildings along First Avenue, between 14th and
23rd Streets, are more "meat and potatoes," as one bidder put it,
than gleaming real estate trophies like Rockefeller Center, the
General Motors Building or the Chrysler Building.
But the chance to gain control of such a large block of apartments and a wide swath of
land in an international city of rising rents has many prospective buyers salivating.
The deal is in fact so big that every bidder has had to take on partners.
"It's a one-of-a-kind purchase," said Richard S. LeFrak, chairman
of the Lefrak Organization, which is bidding in partnership with
two financial institutions. "Any transformation is going to occur
over a long period of time."
"It has a very exciting potential," said William L. Mack, a
principal at Apollo Real Estate Advisors, which is bidding in
partnership with ING Clarion Partners, an investment fund.
"These things don't come up very often."
MetLife, which has told potential buyers that it is willing to retain
a stake in the complexes, is hoping to close the deal by Nov. 15, a
quick goal for such a large transaction. The company plans to
review the bids and ask a smaller group to make a second,
noncontingent offer by Oct. 15.
The tenants association at Peter Cooper and Stuyvesant Town is also
putting together a bid of more than $4 billion based on a plan that
3501.537-002
Page 3 of 6
SUBJECT TO PROTECTIVE ORDER PARAGRAPHS 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, and 17
EFTA_00076809
EFTA01250258
involves selling some apartments at market and below-market rates,
while preserving about 2O percent of the units as rentals affordable
to middle-income families. But the offer is dependent on MetLife's
willingness to accept less money from the tenants if bids escalate to
$5 billion and beyond.
"I hope the tenants are able to swing this," said Sonny Fink, a Peter Cooper tenant for
45 years. "We want to buy this thing. It looks very good, if they give us any kind of
break at all."
But other bidders have different goals. The Lefrak Organization
owns about 2O,OOO rent-regulated apartments in New York City.
In recent years, Apollo has been one of the more aggressive
buyers of New York apartments and would double its holdings.
Other probable bidders include Related Companies; Stellar
Management; Vornado Realty Trust, which owns the Bloomberg
Building on the Upper East Side; and Tishman Speyer, which
controls Rockefeller Center. Buyers based in Saudi Arabia, Israel
and Qatar are also in the mix, executives say.
Even as the condominium market has slowed, investors have
increasingly bought pedestrian rental buildings, which are seen
as relatively safe investments with potential windfall profits when
the apartments no longer qualify for rent regulation. It is a long-
term strategy with a small return in the early years, given a high
purchase price, bidders say.
Under rent regulations, an apartment can be decontrolled after it
becomes vacant, or if the rent reaches $2,OOO a month and the
existing tenant's household income rises above $175,000 for two
consecutive years. Owners can also pass on to tenants part of the
cost of capital improvements, pushing rents toward the $2,OOO
level.
In recent years, MetLife has sought to open up apartments by
3501.537-002
Page 4 of 6
SUBJECT TO PROTECTIVE ORDER PARAGRAPHS 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, and 17
EFTA_00076810
EFTA01250259
ousting illegal subtenants and people whose primary residences
are elsewhere. Today, about 27 percent of the 12,232 apartments
rent at market rates. The sale documents anticipate that 600
more units will be decontrolled next year and 1,OOO more in
2008.
But the pending sale has become a political issue. Middle-income
neighborhoods are fast disappearing in Manhattan. Critics
contend that MetLife built Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper
Village with tax breaks and other subsidies for middle-income
residents.
"It's becoming clear that middle-class families can't find a place to
live," said Brad Lander, director of the Pratt Center for Community
Development. "But here MetLife is intent on making billions more
by selling to a buyer who displaces middle-income people with
higher-income people. But it's not in the city's interest to displace
middle-class families."
MetLife executives say they do not have a continuing obligation to provide subsidized
housing. They say the company's 25-year agreement with the city to provide
affordable housing expired in the 1970's.
The Bloomberg administration, which has long trumpeted its
plans to preserve and expand affordable housing for low- and
middle-income families, has been grappling with the pending
sale. Officials say they have talked to bidders, including the
tenants group, and are trying to assess the relatively high costs of
preserving Stuyvesant Town versus the lower cost of building
affordable housing in Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island or the
Bronx.
Some bidders say the city could face a lawsuit if it provides tax
abatements or tax-free bonds exclusively to the tenants.
3501.537-002
Page 5 of 6
SUBJECT TO PROTECTIVE ORDER PARAGRAPHS 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, and 17
EFTA_00076811
EFTA01250260
"We're waiting to see how this unfolds," Deputy Mayor Daniel L.
Doctoroff said.
City Councilman Daniel L. Garodnick, who lives in Peter Cooper
Village and has been promoting a tenant bid, said this was a
"defining moment in city history."
"It's a question of whether we will take a stand in defense of housing
for the middle class," Mr. Garodnick said. "It's very important for the
city's economy that we do so. That's why it's generated so much
interest, not just locally, but nationally. We expect to make a
competitive bid here, one that will allow MetLife to make a profit
and also honor the tradition of affordability in that community."
ADVERTISE".17 '
Continue reading the Tulin story
Site Index
Site Information Navigation
2020 The New York Times Company
;YTCo
;ontaot
York with im
dvertise
Brand Studio
our Ad Choices
privacy Policy
erms of Service
erms of Sale
≥ite Map
Jeip
iithscriptions
3501.537-002
Page 6 of 6
SUBJECT TO PROTECTIVE ORDER PARAGRAPHS 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, and 17
EFTA_00076812
EFTA01250261
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
43231023c37b34069d892f10339b14c3ca24084535e43db6f289cf5fd02e4be0
Bates Number
EFTA01250256
Dataset
DataSet-9
Document Type
document
Pages
6
Comments 0