Current:Home > ContactVideo of 73-year-old boarded up inside his apartment sparks investigation -Insightful Finance Hub
Video of 73-year-old boarded up inside his apartment sparks investigation
View
Date:2025-04-15 22:48:40
HARVEY, Ill. (AP) — Rudolph Williams says he was home in a Chicago suburb when he realized the doors and windows to his courtyard-style apartment had been boarded up with plywood, locking him inside.
“I didn’t know exactly what was going on,” the 73-year-old said Monday in describing how he tried to open his blocked door. “What the hell?”
His ordeal — chronicled by his nephew on now-viral videos — has generated a firestorm of criticism about rental conditions at the dilapidated low-income apartment complex in Harvey, Illinois. People are also debating who’s to blame; and Mayor Christopher Clark has promised an investigation.
City officials, residents and the property management company have conflicting accounts about what happened Friday at the 30-unit complex roughly 30 miles (48.28 kilometers) south of Chicago.
It started that afternoon when crews without any logos on their clothing or vehicles started boarding up units. Residents say they weren’t warned and that the workers ignored residents telling them people were still inside. City officials say police were on site earlier in the day and performed well-being checks, but not when units were set to be boarded up. The property managers claim the units were empty before they started boarding up units at the city’s direction.
No injuries were reported.
Genevieve Tyler, who said she was recently laid off from her meat factory job, was home when she heard noises outside and ran for a second door in her apartment looking to escape because she thought it was a break-in. That’s when she said she came upon crews boarding up her windows.
“I feel sick,” she said, adding that she was too scared to return home for two days. “I’m still sad.”
The complex, which is in clear disrepair, has been on the city’s radar for months.
One of the two buildings has no heat, with residents using stoves and space heaters to keep warm. A set of stairs has collapsed and is blocked to pedestrians. There is garbage everywhere: broken furniture, a large dumbbell and liquor bottles.
There have also been numerous safety issues involving drugs and crime. Police were called to the property more than 300 times last year, according to Harvey Police Chief Cameron Biddings.
City officials say the property owners were warned about the unsafe conditions and urged to make changes. The landlords were then notified that people had to evacuate by Oct. 28 and told to let residents know.
However, only some residents say they got the message. Others who were notified say they were skeptical of the documents’ legitimacy. Some got letters on official city letterhead saying they had to leave due to the safety risk, while others received papers from the property managers that said the building would be shut down.
James Williams, Rudolph’s nephew, who lives with him at the property, said a bunch of notices were strewn around the courtyard.
He and other people on site helped free his uncle from the apartment Friday evening, partly by using a drill, he said.
Phone and text messages left Monday for the California-based building owners were not immediately returned. They hired property management company, Chicago Style Management, in November.
Tim Harstead with Chicago Style Management disputed Williams’ account, saying crews found one unauthorized person who left before they started boarding up units.
“A lot of people in that area are squatters and trying to stay there,” he said.
On Monday, Mayor Clark and other city officials toured the complex, which lies off a busy street in the community of 20,000.
In a series of interviews, Clark reluctantly acknowledged that people were still inside their units when the apartments started being shuttered, but he said he wanted to hear directly from residents rather than via social media videos.
The city played no role in boarding up the apartments, he said, pledging that city police would investigate and might turn the matter over to the state’s attorney or Illinois attorney general. Criticism of the city on social media was misdirected, he said.
“It’s horrible,” Clark said. “What’s even more horrible is the fact that they would attribute that to people who are trying to actually help the situation versus the people who actually put them in this situation.”
At least one city official, Alderman Tyrone Rogers, told media outlets over the weekend that residents’ claims were a “total exaggeration.” He did not return messages Monday from The Associated Press.
Some residents, including 34-year-old Loren Johnson, left last month. He said the shutdown notice scared him off as did the broken heating and criminal activity.
“They don’t do anything, but they take full rent,” he said of the landlords.
Roughly half a dozen residents remained on Monday, saying they look out for each other.
Mary Brooks, 66, lives in one of the few apartments that wasn’t boarded up.
She described herself as a cancer survivor with mental health issues who has nowhere else to go. She also said she has tried to reach city officials multiple times about the complex over her nearly four years of living there, a complaint she shared with the mayor when he visited her at home Monday.
“Nobody pays attention to the poor,” she said. “Nobody cares until something happens.”
veryGood! (365)
Related
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Sri Lanka is allowing a Chinese research ship to dock as neighboring India’s security concerns grow
- Actor Cedric Beastie Jones Dead at 46
- Lawsuit accuses city of Minneapolis of inequitable housing code enforcement practices
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Mississippi should set minimum wage higher than federal level, says Democrat running for governor
- Sam Bankman-Fried plans to testify at his New York fraud trial, his lawyer says
- 'A Christmas Story' house sold in Cleveland ahead of film's 40th anniversary. Here's what's next.
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Slovakia swears in a new Cabinet led by a populist ex-premier who opposes support for Ukraine
Ranking
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Police: Squatters in Nashville arrested, say God told them to stay at million-dollar home
- Top Missouri lawmaker repays travel reimbursements wrongly taken from state
- Texas sues Biden administration seeking to stop federal agents from cutting razor wire on border
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- After 4 years, trial begins for captain in California boat fire that killed 34
- Mother leaves her 2 babies inside idling unlocked car while she goes to a bar
- 'No Hard Feelings': Cast, where to watch comedy with Jennifer Lawrence, Andrew Barth Feldman
Recommendation
Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
Nashville police chief’s son, wanted in the shooting of 2 officers, found dead after car chase
A warmer than usual summer blamed for hungry, hungry javelinas ripping through Arizona golf course
Scholastic backtracks, saying it will stop separating diverse books for fairs in 2024
Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
Tom Bergeron will 'never' return to 'DWTS' after 'betrayal' of casting Sean Spicer
Is daylight saving time ending in 2023? What to know about proposed Sunshine Protection Act
U.N. warns Gaza blockade could force it to sharply cut relief operations as bombings rise