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By Chris Lovett
Special to the Reporter
To judge by sale prices for three-decker
condominiums in Dorchester, the housing slump is
over - at least at a few locations. The prices do
have connections to names that repeatedly turn up
in foreclosure filings, and they stick out like
tree stumps in a flood of declining values, but
that hasn't stopped the flow of credit - whether
from small lenders or high-profile companies such
as JP Morgan Chase.
One example of a unit with a rising price is a
top-floor condominium in a three-decker at 43
Whitfield St, a few blocks west of Codman Square.
After selling for $330,000 in February, 2006, the
unit would be taken by foreclosure. In April of
this year, Fannie Mae let it go for $65,000. Then,
after less than two months and a certain amount of
improvement, there was a new buyer who put up
$339,000, with a 20 percent down payment.
The last transaction in June also stands out as
a turnaround for the seller. This was a company
called SRC Investments, whose president and
treasurer, Sirewl Cox, figured in nine other
transactions that have drawn foreclosure filings
since last September. It was a director of the
company, Lord Allah, who bought Unit 3 at 43
Whitfield St. from Fannie Mae in April. Later the
same month, he bought Unit 1, for $45,000. Each
time, he turned over the property the very same day
to SRC Investments for $100.
Once SRC Investments took title, it received
mortgages for both units from a lender based in
Jamaica Plain, Capital Trust LLC. Though Capital
Trust was lending to a company that had no record
of previous borrowing in Suffolk County, the
mortgage notes - for loans totaling $72,000 - were
signed by Cox.
Attempts to reach Cox at phone numbers in
Easton, Mass., and a broker's office listed in
Dorchester were unsuccessful. Capital Trust has yet
to respond to messages by email and phone asking
how it could give mortgages to someone with a paper
trail showing several recent bad loans.
On its website, Capital Trust says its approach
to lending provides "speed and flexibility that
traditional banking environments cannot provide."
The website also says Capital Trust can "provide
creative financing options for opportunistic real
estate transactions" and "quickly fund loans that
make sense."
But some observers of the real estate market in
Dorchester say what doesn't make sense is the Unit
3 sale price of $339,000. One observer said, even
with "top of the line" renovations, the market
value would only run as high as $300,000.
Another observer familiar with the market said,
"Based on what the current market conditions are, I
won't imagine it would be three-anything."
When the unit sold June 3, the buyer on the deed
was a Christine Hoyte of San Francisco, California.
JP Morgan Chase gave her a mortgage of $271,000, on
condition that she use the condo as a second home.
To complete the transaction, she also gave power of
attorney to a stand-in named Larneshia Bryant,
whose name appears on the mortgage note.
But other documents show Bryant also has
connections to Cox. The two of them were shown as
joint tenants of a condo in another three-decker in
Dorchester, on Roxton Street, where a lender filed
to foreclose on the mortgage in February of this
year. The unit is listed as being owned by Cox and
Larneshia Bryant Alexander.
Over a period of three months earlier this year,
there were foreclosure filings against Bryant on
seven other properties. Two of the properties were
bought from Cox in 2006, less than two months after
he acquired them. Two others, also turned around in
less than two months, were bought from another
seller whose mortgage was signed by Cox with power
of attorney.
Bryant has one other tie to Cox, through a
business entity called Strategy Investments. The
company was organized three years ago, with Cox as
president and director, and Bryant as treasurer and
secretary. The company bought two properties - one
in Dorchester and the other in Roxbury - on which
lenders would later file to foreclose.
Strategy Investments is listed on the directory
of an office building at 40 Court St. for Suite
700. That's also the official address for SRC
Investments.
The notary who stamped the mortgage note for
Unit 3 at 43 Whitefield St., Rebecca Konsevick, was
asked whether Bryant was supposed to represent the
interest of the buyer.
"That was my understanding," said Konsevick.
When told about Bryant's business ties to Cox,
the notary was asked which side Bryant was on when
she signed the mortgage for Hoyte.
Said Konsevick, "I have no idea."
The previous owner who lost all three units to
foreclosure at 43 Whitfield St was Tariq Muhammad.
He bought these units and another in a three-decker
on Wheatland Ave. from Iris and Kelvin Sanders. The
other two units at Wheatland Ave. were bought by
Cox, and both also went down the road to
foreclosure. Over the past three years, lenders
have filed petitions to foreclose on a total of 12
units sold by Iris or Kelvin Sanders - all of them
in Dorchester.
Muhammad also bought a three-decker for
conversion at 310 Fuller St., with the help of a
$120,000 loan from Kelvin Sanders. The house shows
signs of repairs. After selling two units last
year, each with 5 percent down payments for
$355,000, Muhammad sold a third unit in February of
this year for $365,000, with a down payment of 10
percent.
Just down the street, a realtor at Dorchester
Associates, David Cahill, has been working on the
sale of a whole three-decker which has been listed
on the market for $369,021. When asked about the
slightly lower price for a single floor sold in
February - $365,000 - Cahill called the figure
"ridiculous."
"When I see those prices pop up in the public
record, I just shake my head," he said. "It's
unbelievable."
By way of comparison, Cahill noted the
difficulty in selling condos at the new development
right next to Ashmont Station, The Carruth. Based
on that, Cahill says, it would be harder to sell
condos in most other parts of Dorchester,
especially if they're farther away from rapid
transit and commercial centers. The condos at 310
Fuller St. are roughly half way between Ashmont
Station and the commuter rail stop at Morton
Village.
"It's not an area where people are going to go
shopping for condominiums," said Cahill.
But that didn't stop Marcus Emile.
He was the buyer at 310 Fuller St. who paid
$365,000 and signed for a loan of $328,500. The
loan was from Dreamhouse Mortgage Corporation. On
its website the company says, "Our team of
experienced mortgage experts is committed to your
success and will go above and beyond traditional
means to insure your satisfaction."
The unit at Fuller wasn't the first for Emile.
Four weeks earlier, he bought another property, in
the St. Mark's area, a three-decker unit at 15
Santuit St. for $340,000 - from Kelvin Sanders.
The down payment on the unit was 10 percent and the
loan was from Countrywide Bank.
As with previous three-decker acquisitions by
Kelvin and Iris Sanders, there was also a single
buyer who took multiple units. In this case, the
buyer was John Castodio. One deed shows him as
being from Stonington, Connecticut. One of his
mortgages for 15 Santuit St. requires him to use
the unit as a second home. On the other mortgage,
the owner-occupancy requirement has been
waived.
Cahill says the transactions at high prices make
some owners more reluctant to sell at the normal
market rate. And if more of the high-priced units
go into foreclosure, he warns, there will be more
converted three-deckers without active condo owners
associations - which might limit the unit's next
sale to cash-only.
"No bank in their right mind's going to finance
it," he said.
Less than two years ago, some three-decker condo
units in Dorchester, often with freshly-made
improvements, were selling for as much as $435,000.
At least 90 units were sold in conversions - mostly
in Dorchester - involving Michael D. Scott (and
other variants of the name) and his associates or
their business entities. So far, there have been at
least eight foreclosure filings on the properties.
Some of the units have recently been listed for
sale, at prices as low as $174,000, and one unit -
on Lafield St. - sold June 30 for $190,000. Less
than two years earlier, Scott sold the unit to a
buyer from Maryland for $375,000.
Some properties bounce from one foreclosure to
another. This happened at 24 Gayland St.,
Dorchester, a conversion in which Scott figured.
After the first buyer lost unit 2 to foreclosure,
Scott bought the unit and sold it again at a higher
price less than two weeks later, in February of
last year. The new buyer also has mortgage trouble.
A foreclosure petition was filed against her last
month.
There have also been repeat foreclosures among
Cox and his associates. After he lost a property he
originally bought on Claybourne Street with
Jacquelyn Pittman, Cox bought a property that
Pittman lost to foreclosure on Reservation Road in
Hyde Park. That purchase led to another foreclosure
petition, against Cox.
Pittman also lost a property to foreclosure at 2
Rock Ave. in Dorchester. It was purchased in
January of last year by Larneshia Bryant. A
foreclosure petition was filed against Bryant in
March of this year.
Due to an editing error, a section of the
following article - first published in last week's
edition of the Reporter - was inadvertently
missing. The Reporter regrets the error. The story,
printed here in its entirety, is also available
online at our website, dotnews.com. The author,
Chris Lovett, has spent his lengthy career in
journalism covering Dorchester and the city of
Boston. Lovett is the news director of BNN-TV's
Neighborhood Network News. He is a frequent
contributor to the Reporter and also maintains his
own website, civicboston.blogspot.com.
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