Thursday, December 21, 2006

News probe helps put hit on Pinnacle

BY JUAN GONZALEZ DAILY NEWS COLUMNIST


State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, who launched a probe in September into allegations that Pinnacle Group LLC had illegally overcharged many rent-regulated tenants for apartment renovations, has reached a deal with the company, one of the city's biggest owners of rent-stabilized units.

Under the deal, Pinnacle will allow an independent investigator appointed by Spitzer's office to review all rent records for the company's nearly 20,000 rent-regulated units. The company agreed to repay any rent overcharges that the investigator uncovers, according to a source with knowledge of the negotiations.

As part of the agreement, which was still being finalized yesterday, Pinnacle will admit no wrongdoing. In addition, the company has agreed to pay $100,000 to the AG's office for the cost of the investigation, the source said.
The deal comes less than two weeks before Spitzer will leave office and be sworn in as governor.
The AG's probe and separate investigations of Pinnacle by the Manhattan district attorney's office and the state Division of Housing and Community Renewal were all launched after the Daily News revealed in a series of articles this year that Pinnacle had filed more than 5,000 eviction proceedings over the past two years against its tenants - nearly one for every four apartments it owns.
The News investigation also found many cases where Pinnacle had inflated the costs of its repairs for vacant apartments and then doubled or tripled monthly rents far above what rent laws allow.
The company's aggressive tactics spawned widespread opposition and numerous protests during the past year from many of its tenants as well as from political leaders and housing advocates in Harlem, Washington Heights and the Bronx, where the bulk of Pinnacle's housing stock is located.

"We are not in a position to comment on any aspect of the review by the attorney general's office at this time," said a spokesman for Pinnacle last night. "The Pinnacle Group, however, has been cooperative throughout this process."
But some tenant groups who heard of the settlement yesterday called it a slap on the wrist to a huge company.
"This agreement is too nice to Pinnacle," said Luis Manuel Tejada, a spokesman for the Mirabal Sisters Cultural Center in Washington Heights. "You just can't tell them to return rents they've overcharged to tenants without also penalizing them for violating state housing laws."
"It sounds like it's, 'Let's pay it off and let the whole thing go away,'" said Kim Powell, of Buyers and Renters United to Save Harlem. "This agreement does nothing about the massive eviction proceedings or poor management procedures at Pinnacle. It's only a part of the problem being solved." Originally published on December 18, 2006