Showing posts with label Housing - Landlords. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Housing - Landlords. Show all posts

December 16, 2007

Landlord defies UW, still houses sex offenders

12-15-2007 Washington:

Despite the opposition of Gov. Christine Gregoire and the University of Washington, the doors of Carol Clarke's University District rental properties remain open to convicted sex offenders.

Earlier this year, the UW persuaded Gregoire to order the state Department of Corrections (DOC) to remove convicted sex offenders on probation from Clarke's five rental houses in the densely populated neighborhood north of the campus. DOC had to find new housing for 10 of the 13 convicted offenders who lived in Clark's homes.

DOC still won't allow convicted sex offenders under its community-supervision program, or on probation, to live in Clarke's homes. But that hasn't stopped her from accepting convicted sex offenders who are no longer on probation and thus have no restrictions on where they live.

Clarke is adamant that convicted sex offenders deserve a place to live and said most offenders have been model tenants in the seven years she has rented to them.

She said Gregoire and UW "don't own the property. They act like they do."

"I know how hard these [convicted sex offenders] have fought to become better people. They're trying to do it right."


In the months since UW President Mark Emmert brought his concerns about Clarke's tenants to Gregoire, the 69-year-old landlord has allowed two new convicted sex offenders to move in and is accepting rental agreements from others who are off probation.

Eric Godfrey, UW's vice provost for student life, said the university is still concerned about the high concentration of sex offenders in the area, where some 6,000 students live. Godfrey said he wasn't aware Clark was accepting offenders who are off probation as tenants but admits there is nothing the school can do if they aren't on probation.

"This is the first I have heard of it. We have to have a conversation with DOC," Godfrey said.

Three sex offenders on probation still rent from Clarke, because the DOC couldn't find adequate housing for two of them and the third comes off supervision in the next few weeks, corrections officials said. One of the three is a Level 3 offender, considered to be the state's most dangerous and most likely to reoffend.

Once sex offenders complete probation, they are no longer required to abide by the rules set forth by the DOC but must register their addresses with local law enforcement.

Community-corrections officers, local law enforcement, mental-health-treatment providers and an aide from Metropolitan King County Councilman Larry Gossett's office have spoken to Gregoire's staff to try to get her to change her mind about letting offenders on probation live under Clarke's roofs. But a spokesman for Gregoire's office said the governor's decision stands.

"I thought there was no objective foundation for Dr. Emmert to call the governor to say 'get these folks out of our neighborhood,' " Gossett said Friday. "There are more men who are in the Greek fraternities in this same neighborhood who have been accused of sexual harassment, or alleged date rape, and they're not being put out of their houses."

State Sen. Debbie Regala, D-Tacoma, recently met with university officials to express her disapproval over what she considers a "knee-jerk" reaction. Regala thinks Clarke is a good landlord who "is doing the right think in providing stable housing for sex offenders."

"It is important to recognize that not every sex offender is a predator," she said.

Regala said she suggested to the university that it better educate students about the dangers of being assaulted not by convicted offenders on probation, but by friends and acquaintances.

Seattle police Lt. Clay Monson said he's aware of the UW's demands that all sex offenders be forced from the area, but the department "is not going to do anything special or different" because of it.

Of the 54 residents Clarke has living in her University District homes, 10 are convicted sex offenders. That includes five no longer on probation who have been Clarke's tenants since before Gregoire and the DOC got involved.

Clarke said she carefully reviews each offender's criminal history, mostly renting to pedophiles instead of offenders with a history of crimes against young men or women. The Snohomish woman said she checks references and even talks to the DOC before granting offenders permission to live in her homes.

Corrections officials say they have never heard of a resident in Clarke's University District homes committing a crime against a UW student.

Clarke's house rules are simple: no parties, no drugs, no drunkenness, and tenants must have a job. She encourages offenders — who pay up to $395 for a room and utilities — to go to church.

"These people are so grateful. They will jump all kinds of hoops to stay there," Clarke said. "They are just so good. If I tell them not to stand on the porch and stare at girls, they'll come into the house." ..more.. by Jennifer Sullivan: 206-464-8294 or jensullivan@seattletimes.com

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November 12, 2007

Landlord explains why he rents to sex offenders


11-10-2007 Wisconsin:

BECKER: By renting to the sex offenders, they are actually a better clientele for us and neighborhoods, you might say.

Ron Becker has spent 40 years renting rooms and apartments to all sorts of people. There are good tenants, bad ones and then there are the most controversial ones of all: sex offenders. Like just about everyone who has ever spoken his mind in public about sex offenders, Becker abhors the crime and understands when people consider it unforgivable. But as a property owner renting to tenants as a source of income, he has a view of sex offenders not often aired in this community. “You can be a bad person and be a good tenant,” Becker said this week in an interview with The Freeman.

THE FREEMAN: How many different properties do you own?

RON BECKER: In and around Waukesha, probably about eight. FREEMAN: How long have you been doing that? BECKER: Just about 40 years.

FREEMAN:You mentioned when we set up this interview that sex offenders are only some of the people, through your history of being a property owner, that you have rented to.You’re not just someone who has a special contract with the Department of Corrections?

BECKER: Well, one of the buildings does have a special contract with probation and parole. The other buildings do not.

FREEMAN: Renting properties, that’s just a source of income for you, right?

BECKER: Just like anybody else who rents out properties.

FREEMAN:You mentioned to me (earlier) that you wanted to point out that there are all different kinds of people who rent from you. I was just wondering if you can expand on that. Biography

WHO: Ron Becker, 66, of Waukesha ABOUT: Becker has rented properties in Waukesha for 40 years. He also runs a mortgage business and has been involved in other enterprises through the years, though he says he recently scaled back as he has aged. Becker owns eight properties in Waukesha that he rents. His most well-known property is a rooming house at 319 E. Main St. that is at least partially rented to released sex offenders through a contract with the state Department of Corrections. Becker is clear, though, that his properties are rented to a variety of people, and he is not just a landlord to sex offenders.

FREEMAN: How is that?

BECKER: Before we started renting to sex offenders, we were renting to some people who were much more undesirable, as far as criminal and more undesirable people than should live in Waukesha. As we began to take on some of the sex offenders, the worse element that we would rent to seemed to fall to the wayside.

FREEMAN: Really?

BECKER: That’s correct. Now, if they’re restricting these sex offenders from our buildings, that’s all right. They’re going to move to other parts of the city, but then we’re going to be getting more of that, or probably will accept some of that more undesirable tenant – which we’ll try not to. But we’ll end up getting some of that. Those are the people that wander the streets and may mug somebody on the street. Or if the person’s walking the street, it’s the people we really don’t want here. We’re not the only ones that rent to them, but that’s the element that the city wants to get rid of also. It’s a problem.

FREEMAN: The types of people you mentioned with different criminal backgrounds, the undesirables, as you said?

BECKER: Right, you can’t discriminate and get rid of all of them. I mean, you can turn a lot of them down, but you have to keep your buildings full. You can’t leave the properties empty because somebody’s undesirable. You’re going to rent to people, and the better the tenants you can get, the better it is for you.

Now, sex offenders are better tenants. Their mentality is not better. They’re obviously a sex offender. They’re someone we really don’t care to rent to in the city of Waukesha. They’re there. They’re good tenants with a bad mentality, but they’re not walking the streets like your common criminal that you might see walking downtown because they’re monitored, they’re restricted. They’re in their house, they’re not out on the street.

FREEMAN: When they are on this release and the state is constantly checking up on them, for your purposes as a property owner, that makes them effective and good tenants for you?

BECKER: Well, sure. They’re not allowed to have guests running in and out. They’re now allowed to drink. They’re not allowed to do practically anything except sit in that room. It makes them a good tenant. There has never been a sex offender in the city of Waukesha that has ever reoffended, and there’s probably been a very few in the state.

FREEMAN: Well, that’s not entirely true. I remember there was a guy, Joe Smith, that lived downtown ...

BECKER: It’s not Joe. It’s Dan Smith. I think it’s Daniel Smith. ... Now, wait a minute now, the one police officer at the meeting (Tuesday), I had brought that up, and he agreed with me (that) none of them have reoffended. Some of them have done things, but they haven’t actually reoffended.

FREEMAN: So you acknowledge that they have violated the terms of their probation or release?

BECKER: Yeah, almost all of them violate the terms of their release, but it’s not through reoffending as a sex crime. It might be for having a beer, or it might be for having an adult woman in his room, which he’s not allowed to have. It might be for a lot of small, incidental things he’s not supposed to do. They bring them in for a lie detector test and they ask him if he’s done this or looked at pornography or had a girl in his room or if he’s had a beer. And he answers these questions and if it comes up positive on the lie detector test, he goes back to jail.

FREEMAN: I just wanted to make that clear because ...

BECKER: No, no, no ... almost all of them, it seems, go back to jail when they’re on early release one, two, three, four times.

FREEMAN: You mentioned one of your properties (has) a contract with the Department of Corrections.

BECKER: Yes.

FREEMAN: Is that the one at 319 E. Main St.?

BECKER: Yes.

FREEMAN: I wanted to ask you how that came about.

BECKER: First they contacted me to rent to sex offenders and I said I wouldn’t rent to sex offenders. Then they asked me down to their office and I agreed, and I went down and after they got through giving me the pertinent information on why I should rent to them, I felt I was doing a service to the community by renting to them. Because if they cannot find a place for these guys to live and they do serve their time, they can get a writ of habeas corpus and they can get released, and if they don’t have a place to live, they can’t monitor them. So now they’re out on the street. They’re much more dangerous out on the street, not being monitored. I figured I’m doing some sort of a service to house them, keep them off the streets.

FREEMAN: How long ago ...

BECKER: That’s how it started out. It was four or five years ago.

FREEMAN: With that Main Street property?

BECKER: Right.

FREEMAN: I was curious if you’ve ever had second thoughts about that. I don’t know if you’ve seen some of the comments in the paper, but it seems, of late, in the last several months people have gotten really worked up about it. And, obviously, they passed a law this week.

BECKER: I’m not concerned about it the smallest little bit. The reason for it is, there was a news conference in front of our building, the neighbor that lives right next door to 319 (E. Main St.) was complaining or whatever, and they had a news conference there and she was making a big thing of it. There were ... 50 people outside and there was a big thing in the paper, and she’s talking about sex offenders in our building, and about two weeks later she has one of them in her house, playing cards with her, associating with her, children and everything.

FREEMAN: When did this happen?

BECKER: Oh, this happened a couple of years ago. She was looking for the notoriety, and here she is mingling with the sex offenders, playing cards with them. It’s amazing. I couldn’t believe it. The one that cried the loudest was the one that associated with the sex offenders the most.

FREEMAN: What about your interactions with them?

BECKER: Oh, I have interactions all the time.

FREEMAN: You don’t hesitate when you hear they’re coming from the state. They pay their rent?

BECKER: They pay their rent better than anybody. They’re hard workers. Sex offenders, basically, in all respects are good people. They pay good. They’re neat, they’re clean. Everything about them is good, except for the part of their brain or wherever it is where the mentality is to do what they do.

FREEMAN: But a lot of people think that mentality is unforgivable.

BECKER: Oh yeah, it sure is. It sure is, there’s no question about it. But you have to remember this, too, most sex offenders – I don’t know what percentage but it’s probably 95 percent – only offend on people they know. The family member, 90 percent of them, that’s what it is. So when they’re out on the street, the people in Waukesha complaining about them, they’re complaining about nothing. There’s nothing to complain about.

FREEMAN: You were there (Tuesday) at the council meeting, right?

BECKER: Yes.

FREEMAN: When I read (about it), there was a mention at the end that one of the council members invited some state legislators to come down and explore why Waukesha has so many sex offenders.

BECKER: I saw that. You know why there’s a lot of them in Waukesha?

FREEMAN: Why is that?

BECKER: Because all their services are here. Probation and parole has their office here. They have to go to that office weekly, sometimes biweekly. I think some of them have to (go) up there every two days to meet with their probation officers. They have meetings for – what do they call that? – for the rehabilitation, counseling. They have that in Waukesha. They don’t have it in Delafield and Oconomowoc. They have to have it some place, and this is the county seat. This is where the state office building is down here in Waukesha County. This is the city that has some rooming houses, it has some low-income, it has affordable housing for them. Most all of them are not high paid.

FREEMAN: I’d imagine it’s difficult to get a high-paying job as a sex offender.

BECKER: Right. If they had made rules stricter (Tuesday), like a 1,000 feet or 1,500 feet, these guys would have no place to live. How are they going to come to their meetings? That’s why they force them underground, and then they don’t have any registration. Now, they don’t know where they live. None of the neighbors know whether they’re living next to them or not. It’s far better to know where they’re living, even if they’re living next door to you. ... If you know the facts about them, that they haven’t reoffended, you can’t find one that reoffended. They usually only interact with people they know. There’s very few of them that lure kids into their home. It’s a very rare thing. Basically, the sex offenders are not really that much of a threat to the neighbors.

FREEMAN: Because you know who they are?

BECKER: If you know the statistics, all the statistics on them, they’re not really the threat that people are making them out to be. The people that are the real threat to the neighbors and the community are the criminals walking the street that are coming out of Milwaukee, coming out of those bad neighborhoods in Milwaukee, walking the streets.

FREEMAN: These are the people you mentioned, the previous tenants?

BECKER: Two of them tried to rob my daughter and grandkids. A sex offender has never tried to do that. You’ve got some real bad elements coming into Waukesha here. They’re trying to make downtown nice. Well, they’re never going to do it with those types of people walking the streets and loitering downtown and causing problems. I see it every day.

..more.. by James Kogutkiewicz

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Sex Offender Plan Irks Landlord


10-4-2007 Wisconsin:

WAUKESHA -- Ron Becker, a local lord of low-income housing, isn't quite sure how he'll respond if laws are enacted here that tightly limit where known sex offenders can live.

Becker said Wednesday that he might complain to the American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin about the city violating the rights of sex offenders.

Or, Becker said, he may do something more audacious, maybe spray paint "sex offender" repeatedly on a van and drive it up and down W. Main St. while shouting through a loudspeaker his displeasure with the new law.

"Over the years, I got a reputation that I could be a time bomb ready to go off," Becker said. "When I was younger, I did things like that to make a point. Now that I'm 66 . . . the ACLU might get a call."

Becker watched silently as the Common Council late Tuesday directed City Attorney Curt Meitz to draft a sex offender ordinance. Aldermen are expected to fill in the measure with details about where sex offenders can live, possibly at the first November meeting of the Ordinance and License Committee.

Many blame Becker for concentrating sex offenders who are fresh out of prison in Waukesha, an accusation of which he is well aware.The state Department of Corrections, which works with Becker and several other landlords to find housing for the sex offenders it supervises, reports that this week, 357 registered sex offenders reside in Waukesha County and about 186 are in Waukesha. In the city, 97 are under state supervision. In the county, 138 are under supervision.

Many were calling Waukesha a "dumping ground" for sex offenders, but the tolerance level hit a tipping point when the state placed sexual predator Dennis Marth into a single-family home along well-kept Buena Vista Ave.

Ald. Randy Radish, who serves downtown and its bordering neighborhoods, led the charge to quickly place controls on where sex offenders could live, which meant reigning in Becker and others.

Taxpayer rent subsidies

The Department of Corrections reported that over a six-month period ending Jan. 31, it paid Becker $14,933 in rent subsidies to house released prisoners who included sex offenders.

Ald. Carrol Waldenberger, who heads the Ordinance and License Committee, said the city must find a way to stop the sale of undervalued properties to those who want to create sex offender housing.

Two property firms that bear Becker's name hold nine residential buildings, City Hall records say. Another firm that Becker said he has a financial interest in owns the Buena Vista Ave. and two other Waukesha properties.

Becker said he has sold off most of his holdings, except for the Waukesha House on W. Main St., to land contracts in which he holds the mortgages.

If the city's passes a sex offender ordinance, it will one day regret the move, he said.

Looking to others

Waldenberger has asked aldermen to look at Franklin and Grafton sex offender ordinances for guidance. Those laws prohibit sex offenders from living within 500 to 1,000 feet of each other to prevent concentrations that can hurt the property values.

Regulations also can prevent more than one sex offender from living in one residential property. That measure takes away the financial incentive of having multiple offenders in rooming houses and homes.

More restrictive measures include prohibiting property owners from renting to sex offenders who are under state supervision programs and not allowing registered sex offenders who are not from Waukesha to set up housekeeping here.

"Do you think they can get away with that?" Becker asked about the proposed restrictions. "Are they (aldermen) looking at the disadvantages?"

Confining the concentration of sex offenders to two or three neighborhoods avoids placing them into 15 or more neighborhoods, he said.

Violating the civil rights of sex offenders will bring the ACLU into the game, and "make the ground shudder under these municipalities' feet," Becker warned.

ACLU of Wisconsin Executive Director Chris Ahmuty could not be reached for comment. ..more.. by Darryl Enriquez, The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (Wisconsin)

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