The $20 million scam
Months after Fine and Deo, acting on
behalf of MTCC #710, commenced a
lawsuit against Channel for fraud, and six weeks after Manzoor Khan and
Channel received a raving review by a columnist in the Toronto Star
detailing what a great job Channel does in obtaining loans for troubled
condos, Khan's massive condo frauds became national news.
Toronto
condo owners allege massive fraud
Amber Hildebrandt, CBC News
Posted: 15 September 2011
Hundreds of condominium owners across Toronto are reeling in the wake
of an alleged fraud involving millions of dollars that could affect
their properties.
Manzoor Moorshed Khan is alleged to be the mastermind of a fraud
related to condominium loan documents.
In a statement of claim they say Manzoor Moorshed Khan, director of
Channel Property Management, was the mastermind of the alleged fraud
that included falsifying documents to obtain loans in a condo's name
and rigging tender processes to funnel contracts to companies he
directed.
In his statement of defence, Khan denied all allegations. CBC News
could not reach Khan or anyone at Channel Property.
Toronto police's financial crimes unit is investigating the
allegations, but wouldn't confirm rumours that Khan has fled the
country.
The lawsuit filed by the owners of 25 Grenville Street, a 200-unit
downtown condo, alleges employees of Channel Property falsified papers
by pretending to be condo board members to obtain a loan worth $3.1
million and then absconded with the money.
A lender who provided one of the loans, Equitable Trust Company, issued
a press release saying it suspects fraud in at least four loans from
its company, worth $14 million. "The amount of the total loss, if any,
cannot be determined at this time," the company said.
But while experts say the owners of 25 Grenville may not be directly on
the hook for the fraudulent loans signed in their name, another Toronto
condo is already bearing the brunt of alleged misappropriations.
Margaret Buczko lives at 236 Albion Road, a 250-unit condominium in
Etobicoke home largely to blue-collar workers. Khan’s company, Channel
Property, began managing the condo in May 2007.
Since then, Buczko says the unit owners have been left footing the bill
for a multimillion-dollar loan for renovations that were improperly
done and now must be fixed.
Maintenance fees have increased from $340 to $780 a month, extra costs
which Buczko, who is on disability, is struggling to pay.
“I'm 52 years old. My husband is 58. And it’s like our life is in
ruins,” said Buczko. “We work hard and you know we were thinking to
have some security for retirement. Now, nothing.”
The value of her property has also plummeted, says Buczko.
“Eighteen years ago I paid $152,000 for my condo and now it’s $70,000.
Nobody wants to buy even at that price because maintenance fees are so
high.”
Now, Buczko says unit owners have been told they may not be able to
recover the money because Khan may have fled the country — and his
alleged fraud was more intricate and indirect than falsifying loan
documents.
A lawsuit filed by the owners claims that Khan directed five other
companies that would bid for and win contracts with condos Channel
Property managed. Those companies then allegedly subcontracted out the
work and overcharged the condos.
The companies listed in the lawsuit include Canali Engineering Group,
Mountview Canadian Enterprise, Lakewood Contracting, Reliance Electric
Services, and PMP Canada.
Industry experts say Ontario’s decade-old Condominium Act needs to be
changed to better protect owners in a burgeoning condo market.
Lessons to be
learnt?
On her legal firm's blog, Condocentric: Property Management Fraud,
Patricia E. Elia writes that fraud is nothing new and she lists the
lessons that should be learned from the Manzoor Khan scandal.
I would add that you should be weary of any property manager promising
to work miracles even if it is published by a lawyer in a newspaper
column.
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