Real Estate
Crown Heights Landlord Among Worst For Eviction, Data Shows
Ebbets Field landlord Shalom Drizin was name among the top five worst landlords for evictions in 2018.

FLATBUSH, BROOKLYN — A Crown Heights landlord was named one of Brooklyn's worst when it came to evictions in 2018, according to new data released Monday.
Shalom Drizin of Fieldbridge Associate, which runs the Ebbets Field development at Bedford Avenue, was named the second worst evictor by tenants rights activists from The RTCNYC Coalition and JustFix.nyc. The groups launched the Worst Evictors NYC map Monday to help inform New Yorkers about the people who own their homes and their rights as tenants, according to a press release.
In the list of Brooklyn's top five worst evictors, which are ranked on the new website, Drizin was beaten only by The Pinnacle Group, which the New York Times reported filed 5,000 eviction notices in less than two years.
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Drizin evicted 16 families in 2018 from the Ebbets Field Housing Development, where tenants report dangerous conditions going unfixed, frequent fires and possibly illegal rent hikes.
But Pinnacle took top prize with 27 families evicted in Flatbush, Prospect-Lefferts Gardens and Crown Heights, according to the map. Their tactics spurred an Attorney General's investigation in 2006 and a 2008 city law allowing tenants to sue for harassment, according to the Times report.
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Jacob and Naftali Hager, with property in Brooklyn, Queens and The Bronx, evicted 11 families, three from just one building at 100 East 21st St. in Flatbush.
Moshe Piller — who owns several Brooklyn buildings as well as the development where two babies were killed in 2016 when a faulty radiator sent steam pouring into their home — evicted eight families in 2018, according to the map.
And Flatbush landlord Michael Niamonitakis, seventh on the 2016 list of New York City's worst landlords, also evicted eight families, advocates said.
Meridian Properties, Niamonitakis' realty company, was subject to a lawsuit in 2018 after a 58-year-old man froze to death in his Crown Heights apartment, where tenants frequently complained about a lack of heat.
Piller was the target of the Anti-Eviction Mapping Project's public demonstration outside Brooklyn Housing Court Monday morning. Public Advocate Jumaane Williams joined the group to call out bad actors who rely on mass evictions to flip increasingly valuable Brooklyn property.
Williams championed the recently passed Right to Counsel law, which mandates tenants be provided attorneys in housing court, as a possible means of curbing the trend.
"This is our time to make sure that we not only strengthen rent regulation but expand it to many people with no protections at all," Williams stated. "People are waiting for action."
New Yorkers curious about the eviction practices of their own home owners can use the Who Owns What tool to track evictions in multiple buildings owned by the same landlord.
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