Board finds district judge made necessary disclosures about properties in St. Cloud.
A state oversight board
has dismissed a complaint filed against a district judge by St. Cloud
residents who accused her of a conflict of interest in her real estate
dealings.
While
finding no cause to discipline Judge Vicki Landwehr, the board also
cautioned her to disclose whenever someone she does business with
appears in her courtroom. Landwehr and her husband, Don Landwehr, own
about 20 residential properties in the St. Cloud area. Neighbors and
city leaders say some of the properties are unsightly magnets for crime.
More than a dozen
neighbors asked the Minnesota Board on Judicial Standards to investigate
a potential conflict of interest in instances where occupants of houses
co-owned by the judge also stood before her in court.
On Dec.
21, the board sent a letter to one of the complaining neighbors saying
it found “no reasonable cause to believe” the judge’s actions “warranted
discipline.” The board determined that Landwehr made the necessary
disclosures in court about her real estate involvements.
The board also notes that Landwehr “was fully cooperative” with its investigation.
“My goal is always to make whatever disclosures I think are required,” Landwehr said in an interview Monday.
Ongoing concern
The
board’s letter, provided to the Star Tribune by St. Cloud resident Patti
Goke, responds in part to concern over a property at 934 Longview Drive
— the site of multiple police raids this year. The property’s occupant
has also appeared in Landwehr’s courtroom.
Goke, who
lives two doors away on Longview Drive, said the now boarded-up home has
made her block feel unsafe, spurring residents to write the board about
their concerns.
“We were tired of what our block was having to put up with,” Goke said.
The Landwehrs sell many of
these properties through contracts for deed, where tenants make
payments to the couple and only gain ownership once the house is paid
off. It’s a model city officials say they’re now working to better
regulate.
The city
has had two meetings to discuss concerns about Landwehr properties
across St. Cloud. Don Landwehr said he and his wife weren’t informed
about either gathering.
“An attack by ambush is what it turned out to be,” Don Landwehr said Monday.
He said he’s in the process of canceling contracts at two “problem houses” — including the home on Longview Drive.
Once the properties revert to the Landwehrs, they said they plan to address neighbors’ worries and make some needed spruce ups.
“These houses were not
kept in very good repair,” Don Landwehr said, adding that the couple is
willing to do “whatever is necessary to bring them into standards that
comply with the neighborhood.”
In the
meantime, residents like Goke have turned to social media to air their
grievances about the Landwehr properties in two separate St. Cloud
Facebook groups.
More than
100 residents have banded together so far, Goke said. The group has also
written to the Internal Revenue Service and the Minnesota Department of
Revenue requesting investigations into the couple’s business dealings,
Goke said.
Full Article & Source:
Ethics board dismisses complaint, cautions judge about disclosing conflict of interest
Sounds like they went easy on her, as usual.
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