NRCC - National Republican Congressional Committee

02/07/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 02/07/2024 12:08

ICYMI: Suozzi and The Slumlord

ICYMI: Suozzi and The Slumlord

February 7, 2024

Tom Suozzi has spent years investing alongside New York City's "worst landlord."

In case you missed it…
Dem Running for Santos Seat Appears To Invest With Notorious NYC Slumlord
Washington Free Beacon
Andrew Kerr
02/07/2024

The New York Democrat vying to fill former Rep. George Santos's (R.) seat appears to invest with a firm whose cofounder once led a company labeled the worst landlord in New York City.

Former Rep. Tom Suozzi (D., N.Y.) holds a combined stake of up to $500,000 in two commercial properties with the investment firm HREA NJ NY LLC, according to his latest financial disclosure. The firm shares an address with the similarly named Hildreth Real Estate Advisors, a firm owned by real estate investor David Shorenstein. Shorenstein also cofounded and led Silvershore Properties, which in 2017 racked up a staggering 1,090 housing violations across 19 of its properties in New York City.

Under Shorenstein's tenure, Letitia James, then New York City's public advocate, put Silvershore atop its 2017 "Worst Landlord Watch List." Residents of Silvershore Properties reportedly lived in pest-infested apartments overrun with mold, and went weeks without heating or hot water in the dead of winter. One Silvershore resident toldDNAinfo in 2017 that she had to spend $100 a month on glue traps to stave off a rat infestation in her apartment.


Suozzi's financial disclosure indicates he owns a 3 percent ownership stake in HREA NJ NY LLC. It is unclear whether Shorenstein has any direct involvement with the company, which appears to be an affiliate of his Hildreth Real Estate Advisers. Hildreth also uses the HREA acronym on its website to refer to itself. Neither Suozzi nor a spokesman for Hildreth responded to a Washington Free Beacon inquiry into the relation between the two entities.

Silvershore Properties said in November 2017 that it had done a "tremendous amount of work" on its properties and expected its violations to reduce significantly during subsequent inspections. But months later, in July 2018, the firm sold most of its holdings and shut down its Manhattan headquarters.

Residents accused Silvershore of letting their homes languish in disrepair in an attempt to push them out and replace them with higher-paying residents, Gothamistreported in 2019.



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