Monday, May 17, 2021

Public Info Request To Maryland Attorney General about Ft. Howard Housing Deposits

 I sent this email on 5/17/2021 to: bbond@oag.state.md.us

Public Info Request To Maryland Attorney General about Ft. Howard Housing Deposits

I have proven well that the former lease holder for the Ft. Howard VAMC property - John David Infantino - is an international scam artist. He had signed on to create a "veterans focused" residential, retail, medical and commercial community. After several years of him not doing any work on the project, the VA cancelled the lease. He had taken housing security deposits from people who may or may not have been paid back. A legal order required him to pay the people back their deposits. I am requesting the list of those who were or were not paid back. 

Even if they were, their lives were disturbed by their mistaken beliefs that they would soon be living with other vets on the shores of the Chesapeake Bay and Patapsco River. At least one sold his and his wife's long time home, and then the couple had to temporarily move into their son's garage. John Infantino never had an actual real estate development firm, just the name for it. He rarely had any employees, and only virtual offices where several companies used the same address, but none had their own staff there. Infantino has never completed any real estate development. He is a complete fraud, who fooled the Maryland Attorney General's office and many more people around the globe. 

The public deserves proof that he did or did not pay deposits back to those who had dreamed of living on Ft Howard, but were broken hearted American Citizens when the project never happened. Please provide me with that proof.  

From the Maryland Attorney General's Website:

"AG Gansler: Developer of Unbuilt Retirement

Community for Veterans in Baltimore Co. Must

Reimburse Deposits to Applicants

Baltimore, MD (June 3, 2014)"

From it:

"In order to apply to lease a rental unit, veterans had to submit an application packet and pay a "holder fee" of $500 for a single applicant or $750 for a joint application. A second deposit of either $1,500 or $2,250 was later collected from tenants to secure their residency."

The press release on that page ends with:

"he settlement requires Infantino and his companies to pay restitution to all Bayside at Fort Howard applicants whose money has not yet been returned to them. They must also pay the Consumer Protection Division $2,500 for its costs investigating the matter and a $10,000 penalty, which may be reduced to $5,000 if all terms of the settlement are met."

Thank you

David Robert Crews {a.k.a. ursusdave}

Some of my proof he is a conman:

Sunday, May 16, 2021

Two Hospital Stays as Inpatient But No Effective Acceptance That Anxiety Is Destroying Me

On May 4, 2021 I entered the MedStar Franklin Square Medical Center in Baltimore County, Md., and was discharged on May 6. I went in with severe anxiety, shortness of breath, and longtime arthritic knee pain, plus ankle and foot pain so bad I can barely walk or stand for long. On May 6, around 5:30 am, I had a serious anxiety attack, and it took me approximately 4 minutes to summon help from my bed. I hit the red button, then yelled for help for several minutes, then called the operator downstairs and she called up to the 6th floor nursing station and help came in. One male nurse said, “Just calm down,” and I yelled at him about not being able to it is an anxiety attack. The staff did not like that. I had had several previous attacks, with the worst one occurring in the Greene St Baltimore VA Hospital on April 5, 2019 and it was so bad they had to cut my shirt off during the emergency. “Just calm down” was a lame thing to say about a dangerous anxiety attack. Then they brought in an anxiety med I had never been given before, and it worked. Later that day, I was given another one and my anxiety symptoms subsided. 
I had been telling staff all along it was anxiety. They did a Cat Scan of my abdomen to see why I had been nauseous for two weeks, though I had insisted it was anxiety. I had another Cat Scan of my chest and found out blood clots there had gone. My blood pressure kept skyrocketing. The did an EKG, and a Sonogram of my heart – both of which showed my heart is good, though I was telling most every staff member who worked on me that it was anxiety not physical. There was another big MRI type test of my heart, because the doctors thought they may have seen blockage. They did see a small Kidney Stone, which I have been aware of by the mild pain. 

An Occupational Therapy consult had gone in the day I arrived, and the therapists came up the afternoon before I was discharged. They gave me a walker, and that was about it. I needed, and had expected, to be fully tested in the Occupational Therapy section. The staff refused to allow me to call a taxi to leave, to go back to a motel (I am homeless), and insisted I go by ambulance because they were afraid I would fall. They were that concerned about my leg pains, difficulty breathing and all, but not enough to give a full physical testing. They were angry at me for shouting, when I was deep into the frightening anxiety attack. I feared death. 

I had gone to Franklin Square when a nurse from my VA primary care team called me at the motel to follow up on my previous week’s 4 day inpatient stay at Baltimore’s Greene St VA. I was having a horrible anxiety attack all day, it felt like I was on fire and under water with lead boots on. I had thought about dialing 911, but was so exhausted from shortness of breath and dealing with tortuous leg pains and anxiety, the VA’s refusal to treat me properly for anxiety and leg pains, I did not feel well enough to ride in an ambulance. The VA insisted they call 911 and did. Which may very well have saved my life. 

Anxiety – nearly daily for months - causes my heart to race and my blood pressure to soar. I regularly feel as if fire flows under my skin and shoots out the pores like gas jets. 

That previous week’s VA stay began on April 26, 2021 and ended on April 30. They had performed most of the same 21st Century medical tests as Franklin Square, with me constantly telling the VA staff that anxiety was what was doing the worst to me. They also had Occupational Therapists come to my room and give me some home aids, but they never tested me in their lab. I cannot effectively walk anymore. I have rarely owned a motor vehicle and have had to walk a lot in my life. I’ve backpacked on trails when younger, delivered truckloads of heavy office furniture, worked on a steel mill blast furnace labor gang, etc.. I need wheels under me know to get around now. I nearly collapse when walking a half a block or standing in line in a store. 

Doctors asked me if my heart races, but I did not realize it often did during anxious times until it happened during the VA’s Sonogram of my heart. When the tech told me that my heart was racing, I told her that it was due to thinking about a serious international project I have been working on. I had already told most of the doctors and nurses in both hospitals that the project is what is causing consistent anxiety and bad attacks. The VA gave me an anxiety med that does not take full effect until 4 weeks into taking it. Not much good for now. 

At the VA, my blood pressure stayed high, and they did not want to release me till they figured out why by looking at the test results. They had several meetings among doctors and nurses about it. I told them again it was anxiety. The doctors told me that my heart is good, and the anxiety is not going to kill me within a week of being discharged so they could not keep me as inpatient. 

I use a VA wifi monitored CPAP machine, and they can see by that I am having anxiety disturbed sleep and trouble breathing.

Since back around the year 2000, I have been receiving a VA Non-Service Connected Disability Pension for depression and anxiety. They are service connected, but the VA refuses to grant me that service connection. I have applied several times since the 1970's. My time in the Army was 1969-71.  

I have requested inpatient physical therapy from both the VA and Franklin Square – my Medicare coverage. The Medicare Cigna-Health Spring Preferred HMO social worker called me and, in the conversation, I learned that to get into civilian inpatient physical therapy I need to go right from a hospital. My VA primary care doctor said it was determined I do not require inpatient care. Both determinations made without Occupational Therapy testing me. 

I am trying to get into Perry Point VAMC for inpatient therapy, then into veterans’ housing that is on or next to the VA campus at Perry Point. I am determined to lose enough weight for new knees, and I have a lot of photography and writing I do and need to continue.   

I also need to bring this international project to a completion. It is about the Ft. Howard, Maryland VAMC property sitting and rotting for 19 years, due to an American international conman – John D. Infantino - who was supposed to create a vets’ community on Ft. Howard. He also did the same to vets and active military in Ft. Bliss, Tx. and Ft. Ord, Cal. And more and others all around the globe. He also claims to be employed by the VA, but is not, and to have done many real estate developments all around the world – but has not. He has cost millions of dollars to the US Government and many others. Has caused billions of dollars in lost developments. Probably has scammed millions from investors. I have done over a thousand hours of online research about him, posting online about and writing to media, politicians, the VA, the Maryland Attorney General, and regular citizens about him. He must be stopped and punished, while the VA and others learn how not to be scammed like that. 

I am a victim of John David Infantino’s worldwide scams. Had the United States not signed a lease with John Infantino to develop a veterans’ community on the former Fort Howard VA Hospital grounds, and the federal government had made the agreement with an actual developer, I could have been living a better, healthier life there. I investigated John David too deeply. I learned too much. I realize too intensely the depth, width, height and scope of his massive damages to people and communities worldwide. His guilt rides on my shoulders, crushing the life out of me, until millions of his victims around the world accept that he conned them.    



Sign the Petition To Have The VA Make Something Positive of Their Ft. Howard Property

 After nearly two decades of Maryland's Ft. Howard VAMC property wasting away, it is time to raise hell about it. Beginning with you signing and sharing the petition linked to below. In 2004, Ft Howard was set to be developed into a veterans' residential, retail and medical community. It is supposed to have individual living units, assisted living, and a nursing home, small shops and eateries, plus a VA medical clinic. In 2006, the VA signed a lease to it with (fake) developer John Infantino, and he lost the lease after years of inaction at beginning the development work. Infantino rarely had security there, and the place was vandalized terribly.

Then Tim Munshell took over with a new lease, and he not only is not qualified, he did not take care of the property either, and eight arsons happened destroying the best waterfront old houses and more. He left it that way, though he is legally liable for reconstructing the houses exactly as they were built in the 1900-era. The last lease holder is Sam Himmelrich, who is an accomplished Baltimore developer of old properties, but there is newer zoning that he says limits the number of buildable living units so low he can't make enough off rents.
Government rules are that after three fails at development, the property is taken from the VA and given to the US Government General Services Administration to be disposed of. If Himmelrich goes, we vets loose Ft. Howard. And the area community will not like that.
Fort Howard deserves the support of all Americans. It is a great place for veterans' health care and homes.

People Need to Face It That the Ft. Howard Development is Still Stalled

 Right now! It is time for citizens to make known to the VA, politicians, and media that what is happening to the former VA Hospital on Ft. Howard is a terrible thing. If you don’t, I suspect a lot of people will really regret it. The US Government is going to do something with the property. I had a conversation with the Baltimore VA's R. David Edwards - Chief, Public and Community Relations. Mr. Edwards informed me that the VA gets three chances to have a VA property redeveloped. Then the General Services Administration takes over the property and has a list of three other entities whom the property is offered to. If number one turns it down, number two is offered; then if that is not accepted number three has a shot at it. I cannot recall the names on that list, and if they all turn it down I cannot recall what he said happens next but the land may be sold. Either way, veterans loose it, and the Ft Howard area communities may be negatively impacted by the next use of that federal property.

I do not know if the VA has or has not begun to make moves towards cancelling the current lease to Ft Howard, but they may be. The tricky question I do not have the answer to is whether the current lease holder is still the second one, Tim Munshell, or the current developer, Sam Himmelrich, has a third lease. About a year ago, Mr. Himmelrich and I exchanged some emails, then had a long conversation on the phone. He invited me down to see the work he has accomplished in restoring the Ft. Howard campus. He is a fan of my photography, and I was to take photos and write about it. Sam Himmelrich is the first actual, experienced and successful real estate developer to work on the property. Sam no longer answers my emails.
Due to the first lease holder, John David Infantino, being nothing but a conman who has never done any development, the VA made a serious mistake by signing the lease with him. I say his lease should not count in the "three strikes you’re’ out" regulation that puts the property up for grabs by entities outside the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Tim Munshell has no full project development experience or abilities, but he did study the property and was hired by Himmelrich to do what Tim actually does well on a development project. Which I have said all along Munshell was up to – to be between the VA and a real developer.
If people do not get with this and make some efforts to force the VA into setting this situation right, veterans and the Fort Howard, Chesapeake Terrace, Millers Island, Lodge Forrest, Lodge Farm and Edgemere neighborhoods may very well be grossly, negatively impacted.
The US Government is going to do something with the property.
Do all you can to assure it has a positive outcome.
The photo is of the entrance to the Ft. Howard VA property on Easter Sunday 2021. That yellow gate should be closed and locked. I did not step further towards the tall fence to see if there is a lock on it, because that could get police called for trespassing. It had rained several days prior, so I saw that the washed out tree debris would have shown tire tracks if vehicles had been in there recent to that day. Which means if there are not security guards living in there, then there may not be any security. Himmelrich did have good security posted there.



Court Report from John Infantino Suing the US About the VA Cancelling His Ft. Howard Lease

The first lease holder to the Ft. Howard VAMC property, who had promised to build a veterans community there, consistently claimed that the federal property is exempt from county and state codes, taxes and laws. He claimed that the development was undoable due to Baltimore County, Maryland and the Department of Veterans Affairs insisting he adhere to legal requirements, and that the lease exempted him from those requirements. After he did not perform any work on the project, the VA canceled the lease. Then he sued the United States - YOU - for the lease being cancelled. In that law suit, it is proven that the lease holder does have to adhere to local and state building requirements. This is from that law suit court report:

"Plaintiff (John Infantino) recognizes that the Lease states that FHSHA (Ft. Howard Senior Housing Associates) would comply with "applicable local and State laws, codes and ordinances," but argues that the Federal government's exemption from such laws means that none of the state or local requirements or taxes are "applicable."
"Plaintiff (John Infantino) recognizes that the Lease states that FHSHA (Ft. Howard Senior Housing Associates) would comply with "applicable local and State laws, codes and ordinances," but argues that the Federal government's exemption from such laws means that none of the state or local requirements or taxes are "applicable."
The government argues that it did not breach its duty to cooperate or violate any implied warranties because the VA, in the terms of the Lease, exercised its statutory authority to require such compliance. The government argues that the version of 38 U.S.C. § 8166(a)8 in effect at the time the parties entered into the Lease gave the VA the "discretion" to require a lessee that enters into an EUL to comply with state or local requirements relating to land use, building codes, permits or inspections and thus the VA was entitled to require compliance with state and local laws and regulations. Specifically, the government relies on the second sentence of § 8166(a), contending that it expressly states that any construction, alteration, repair, remodeling, or improvement" is not subject to state or local "land use, building codes, permits, or inspections unless the Secretary provides otherwise." 38 U.S.C. § 8166(a) (emphasis added). The government argues that the Lease by its terms demonstrates that the Secretary of the VA did not exempt FHSHA from complying with state and local laws, instead stating in Articles 4.A.1, 4.A.2, and 10.H.1 that FHSHA is subject to all applicable laws. According to the government, "applicable" laws include the local Baltimore County zoning requirements.
it is clear that these terms unambiguously state that state and local laws are relevant to the project. Plaintiff's contention that "applicable" should be read to mean "none" is simply inconsistent with the plain language of the lease and must be rejected. Accordingly, the VA's later insistence that FHSHA comply with state and local laws was not a breach of the lease, but rather entirely consistent with it.
The Lease expressly required that FHSHA
pay and discharge, . . . prior to delinquency, all taxes, general and special assessments, and other charges of every description that during the term of this Lease may be levied or assessed against the Property and all interests therein and all improvements and other property thereon, whether belonging to [the VA] or the Lessee.
Def.'s App'x 44, Article 17.B. Accordingly, if a state or local government imposed taxes on FHSHA's interest in the property, FHSHA was obligated to pay such taxes and the VA did not have the power under § 8167 to exempt FHSHA from paying state or local taxes."

I Am Not the First To Go Online about John Infantino

I am not the first to go online about John Infantino. Maybe these peoples' words will provide everyone with acceptable witnessing about a tried and true international scammer named John David Infantino. 

The Truth about Federal Development – the ugly truth about a Washington D.C. based real estate development firm… (wordpress.com)

Wednesday, May 12, 2021

I Just Sent This Email About Ft. Howard to the Maryland Attorney General

consumer@oag.state.md.us 

Were American Military Veterans Repaid Deposits Made for Failed Housing at Fort Howard? 

In 2014, your office had a court case against John David Infantino, who's - "veterans focused" - proposed Bayside at Fort Howard residential, retail, commercial and medical development project for the former Ft. Howard VA Hospital property failed to materialize. Your office - as per a phone conversation - swore to me that all the deposits were repaid. I am requesting proof that the monies were returned to the depositors.   

The VA had cancelled their Ft. Howard lease with John Infantino several years prior to the court case. With that court legal determination, you told John David to take down his website for Bayside at Ft. Howard, which he had kept up online to help him convince potential investor/scam victims that he was a success at creating the promised vets' community and was working on other projects worth investing in. He took it down, then a few months later I found it up online again, because I have worked at hundreds of hours of investigating and tracking John D Infantino's online activities. I immediately informed your office that the website was back online, and was told, "Well if it is, he'll never build another thing in Maryland." To which I replied, "He never has and never will build anything anywhere. He is nothing but a conman." And then was told by your staff member that they them self had read some of what I posted online about Infantino, and simply said something to the effect that yeah Infantino is a bad guy.  

As per an article in the East County Times, one vet depositor and his wife had sold their home in expectation of moving to Bayside at Ft. Howard, then when the development only seemed stalled to them, they moved into temporary shelter in their son's garage. We can reasonably surmise that other depositors had their lives upended in similar ways. 

The Ft Howard VAMC development is a 19-year fiasco of a complete failure, which leaves the property rotting, vandalized, 8 arsons occurred destroying millions of dollars of the best, 1900-era, old time craftsmen constructed, large beautiful, Chesapeake Bay/Patapsco River waterfront homes that were originally for Army officers' families circa World War One.

You need to get onboard with those of us who are now fully confronting the issue and demanding that it be resolved by having something positive done with the Ft. Howard VAMC grounds for veterans and the affected communities of the Ft. Howard, Maryland area. 

Please provide us with a list of the Bayside at Ft. Howard depositors who were or were not repaid by John D. Infantino.

Here is the link to my blog post about the court case:

The Way That I See It Is...: Ft. Howard Infantino Lawsuit Won Not Much (davidrobertcrews.blogspot.com)

Here is the link to my blog post about the Bayside at Fort Howard website being reposted after your office thought it was permanently offline:

The Way That I See It Is...: Infantino Maintains Phoney Ft. Howard Webpages (davidrobertcrews.blogspot.com)

 

Photography and Writings by David Robert Crews {a.k.a. ursusdave} 

(former US Army photographer and several times a patient at the former Ft. Howard VAMC Hospital)  

Saturday, May 8, 2021

My Ft. Howard and John Infantino Facebook Message to Congressman Ruppersberger

On December 21, 2013 I sent the following Facebook message to Maryland Congressman Dutch Ruppersberger, about the Ft. Howard VAMC property being leased to conman John Infantino. I have to post it as snipped images, overlapping so that they are clearly one message. This is to show that I have contacted Ruppersberger about the Fort Howard fiasco and John David Infantino's multiple other scams. This for those who question the work I have been doing for years, and doubt it, and for any reporters or investigative law enforcement who should have gone after John Infantino years ago.

The only link in it that still works is for my blog, but you cannot click on the links you'd have to write them in. John David has taken down the Federal Asset Management and Bayside at Ft Howard scam web sites. 

John D. Infantino committed major frauds, against every American Citizen tax payer, veterans, and on and on around the world. He is till at it somewhere. The VA and other con game victims of his need to know and learn not to have such cons by anyone run on them.  






Thursday, March 11, 2021

Construction and Management Problems at 317 E North Ave Baltimore

Due to the poorly executed reconstruction work on the apartment building, along with the landlord's rental agents' deadly disrespect for the tenants, I left my apartment at 317 E. North Ave Apt. 313, Baltimore, Md. after the lease was up. The bathroom had a step-in shower, but when I moved in the drain pipe was not connected and the first shower I took ran water into the apartment below. My unit was not the only one rented out with an unconnected shower drain. After the drain was installed, shower water still ran into the apartment below. I had to duct tape along the base of the shower and the bathroom floor, because it was not sealed by caulking. 

Our elevator was not working for around ten days. The rental agent sent me an email saying it was going to be worked on, but never said how long the elevator would be out. There are plenty of residents who do not use the Internet. Management never posted signs saying it was out of service, so we had to wait at the elevator long enough to give it up and walk the steps. We should have been informed, so we could plan our trips out and stock up with food & other needs so we did not have to go to the store again until the elevator was running. Plus, there's possibilities of resident's relatives or friends offering those residents a temporary place to stay or to run errands for them - those among us residents who no longer can navigate steps very well. 

The landlord had to replace the elevator's mainboard, which required manufacturing. I understand that these things happen, and that mainboards need to be ordered and manufactured, but not telling the residents that the elevator would be out of service for approximately ten days is not right.

That is the noisiest, most shaking elevator I was ever in. It sounds like rusty cables and worn out hydraulics. The craziest thing I've seen the elevator do sometimes is right after the door begins closing the elevator jumps up and down several inches. That is freaky. 

When the elevator was out of service, I had to use the steps in the center of the building, which was very difficult due to painful arthritic knees, degenerative back disease and shortness of breath. I am 70-years-old. So I went to the fire escape stairs at the end of the building - stairs that are not marked as being for fire emergency use only - to see if they were less painful for me to use. They weren't, but when I tried to reenter the hallway, the doors are locked to prevent anyone from getting out of that stairway. I was up and down those stairs finding doors locked. It was so stressful that it had me seriously upset, having difficulty breathing, physically stressed - with increases in bodily pain - to the point I feared a heart attack. 

I had a pocket knife that I used to jimmy a door open. Had there been a fire, as we upper floor residents escaped downstairs and if the fire moved fast into the lower levels of the stairway, preventing us from descending the stairs, we'd be trapped. I see that as a gross violation against fire safety.


For the final several weeks of me living there, the rear entrance door, our most used entrance and exit, has a failing lock system. Sometimes the electric lock held, but other times the lock did not prevent the door being opened. Leaving us residents in danger of becoming victims of crime. 


Our apartment doors only have one lock - a deadbolt. My apartment door is hung so sloppily that you can see through the cracks into the hallway, and it was so high off the floor that I could see the hall light shadows of people walking past or stopping at the door. A 12-year-old kid could easily kick those flimsily locked apartment doors open.

   

The kitchen floor of 313 has a dangerous trip hazard, caused by floor tiles not installed levelly. A person could be tripped and fall right on the stove. I only tripped on it once, when I first wore some shower shoes. I have degenerative back disease that - several decades ago - has been aggravated by a small slip of my boot sole on an ice-cube-amount of water on a motel hallway floor, and that little slip put me back in the VA hospital's physical rehab section. 


There are no handrails on the one step in the apartment and the several steps in the hallway I had to use. The dark stain on my wall was from me placing my forearm against it to use the flat wall like a handrail. 




The hallways are the weirdest I have ever encountered. They slope downwards, and have two humps in them. Could be good fun for toddlers to roll down on in little ridable cars. But the weirdness makes me concerned about other odd construction not visible. The building was originally two sets of townhomes, each set first constructed over a hundred years ago. I suspect that the hallway humps have something to do with connecting the townhomes together. I looked at the front of the building to see if each original living unit was lower or higher then the ones next to them, but they are level by the street view. 




I used a brand new office chair with rollers, and the living room floor pealed up under the wheels. The floor is a fake wood decorated tape wallboard kind of cheap garbage. 

Twenty-some-mile-an-hour winds make the roof rattle, because it isn't nailed down tight. It sounds like 5 to 10 mph stronger winds can break the roof off in pieces and carry it away. There are leaks in the roof that rainwater has come from and damaged the living room ceiling and walls. 

Then I had to keep quiet about all that or fear retribution - from people with 24hr access and keys to my home.

What worries me most is that the visible evidences of lousy reconstruction indicates that there are unseen problems, some of which may be electrical fire hazards. The entire building might collapse.

The resulting anxiety and depression I experienced came close to killing me. Several times, on several different days, I could feel life going out of me. I had to calm myself down and talk myself through those sickening, terrifying feelings of hot vomit flowing all under my skin. I did not have the money to move into a new home, and needed help just taking a few heavy suitcases out of that old apartment and to storage. 

Together, all that probably cut some years off of my natural life expectancy.