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Foreclosure

Monday, January 28, 2013

Five Arrested for Partying in Foreclosed Home

Police are still looking for a sixth suspect who used to live in the home.

Five people are charged with trespassing and fourth-degree burglary after they partied in a foreclosed home on Saturday, Jan. 26. One suspect, a former resident of the home, is still at large, police said Dylan Meksomphone, 20, Diana Do, 19, Julisa Cerna Vera, 20, Jericho Tinio, 20, and a 16-year-old boy entered a vacant home on the unit block of Amy Brent Way in Reisterstown through unknown after a former resident invited them to a party. The former resident invited them to the house, and fled when police arrived at the foreclosed home at 11:30 p.m., according to a police report. Police are in the process of obtaining a warrant for the former resident's arrest, according to Lt. Stephen Doarnberger, assistant commander of the Baltimore …

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John Harris

4:15 pm on Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Was it really necessary to arrest and charge the individuals who were (INVITED) to a party by the former resident with 4th degree burglary and trespassing. It is my speculation that the Invitees knew nothing wrong upon crossing that threshold into the residence as they were invited and on the flip side of the coin, could the police not have erred on the side of giving the young adults a warning, …   more ›

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Adat Chaim Puts Positive Spin on Synagogue Sale

With its building on Cockeys Mill Road in foreclosure, synagogue leaders look toward a new beginning.

Adat Chaim officials reached an agreement with Susquehanna Bank that will allow the sale of the 19-year-old synagogue, which went into foreclosure in March. “The negotiations were a roller coaster at times, but in the end we were able to achieve the goal of allowing the congregation to emerge on a stronger financial foundation for future growth,” Adat Chaim President Arthur Wolf said in a statement. The synagogue defaulted on an $800,000 loan taken out in 2005, The Baltimore Sun reported. Court papers filed in Baltimore County Circuit Court in March said the synagogue owed the bank more than $756,000, The Sun reported. Rabbi David Greenspoon told Patch that having the fiscal responsibilities of the building and its grounds off the …

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