Formerly Homeless NYC Man Stole $1.5 Million Home From Elderly Woman: Report

A formally homeless man allegedly tried to upgrade his single-room occupancy, or SRO, New York City lodging for a $1.5 million brownstone by scamming an 84-year-old woman out of her Harlem home. Multiple aliases and a forged city deed were used in the intricate plot, according to court papers, the New York Post reports. Suggested…

A formally homeless man allegedly tried to upgrade his single-room occupancy, or SRO, New York City lodging for a $1.5 million brownstone by scamming an 84-year-old woman out of her Harlem home. Multiple aliases and a forged city deed were used in the intricate plot, according to court papers, the New York Post reports.

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Walter Davis On Building a Black-Owned Bank From Zero to $2 billion
Walter Davis On Building a Black-Owned Bank From Zero to $2 billion

Herny Rothenberg, who uses several aliases, found himself in big trouble after he banged on Jacqueline Hembrickโ€™s door last fall to throw her and her 62-year-old son, Kevin Hembrick, out of their home and they called the police. The New York City Department of Finance is now looking into the alleged fraudster.

โ€œHe got a bunch of alias: Henrique Nixon, Henry Israel, Rothenberg,โ€ a neighbor at the Harlem SRO where he lives told the Post. โ€œHe always carries a briefcase, wears a suit and tie, but he ainโ€™t got sโ€”t going on. We all call him Mr. Wall Street. I know him from the shelter.โ€ย 

According to the Post, Rothenberg transferred the title of the three-story brownstone in 2013, claiming that the property was left to Alexis Stanton, the โ€œsole survivorโ€ of Jacqueline Hembrickโ€™s deceased mother. The Hembricksโ€™ lawyer does not think Alexis Stanton exists and sued to kill the deed transfer, claiming that only Jacqueline and a 90-year-old brother are the immediate survivors.

As part of Rothenbergโ€™s plot to evict the 84-year-old, the Hembricks started getting multiple visits from police responding to emergency calls about a home invasion. The Hembricks had also gotten paperwork from the Department of Finance about incorrect filings in relation to the property. ย 

Such schemes are common, according to a spokeswoman for the cityโ€™s Department of Finance, who said that the department arrested 10 fraudsters like Rothenberg in the past year, the Post reports. The department has also made a number of changes to help prevent such fraud, including โ€œintroducing a bill in the state legislature to better protect homeowners from these criminals,โ€ the Post notes.

Read more of the New York Post.

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