This bright, sunny rarely available corner-unit dog-friendly condo with stunning panoramic views of the city skyline, surrounding neighborhoods, Wrigley Field and Lake Michigan.
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Lakeview Dog-friendly Chicago Condo
This bright, sunny rarely available corner-unit dog-friendly condo with stunning panoramic views of the city skyline, surrounding neighborhoods, Wrigley Field and Lake Michigan.
Tuesday, December 08, 2009
Logan Square Condos are at the station...Logan Station 2
We have immediate delivery condos and 60 day "build to suit" homes available in the Logan Station Phase II development just off of Logan Blvd in Logan Square.
A huge improvement over Phase 1 if you've been there. Have you seen the activity and movement of your buyer clients pushing towards Logan Square? Why? More bang for your buck and a great walking neighborhood [Walk Score: 95/100 "Walkers' Paradise"]. If not, come discover the buzz and see for yourself.
We are ready to deliver Jumbo 2bed/2 1/2 bath duplex, 3 bedroom/2 1/2 bath duplex and 3 bedroom + den/3 1/2 bath triplex condo options starting at $359,000 and ranging from 1,400sf to over 2,600sf! Attached or detached garage and outdoor parking options available too.
Live/work clients? Multi-unit clients? You HAVE to contact me! I've got some amazing and unique options for your clients too!
I encourage you to set up an appointment to see these tastefully done, quality homes just off the boulevard on the quiet residential Willetts Court in Logan Square or for a preview go to www.LoganStation2.com .
Model now open and we are taking appointments. More to come...
For more information contact Jim Gramata, from @properties - Bucktown, the exclusive marketing broker for the developer.
Saturday, September 26, 2009
West Loop Dog Friendly Condo with Dog Run!!!

Absolutely stunning new construction residence in Chicago’s West Loop neighborhood. Retail at street level and restaurants, nightlife, shopping, coffee shops, bars, theaters, expressway and more all nearby. “Very Walkable” Walk Score of 89/100. Visit www.WestLoopChicagoCondos.com
Bright, contemporary and open west facing residence with soaring 10-foot ceilings and floor to ceiling windows. Large functional kitchen with eat-in island and large open living area with adjoining dining area for guests with adjoining powder room. In addition, this residence comes with an office/den with floor to ceiling windows and full west exposure with storage closet. Large private master retreat with walk-in closet and beautiful limestone tile and large vanity. Private open-air balcony looking out over the beautifully landscaped 4th floor common open air plaza with pavers, community grills, benches and separate dog run area (An Official Chicago DogPads.net Dog-friendly Home). One heated indoor parking is available.
Sky Cub party room on the 10th floor with an indoor/outdoor recreation area including an open air terrace with gas grills and picnic areas, sun deck with lounge furniture and a large party room with a wet bar, rec room, pool table and large screen tv available for private functions.
Friday, June 19, 2009
Bucktown Dog-friendly Condo For Sale

Bucktown Featured Property
Welcome to affordable living in Bucktown !
Absolutely stunning recently renovated vintage 2BR condo just off of Armitage and west of Damen in Bucktown at 2017 North Leavitt Street (directions). Great Bucktown residence with an unbeatable location at this price. Walkers’ Paradise Walk Score: 91/100.
Spacious, sunny and bright contemporary feel with vintage details. Cherry kitchen cabinets with granite countertops with peninsula with bar stool seating. In-unit laundry and extra storage too. Clean and move-in condition. A true must see. Street parking a breeze or rental parking nearby. Low taxes and assessments are only $201 per month. Click here for more photos.
Call Jim at 773.252.HOME, send a text or email him at rememberjim@kw.com today to make appointment or for more details on this great Bucktown opportunity. Visit www.bucktownchicagocondos.com for more information about this featured Chicago property
Property Features include:
* Renovated residence in 2003
* 2 Bedrooms (split layout)
* 1 Full Bathroom with linen closet
* South-facing into courtyard
* Granite countertops & Cherry cabinets
* Central heat & air conditioning
* Rear deck/stairs off kitchen
* In-unit washer and dryer
* HD CATV included in assessment
* Ample street parking or rental options
* Private Storage and bike room
* Western Blue line “L” stop
* Convenient to shops & restaurants
* Walk Score: 91/100 Walkers Paradise!
* DogPads.net Dog-friendly Condo
A Registered DogPads.net Dog Friendly Condo

Thursday, April 23, 2009
Featured Lakeview Chicago Condo
Absolutely stunning recently renovated 2BR condo just off of Broadway in East Lakeview at 634 W Roscoe 3S. LOCATION LOCATION LOCATION, CONDITION CONDITION CONDITION, PRICE PRICE PRICE. It's got it all. Great starter residence with an unbeatable location at this price. A Walkers’ Paradise Walk Score of 95/100. Renovated in 2001 with newer kitchen with granite countertops and a outdoor deck for summer fun. In-unit laundry and extra storage too. Clean and move-in condition. A true must see. Permit street parking a breeze or I have a rental garage option within 50 yards of this home. Low taxes and assessments are only $153 per month. DogPads.net Chicago Dog-friendly featured condo.
Pictures here
Directions here
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY 4-25 from 11am to 1pm. Join us!
Visit www.lakeviewchicagocondos.com for more information about this featured Chicago property
Call Jim at 773.252.HOME or send him a text or email today to make appointment or for more details on this great Bucktown opportunity.
Property features:
•2 Bedrooms
• 1 Full Bathroom
• Renovated residence in 2001
• Sunny top floor unit
• Granite countertops
• Updated kitchen w/ cherry cabinets
• Central heat & air conditioning
• Rear deck
• In-unit washer and dryer
• Garage rental or permit street parking
• Private storage and bike area
• Belmont Brown or Addison Red “El”
• Convenient to shops & restaurants
•$156/month low assessment!
•2007 taxes $2,609.81
•Walk Score; 95/100 Walkers’ Paradise!
•Official DogPads.net Dog-friendly Condo
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Bucktown Featured Property for Sale

Welcome to affordable living in Bucktown !
Absolutely stunning recently renovated vintage 2BR condo just off of Armitage and west of Damen in Bucktown at 2013 N Leavitt. Great starter residence with an unbeatable location at this price. A Walkers’ Paradise Walk Score of 92/100. Eat-in kitchen with granite countertops and a outdoor deck for summer fun. In-unit laundry and extra storage too. Clean and move-in condition. A true must see. Street parking a breeze. Low taxes and assessments are only $181 per month.
Visit www.bucktownchicagocondos.com for more information about this featured Chicago property
Call Jim at 773.252.HOME or send him a text or email today to make appointment or for more details on this great Bucktown opportunity.
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Gold Coast Old Town (Chicago) Market Report Fall, 2008
The total number of Lincoln Park , Chicago condos sold for the third quarter, 2008 was 614 units compared with 846 units in 2007 down 27% from the previous year and down 10% since 2003.
The median sales prices of Gold Coast/Old Town (Chicago) condos for the same quarter was $397,000 compared with $377,000 in 2007 up 5% from the previous year and up 23% since 2003.
The average sales price of Gold Coast/Old Town (Chicago) condos for the same quarter was $540,821 compared with $526,148 in 2007 up 3% from the previous year and up 38% since 2003. Note the disparity between median and average prices showing the skewed effect the higher priced Gold COast condos has on the average price figures.
The average market time of Gold Coast/Old Town (Chicago) condos for the same quarter was 144 days compared with 119 days in 2007 up 21% from the previous year and up 129% since 2003.
For a full neighborhood and city wide report visit www.ChicagoHomeBuzz.com
Lakeview (Chicago) Condos for Fall Quarter, 2008
The total number of Lakeview, Chicago condos sold for the third quarter, 2008 was 576 units compared with 700 units in 2007 down 18% from the previous year and and down 23% since 2003.
The median sales prices of Lakeview, Chicago condos for the same quarter was $339,500 compared with $331,065 in 2007 up 3% from the previous year and up 13% since 2003.
The average sales price of Lakeview, Chicago condos for the same quarter was $368,824 compared with $367,738 in 2007 down 1% from the previous year and up 15% since 2003.
The average market time of Lakeview, Chicago single-family homes for the same quarter was 98 days compared with 94 days in 2007 up 4% from the previous year and up 85% since 2003.
For a full neighborhood and city wide report visit www.ChicagoHomeBuzz.com
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Stunning Edgewater Condo For Sale

Clean and move-in condition. A true must see. Parking available for only $15,000 additional . Low taxes and assessments are only $213 per month. Visit www.edgewatercondo.info or call today for a private showing.
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
1900 South State Condo For Sale

Make your next home in Chicago's dynamic & bustling South Loop. Visit www.1900SouthState.com for more information.
This bright, sunny west facing condominium will make anyone an affordable great home. This newer construction phase 2 improved layout one bedroom, one bathroom condo being offered for sale was finished in 2006 and it features include an open and sunny living/dining room with hardwood floors and private balcony. This home also includes upgraded Cherry kitchen cabinets with granite counters and stainless appliances and floor to ceiling wall time in the bathroom as well as in-unit washer and dryer. In addition to the indoor parking space and ‘cage' storage this home comes with an additional private secure storage room unique.
Relax each morning looking right out your private balcony with tree-top views towards the skyline to right (not direct) and watch the sunsets over Chinatown to the west. East access to transportation including one block to the Red Line "L" Cermak Chinatown stop, Metra Train or catch one of the CTA buses right out front on Archer. Expressways such as Lake Shore Drive and I-55 are very easy access from the building.
Hop on the lakefront trail and take a bike ride or jog to the Field Museum or Shedd Aquarium and Lake Michigan in just a few minutes. Clean and move-in condition. Solid association. Low taxes and monthly assessments at $279 include Electric/AC, Heat/Gas, Cable & Fitness Room.
Accessible from within the building are retail shops and stores such as the local cleaners, restaurants, coffee shops, Athletico gym, Chase Bank and other businesses right in building (walk indoors during cold winter months). Other restaurants in the area include Room 21, Cuatro. Bongo Room, Cafe Bionda and Chicago Firehouse.
Right around the corner from The Pointe 1900 are Chess Records studios where "the blues gave birth to rock and roll" in the 1950's and its one block from the site of Al Capone's headquarters at the Lexington Hotel whose vault was filmed live on television in 1986 by Geraldo Rivera only to find them empty. Lots of history made and being made in this great vibrant South Loop community.
Call with questions or to schedule your appointment today
location, location, location
Friday, November 16, 2007
Chicago Spire Gets $2.2 Billion Loan

Chicago's much talked about controversial spire highrise slid in under the press radar and was granted the $2.2 billion loan this week for the 115-story residential tower located at 400 E. North Water Street in downtown Chicago's Streeterville neighborhood. The project is scheduled to begin September 2008.
Friday, July 27, 2007
Michigan Avenue Development Dead
Peebles had signed a contract this spring to pay about $32 million for the site at 300 N. Michigan Ave., currently home to a Walgreens, a Subway and a Radio Shack (Crain's, April 14).
But the developer "felt a bit uncomfortable" with the weak high-end condo market and decided to back out a couple of weeks ago, says Barron Channer, Peebles' vice-president of development.
"We're not moving forward with it, but we're still looking aggressively in the market," he says. "We want to do something that's more in scale with where we think the market is."
from Crain's Chicago Business
Monday, June 25, 2007
Mega South Loop Development
Two Chicago developers aim to build as many as 3,000 homes, a hotel, stores and a marina along the Chicago River just south of downtown, transforming an 8-acre tract that has sat empty for 36 years into a densely packed urban neighborhood.
Estimated to cost $1.6 billion, the 3.5-million-square-foot project four blocks south of the Sears Tower would mark a big step forward in the South Loop's residential renaissance and bring life to a dead stretch of the Chicago River. Sources say the developers, Rokas International Inc. and Frankel & Giles, have agreed to pay about $55 million for the parcel, which, like Block 37 in the central Loop, has stubbornly resisted development.
"That site is a gaping hole," says architect Dirk Lohan of Chicago-based Lohan Anderson, who did planning work there in the early 1990s.
The question is whether Rokas and Frankel & Giles can succeed where others have failed. It's unclear whether the city will grant them the zoning change they need to build such a dense project, which would jam into the site about a million square feet more than current zoning allows. The developers, who decline to comment, also plan to ask the city for about $25 million in tax-increment financing to help pay for a riverwalk and other infrastructure, a source says.
Another challenge: the slumping condo market, which could make financing the development difficult.
Designed by Adrian Smith & Gordon Gill Architecture, the project would include as many as eight buildings — one exceeding 80 stories — and about 125,000 square feet of retail space. The residential component would be a mix of condos, apartments and senior housing. A hotel, with as many as 500 rooms, and a 40-slip marina would round out the complex.
With its riverside location and proximity to downtown and public transit, "it's a great piece of real estate," says Peter Dumon, president of Harp Group Inc., an Oakbrook Terrace-based development firm that has reviewed the latest proposal for the property.
Yet he declined an offer to develop the hotel in the project, noting that hotel guests are unlikely to venture south of the Congress Expressway. Harp instead is considering buying development rights for an apartment tower on the site.
Known as Franklin Point, the property is the former site of Grand Central Station, a rail terminal demolished in 1971. The developers have signed contracts to buy the tract from Jacksonville, Fla.-based railroad company CSX Corp., which owns 6 acres of the site, and D2 Realty Services Inc., which owns about 2 acres. CSX did not return calls. David Kleiman, a D2 principal, declined to discuss terms.
SEEKING APPROVAL
The developers are negotiating with city officials over rezoning the property and will also need support from neighborhood groups and Alderman Bob Fioretti (2nd).
Then there's the challenge of selling enough condos to land a loan for the project. The condo glut could ease by then, but the supply of unsold units downtown reached 6,507 at the end of the first quarter, up 62% from a year earlier, according to Chicago-based consultancy Appraisal Research Counselors.
Founded in 2000 by Lithuanian immigrant Andrius Augunas, Rokas has developed several smaller condominium projects in the South Loop but nothing on the scale of Franklin Point. Frankel & Giles, which also specializes in the South Loop, has a longer résumé, including a 274-unit condo tower at Prairie Avenue and 18th Street.
If it comes to fruition, the Franklin Point project would anchor and enliven the western edge of the South Loop, where residential development has been slow to take off. D2 Realty proposed a less-dense project there than the current proposal but dropped the plan about two years ago amid an impasse in talks with the city. In the early 1990s, Harris Bancorp Inc. scratched plans to build a back-office building on the site.
"It's kind of like Block 37," says Mr. Kleiman, referring to the central Loop parcel that is finally being developed after a 15-year delay. "Hopefully, this will be the time."
©2007 by Crain Communications Inc.
Friday, May 04, 2007
Rogers Park Condo Podcast

Looking for a two bedroom one bath newly remodelled TOP FLOOR close to transportation and park and near lake condo with in-unit laundry, hardwood floors throughout, stainless steel appliances and granite countertops place you can call home?
Phew.
You found it (possibly).
Here is a podcast of that place we would like you to consider.
While you are on the internet why don't you check out the interior pictures here.
Floor plans? Go no further than here!
Contact me for a private showing of this place you can call home.
Friday, February 16, 2007
Boom Turns to Bust

By Alex Frangos From The Wall Street Journal Online
The condominium boom that ended last year made a lot of developers very rich. Aleem Hussain, a journeyman property salesman with a winsome personality, wanted to be one of them.
He formed his real-estate company in 2004, calling it Main Street USA, after a nearby Disney World attraction. He bought a complex of 27 aging, two-story apartment houses in Orlando and set out to convert them into condos. His timing looked favorable. That year, for the first time, the average price of a condo in the U.S. exceeded that of a single-family home, and in the Orlando area, condo and house prices jumped 15%.
But not much has gone as planned for Mr. Hussain, 42 years old, nor has it for his hundreds of investors, who include a bunch of local sheriff's deputies. Today, Mr. Hussain's company is being liquidated by a federal bankruptcy court, and he is residing in the Seminole County jail, charged with 23 counts of federal mail and wire fraud.
Mr. Hussain's rise and fall illustrates one of the hazards of a frothy property market: inexperienced developers get in over their heads and drag unsophisticated investors down with them. "Schoolteachers, cops, doctors, priests, everyone thought they were Donald Trump," says Lewis Freeman, the court-appointed trustee administering Main Street's bankruptcy proceeding. Mr. Hussain's company, he contends, was a "microcosm of the total market. You had a lot of unqualified people getting easy money and able to go into businesses in which they didn't know what they were doing."
Mr. Hussain's 300 or so investors face potential losses of up to $400,000 apiece. Alan Cayo, 76, a retired Army officer who says he invested his "entire life savings" of $280,000 with Mr. Hussain, conjectures that the developer crossed the legal line only after financial problems began mounting. "It was incompetence, fraud, plus the market going down -- a triple whammy," he says.
Mr. Hussain's lawyer, James Lenihan of White Plains, N.Y., describes his client as "someone with good intentions who made bad judgments and got overextended." He says others at the company were also responsible for what went wrong. Mr. Hussain has pleaded not guilty.
Mr. Hussain was born in the South American nation of Guyana in 1964, according to a résumé recovered from his computer by investigators. In the 1980s and 1990s, he worked in real-estate sales in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Costa Rica.
When he settled in Orlando about three years ago, the city was the epicenter of a national boom of conversions of rental apartments to condominiums. In 2005 and 2006, 24,550 apartments in the Orlando metro area, or 18% of the total in 2004, were taken off the rental market to convert, a greater number than in any other metropolitan area in the U.S., according to Reis Inc., a New York real-estate information firm.
The converters were attracted by rising prices. Between 2001 to 2004, the median resale price of existing condos nationwide jumped 57%, compared with a 25% increase for single-family houses, according to the National Association of Realtors. Real-estate experts say demand was boosted by baby boomers downsizing their homes upon retirement, and young people who were moving to cities. In addition, investors who had soured on the stock market had begun buying and selling condos.
Mr. Hussain envisioned Main Street USA, which is located south of Orlando near Gatorland amusement park, as a residential real-estate conglomerate. Its main business would be condo conversions. He and his partners formed "No-Fee Realty" to broker condo sales, and two subsidiaries, "USA Mortgage" and "Main Street USA Mortgage," to broker mortgages and home-equity loans, in some cases to enable property owners to invest in condos.
Former associates describe Mr. Hussain as charismatic and beguiling. He would demonstrate for employees his formidable sales skills by buttonholing potential home-financing customers at supermarkets and persuading them to fill out applications, which involved disclosing their Social Security numbers, recalls former employee Michael Lombardo.
To build trust with the local real-estate community, he took on a partner, Alan Randel, a real-estate broker who had worked in the area for several decades. Mr. Randel, the company's president, hasn't been charged in the case and declines to comment.
First, Mr. Hussain had to raise money to buy apartment buildings. His pitch to investors: Main Street would buy properties, convert them into condos, then sell them at a profit. He said he would set up a private real-estate investment trust to help finance the deals. Investors in the REIT, he said, would get steady, attractive dividends. Those who wanted higher, quicker returns, he said, could co-invest directly in the conversion projects.
In early 2005, he recruited Bernard Presha, who was retiring as public-information officer for the Orange County Sheriff's Department, to join as a vice president in charge of recruiting investors. Mr. Presha and others persuaded at least 10 sheriff's deputies to invest, according to bankruptcy-court documents. Jim Hanton, one of the deputies who invested, was put on a $25,000-a-year retainer. Bryan Margeson, a sheriff's department employee who taught criminal justice at a local community college, introduced Mr. Hussain at investment seminars and talked about how he thought Orlando's boom would continue for years.
Mr. Presha, who has filed a bankruptcy-court claim to recoup $305,000 he invested, says he quit after a couple of months because he wasn't good at persuading investors. Mr. Margeson, who says he lost $100,000, says Mr. Hussain "used me for some credibility, which I didn't realize they lacked."
"Jim [Hanton] said being a drug-enforcement cop, he was super skeptical when his wife suggested they invest," says Mr. Cayo, the retired Army man. "But after a luncheon with Aleem, he was convinced." Mr. Cayo says Mr. Hanton's involvement reassured him. "He was Anglo -- excuse me, but Aleem Hussain could be cousins with Saddam Hussein, so having Jim involved" was comforting.
Mr. Hanton, Main Street's vice president of operations, says he wasn't involved in condo sales or in company finances. He says he lost $130,000, and calls the situation "embarrassing."
In August 2005, Mr. Hussain held a dinner for prospective investors at the Citrus Club, an elite private establishment. According to several who attended, he projected a 100% return in 120 days or less for those who invested directly in a Main Street project.
Magic Marketing Deal
That summer, Mr. Hussain cut a deal with the Orlando Magic, the National Basketball Association franchise. For $350,000, Main Street secured the right to use the team's name in advertising, and to use head coach Brian Hill in a marketing video. Fans could register on the Magic's Web site to attend Main Street investment seminars at the team's practice facility. Attendees could spin a raffle wheel for a shot at free game tickets.
An Orlando Magic spokesman describes the pact as "a traditional team marketing agreement," and says the video was one of 20 the head coach recorded one day for various sponsors. He says the team conducts reference checks on its marketing partners and has never had a problem before.
Mark Pilkington, a counterterrorism official at the sheriff's department who invested $300,000, says the Magic marketing deal reassured him. "We realized there was a frenzy in condos. They were selling like crazy," he says. "I figure, why would he rip me off for $300,000 if he's involved with the Magic?"
In September 2005, with $10 million from about 200 investors, Mr. Hussain moved to buy the 27 apartment houses known as Waldengreen. The complex contained 278 units ranging in size from 517 to 1,079 square feet. His $18.5 million winning bid, financed by a private lender, was a "damn good price for the seller," says Hal Warren, senior director with brokerage Cushman & Wakefield Inc., who represented the South Florida investors who sold. Nevertheless, Mr. Hussain figured he'd turn a substantial profit. He paid $67,000 per unit; he intended to sell them for an average of $150,000.
Mr. Hanton, the sheriff's deputy, alerted him to an 18-acre lakefront estate for sale in Winter Garden, which county records show was owned by Khalil bin Laden, a brother of Osama bin Laden. Mr. Hussain planned to refurbish the Spanish-colonial-style mansion and to add houses, condominiums or stores on the grounds, company documents indicate.
Before Mr. Hussain and a business partner left for Dubai, where the two sides planned to finalize the deal, the company had lined up financing for a $5 million bid, says Jim O'Neil, a former Main Street mortgage processor. In Dubai, after being persuaded by the seller that values had risen, Mr. Hussain agreed to pay $7 million. "We gave Aleem a line not to go over and he jumped over it," says Mr. O'Neil.
Mr. Hussain began renovating the apartment complex, which he renamed Villas at Waldengreen, and his sales team began peddling the planned condominiums. Prospective buyers were invited to seminars conducted by Messrs. Hussain and Margeson of the sheriff's department.
Anthony Cortes, an airline mechanic and father of two, says Mr. Hussain and a retired sheriff's deputy made him an attractive offer: If he put 10% down to buy a condo at Waldengreen, Main Street would make his mortgage payments for two years during the renovations. In February 2006, Mr. Cortes put $14,000 down for a $140,000 unit and took out a mortgage for the rest.
Linda Paralitici, a 50-year-old mother of five who worked for Main Street as a sales broker, bought one unit and persuaded her brother to buy one. "We were not allowed to see the property," she says.
Lack of Experience
Inside the company, Mr. Hussain's lack of experience was showing. Former employees say the operation was disorganized from day one. "The whole thing was a disaster," says Mr. Lombardo, the former employee, who was hired to originate mortgage loans even though he had no experience at it. Piles of mortgage applications by condo buyers who had put down $5,000 deposits, he recalls, languished on the desks of co-workers who were supposed to find financing.
In 2005, signs began emerging that the flood of new condominiums was more than the market could bear. That July, price appreciation for condos nationwide slipped below that of single-family homes. Converters stopped purchasing new properties and smart speculators got spooked.
Main Street sold only 100 of Waldengreen's 278 units. Renovation was haphazard, former employees say. Rather than try to move renters out of one building at a time to allow for the conversions, Main Street tore apart single apartments all over the complex. Several contractors quit because they weren't paid.
Buyers who were told that Main Street would cover two years of mortgage payments began hearing from their lenders that they were in danger of default. Mr. Cortes says he took a second job as a home inspector to take on the $1,200 monthly payment on his unit.
When Colleen Sharkey joined Main Street as a senior vice president in mid-2006, she says, Mr. Hussain told her: "I need to hire you because we've grown so fast and I have no credibility with the bankers and business community." It took her three weeks to understand the books, which were a mess, she says. She says she concluded the company was nearly bankrupt.
By August, the company was out of cash, bankruptcy-court documents indicate. It had lost $3.6 million in deposits on two other apartment complexes it had tried to buy. Dividend payments to the REIT investors, which had been steady, stopped. On Sept. 23, several of those investors confronted Mr. Hussain at Main Street's offices, according to a claim one of them filed in bankruptcy court, and Mr. Hussain responded by writing on a legal pad: "It is our intention to repay all principal investment and interest promised to the above referenced clients at such time as we refinance or sell our assets to provide the necessary funds to accomplish this."
On Sept. 29, Main Street sought bankruptcy-court protection in Orlando. By then, several investors, including some sheriff's deputies, had contacted federal prosecutors to report that REIT dividend payments had stopped and that Mr. Hussain had refused to return their original investments, as promised by the investment documents.
In October, Mr. Hussain rented a car and drove to Atlanta to catch a flight to Costa Rica. U.S. Marshals, alerted by federal investigators in Orlando, met him at the gate and arrested him.
A federal grand jury indicted him on 23 counts of mail and wire fraud. Among the accusations: He falsely represented to investors that their money would be kept in the REIT, when in reality there was no REIT and the money sat in a checking account. And he told investors their dividend payments came from investment profits, when he actually was paying them from money invested by others.
Investigators also say Main Street sold condos at inflated prices to Mr. Hussain's friends or relatives to generate misleading appraisals that justified the higher prices paid by outside buyers.
Mr. Hussain's lawyer, Mr. Lenihan, says his client wasn't trying to flee the country, but was going to Costa Rica and Nicaragua for business and charity purposes. He argues that prosecutors have singled out his client, in part because of his Middle Eastern sounding name, when others at the company were also responsible. "This thing was not set up as a scheme to defraud people," he says. "This is what happens to good people with a good idea and lousy timing who get into trouble." Mr. Hussain's trial is scheduled for April.
Investors and others have filed $19 million of claims in bankruptcy court. Mr. Cayo says he has defaulted on the three condos he bought because broken pipes have made them unrentable. Mr. Cortes continues to make payments on his unit.
The Waldengreen complex, which fell into disrepair last fall, has been taken over by the group that financed Main Street's purchase of it. A new manager has been hired and the units are once again for rent.
The company's remaining assets are being liquidated by the court. It is unlikely that investors will recoup much of their money, according to several people involved in the case.
Mr. Margeson, the sheriff's deputy, refers to the affair as his "$100,000 lesson." He notes that he "never saw people strong-armed to invest. The sad part is people lined up to invest their money. It was the whole furor of the real-estate market."