Lanzetta v. 11902 Longwood LLC, an Illinois Limited Liability Company

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 4, 2025
Docket1:24-cv-11404
StatusUnknown

This text of Lanzetta v. 11902 Longwood LLC, an Illinois Limited Liability Company (Lanzetta v. 11902 Longwood LLC, an Illinois Limited Liability Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lanzetta v. 11902 Longwood LLC, an Illinois Limited Liability Company, (N.D. Ill. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION THOMAS LANZETTA et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) v. ) No. 24 C 11404 ) 11902 LONGWOOD LLC, et al., ) Chief Judge Virginia M. Kendall ) Defendants. ) ) OPINION AND ORDER Plaintiff Thomas Lanzetta alleges Defendants1 conducted a fraudulent real estate scheme and tricked Lanzetta into purchasing real estate through a series of misrepresentations about the property. Lanzetta brings one claim against Defendant Robert Rixer, alleging that he violated the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d). Pending before the Court is Rixer’s Motion to Dismiss Count I of Plaintiffs’ Second Amended Complaint. (Dkt. 45). For the reasons below, the Court denies Rixer’s Motion to Dismiss [45]. BACKGROUND Plaintiff Thomas Lanzetta is a young professional, who lives in California and sought to invest his savings in real estate. (Dkt. 9 ¶ 25). In November 2021, Lanzetta responded to a social media advertisement for CitiPoint Properties (“CitiPoint”), which held itself out as a real estate investment firm that connects investors with the owners of “undervalued and underperforming 1 Defendants include the following natural persons and businesses: 11902 Longwood LLC; TCF National Holdings, INC.; Marcin Chojnacki; Kathleen Long; Chase Real Estate LLC; Midwest Title and Closing Services LLC; Mainstreet Property Management LLC; EJ Investment Group INC.; Illinois Assets LLC; XYZABC, INC.; Citypoint Illinois LLC; Robert Rixer; Rachel Irwin; and BLM Title Services, LLC (doing business as Lakeland Title Services). (Dkt. 9). ‘off-market’ properties” and thereby offered investors the opportunity to purchase “ ‘directly sourced’ properties.” (Id. at ¶¶ 16, 26–29; Dkt. 9-3). At the time, CitiPoint was an “unincorporated enterprise,” organized by Chojnacki, that appeared to be a real-estate investment firm. (Dkt. 9 ¶ 16). Later, on December 28, 2022, CitiPoint

reorganized as Defendant Citypoint Illinois, LLC (“CitiPoint”), which is solely owned by Defendants Robert Rixer and Chojnacki. (Id.) As of January 2023, CitiPoint’s website listed Chojnacki and Rixer as CitiPoint’s managing directors and Lori Mikosz as a member of the investment sales team. (Dkt. 9-1 at 1). Rixer and Chojnacki are also the two sole members of Defendant Illinois Assets LLC, (Dkt. 9 ¶ 8), and were the two sole members of Defendant Mainstreet Property Management, a terminated Illinois limited liability company. (Id. at ¶ 14). Additionally, Rixer and Chojnacki are the sole owners of Defendant EJ Investment Group, a Delaware corporation whose principal place of business is in Illinois. (Dkt. 9 ¶ 15). In addition to their roles at CitiPoint, both Mikosz and Chojnacki worked as real estate agents at Chase Real Estate. (Dkt. 9-2 at 1–3). Chojnacki, Mikosz, Rixer, and other defendants operated out of the same

office. (Dkt. 9 ¶ 81). Lori Mikosz, a CitiPoint investment sales representative, responded to Lanzetta’s inquiry, and the two engaged in “sustained email, text[,] and phone interactions through the spring and summer of 2022 . . . .” (Id. at ¶ 30; Dkt. 9-1 at 1–2). Mikosz told Lanzetta that because she and Chojnacki were agents of Defendant Chase Real Estate, and because “CitiPoint is affiliated with Chase Real Estate, that the transactions would be safely negotiated and consummated under the auspices of Chase Real Estate.” (Dkt. 9 ¶ 32). Mikosz also told Lanzetta that “if he invested with CitiPoint, he would be directly purchased buildings that were underperforming because they were owned and self-managed by local landlords . . . [,]” whom Mikosz described as elderly. (Id. at ¶ 34). Ultimately, Lanzetta alleges that Mikosz assured him that “purchasing [real estate] directly from a local, unprofessional landlord” meant that the property could be purchased at a lower price and that “once the property was managed properly (with the help of [Rixer] and Chojnacki’s affiliate property management company, Mainstreet Management[], the investor (Thomas) could

expect substantial cash flow and rapidly increasing equity.” (Id. at ¶ 35). Lanzetta, however, asserts that the properties marketed and controlled by Defendants “were actually owned by entities controlled by Defendants — acquired just prior to [Lanzetta’s] acquisition for significantly less [than] what [Lanzetta] paid.” (Id. at ¶ 36). On January 13, 2022, Lanzetta agreed to a contract with Defendant TCF National Holdings, Inc.—an Illinois corporation solely owned by Chojnacki’s “paramour[]” Defendant Kathleen Long—for the purchase of a five-unit apartment building located at 11902 Longwood Dr, Blue Island, Illinois (“the Longwood Property”), for the price of 385,000. (Id. at ¶¶ 6, 37; Dkt. 9-7; Dkt. 9-8). On the day prior, January 12, 2022, Mikosz emailed Lanzetta information about the Longwood Property, representing that the property was “presently owned by a[n] elderly landlord

who was retiring . . . [,]” in good condition, and fully leased with tenants who were current on their rent. (Dkt. 9 ¶¶ 39–40; Dkt. 9-4). Mikosz further directed Lanzetta to “a CitiPoint Property Information Portal . . . that provided a detailed cash flow analysis supporting the proposition that the Longwood Property would be profitable at the purchase price of $385,000” and that “the property’s then-current value [was] significantly higher than [the] office price . . . .” (Dkt. 9 ¶¶ 42– 43). Lanzetta further alleges that the CitiPoint Property Information Portal contained a fabricated rent roll representing that the Longwood Property was fully leased and current in rent, when in reality the property was in distress due to delinquent tenants. (Dkt. 9 ¶ 47). But contemporaneously with Mikosz’s communications with Lanzetta about the Longwood Property, Defendants Chojnacki, Rixer, and Kathleen Long “were actively engaged in the purchase of the property themselves from the true current local landlord.” (Id. at ¶ 45). On March 1, 2022, Defendant 11902 Longwood LLC, an Illinois limited liability company that was

wholly owned by Chojnacki and Rixer’s Illinois Assets LLC, acquired the Longwood Property for $280,000. (Id. at ¶¶ 7, 46, 60; Dkt. 9-6). Pursuant to the addendum to the purchase contract, 11902 Longwood LLC took the place of TCF National Holdings as the seller. (Dkt. 9-8). On March 22, 2022, Illinois Assets LLC, pursuant to a resolution signed by Rixer and Chojnacki, authorized 11902 Longwood LLC to sell the Longwood Property, pursuant to the purchase contract with Lanzetta, for a purchase price of $385,000. (Dkt. 9-5; Dkt. 9-7; Dkt. 9-8). The same day, 11902 Longwood LLC granted the deed to Bowser Rental LLC, an Illinois limited liability company with the same address as Lanzetta. (Dkt. 9-10 at 1; Dkt. Dkt. 9-7 at 3; Dkt. 9 ¶ 59). Throughout the negotiations regarding the Longwood Property and in solicitations for other properties, Mikosz and Chojnacki identified themselves as Lanzetta’s real estate agents. (Dkt. 9 ¶

69). According to Lanzetta, Mikosz knew, contrary to her representations, that the information in the CitiPoint Property Information Portal was false, that Lanzetta would not be purchasing the Longwood Property from an elderly, local landlord, that Lanzetta would be purchasing the property from an entity controlled by Chojnacki and Rixer, and that property was in poor condition and not fully leased. (Dkt. 9 ¶¶ 47–53, 70–75). Chojnacki and Rixer never disclosed to Lanzetta, a CitiPoint client, that Chojnacki and Rixer were actively purchasing and ultimately purchased the Longwood Property while Chojnacki and Mikosz were negotiating and formalizing the sale of the property to Lanzetta. (Id. at ¶ 82).

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Lanzetta v. 11902 Longwood LLC, an Illinois Limited Liability Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanzetta-v-11902-longwood-llc-an-illinois-limited-liability-company-ilnd-2025.