People v. Koeppel

169 Misc. 2d 795, 646 N.Y.S.2d 1007, 1995 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 701
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 Misc. 2d 795 (People v. Koeppel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Koeppel, 169 Misc. 2d 795, 646 N.Y.S.2d 1007, 1995 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 701 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Bonnie G. Wittner, J.

Defendant William Koeppel is the owner and manager of several rent-stabilized apartment buildings in Manhattan. He is indicted for one count of rent gouging in the first degree (Penal Law § 180.57). That statute provides: "A person is guilty of rent gouging in the first degree when, in the course of a scheme constituting a systematic ongoing course of conduct in connection with the leasing, rental or use of three or more apartment units, the rental price of which is regulated pursuant to the provisions of federal, state or local law, he solicits, accepts or agrees to accept from one or more persons in three separate transactions some consideration of value, knowing that such consideration is in addition to [such] lawful rental and other lawful charges * * * and upon an agreement or understanding that the furnishing of such consideration will increase the possibility that any person may obtain or renew the lease, rental or use of such property, or that a failure to furnish it will decrease the possibility that any person may obtain or renew same, and thereby obtains such consideration from one or more persons” (emphasis supplied).

Defendant moves to dismiss the indictment based on, inter alia, legal insufficiency of the evidence and inadequate legal instructions. Because the Grand Jury heard evidence sufficient to support the indictment and because the prosecutor’s instructions were proper, the motion is denied.

THE EVIDENCE BEFORE THE GRAND JURY

The Grand Jury heard testimony from five tenants in buildings owned and managed by defendant. The jurors also heard from two real estate brokers, Chris Marr and Ted White, who attempted to place clients in defendant’s buildings. Both brokers and three tenants dealt directly with defendant. They all testified that Koeppel told them that a lease for a particular apartment could only be acquired if a substantial, specified donation (between $1,000 and $3,000 depending on the lease involved) was made to Republican political campaigns.

Christopher Marr testified that, in October 1990, he was employed as a real estate broker. He knew defendant as Bill [797]*797Koeppel, a principal in Koeppel and Koeppel, a company which owned and managed residential buildings in Manhattan. As a broker, Mr. Marr located apartments for clients, negotiated the leases and helped the client move into the particular property. His commission from the tenant was based on either the rent or the amount of work he did for the client. In October 1990, on behalf of a particular client, Mr. Marr submitted an application to Koeppel and Koeppel to rent an apartment at 250 East 73rd Street, New York, New York, a rent-stabilized building. Shortly after, Mr. Marr spoke to defendant by telephone to negotiate the details of the rental. Defendant told Mr. Marr that "in order to do this deal, I would have to pay Mr. Koeppel * * * wherever he would * * * instruct me to pay the money to.” (Grand Jury transcript, at 43.) Defendant said he was on a golf course with President Bush and that $2,000 of Mr. Marr’s commission on the apartment would have to be paid to the National Republican Committee in order for the client to obtain a lease. Mr. Marr told defendant he was shocked, was a Democrat and had never heard of a landlord asking for such a thing. After "several heated exchanges,” Mr. Marr and defendant arrived at a figure of $1,000 which had to be delivered by a certain date in order for Mr. Marr’s client to receive the apartment lease. (Grand Jury transcript, at 45.) Grand Jury exhibit 6 is a copy of Mr. Marr’s canceled check, dated October 4, 1990 and made out to The President’s Club.1 The lease, at the maximum amount permitted by the rent stabilization regulations, was then executed at defendant’s office.

In early 1991, Mr. Marr negotiated on another client’s behalf for an apartment at 141 East 89th Street, a rent-stabilized building. Defendant again told Mr. Marr that his client could have the apartment only if Mr. Marr made a political contribution of $1,000. Mr. Marr made the contribution out of his $2,400 commission and the deal was consummated at defendant’s office for the maximum allowed monthly rental of $1,596.45.

A third client of Mr. Marr’s was interested in a rent-stabilized apartment at 141 East 89th Street. Mr. Marr learned about the apartment when he was telephoned by defendant sometime in the spring of 1992 and told that "a very below market value apartment [was] coming onto the market and [798]*798that I was to be given first shot at it before anyone else in the brokerage community” (Grand Jury transcript, at 51). Shortly after, in June of 1992, Mr. Marr submitted an application on behalf of his client for the apartment, and was once again told by defendant that a lease could only be obtained if he contributed $1,500 to a Republican political organization. Mr. Marr did so out of the proceeds of his commission and on June 12, 1992 the client executed a lease for the apartment at the regulated amount of $1,037.26.

In October 1992, Mia Sette, a tenant in 350 East 52nd Street, another rent-stabilized building owned and managed by defendant, learned of a larger apartment (12D) in the building. She called defendant’s office and was told by the office manager that she could have the apartment if she filled out an application. Exhibit 1 is the application, dated October 22, 1992, that Ms. Sette completed and left at defendant’s office. When a lease for the apartment was not forthcoming, Ms. Sette contacted Mr. Marr, through whom she had obtained her first apartment in the building. When he received Ms. Sette’s call, Mr. Marr was no longer working as a real estate broker. Nevertheless, since she was "a nice person,” he made a telephone call to defendant on her behalf. Mr. Koeppel told Mr. Marr that he knew Ms. Sette wanted the apartment and that the only way to obtain it was for a contribution of $2,000 to be made to the Giuliani election campaign. Mr. Marr explained that he was no longer in the brokerage business and was just trying to help Ms. Sette out. Defendant, however, insisted on the contribution as a condition of the lease. Mr. Marr informed Ms. Sette of this and negotiated the amount down to $1,725. Ms. Sette personally delivered to defendant money orders and a personal check made out to Giuliani for New York in that amount. She, her flaneé and Mr. Koeppel then executed the lease for apartment 12D at the maximum rent-regulated amount of $1,463.50 per month. Sometime later, Ms. Sette received two tickets to a campaign dinner for Mr. Giuliani.2 Ms. Sette testified that she would "absolutely not” have contributed to the campaign had it not been a condition of obtaining the lease.

The Grand Jury also heard from a second real estate broker, Ted White, who opened his own real estate firm, Ted White [799]*799and Company, Inc., in October 1991. Mr. White had previously worked for another such firm, Raskin, Matsan and Cohen. His duties as a broker were to lease apartments to clients who responded to advertisements in the New York Times. The clients paid for his services on a commission basis.

In October 1991, Mr. White contacted defendant, who he knew from the real estate business, to inform him that he was opening his own office. Mr. Koeppel then asked Mr. White to make a contribution to the Bush re-election campaign. When Mr. White refused, Mr. Koeppel told him that it would be "a good idea for someone going out and opening their own business” to make such a donation. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
169 Misc. 2d 795, 646 N.Y.S.2d 1007, 1995 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-koeppel-nysupct-1995.