Regency evictions delayed

IOWA CITY – The evictions of residents at Regency Mobile Home Park will be delayed under an agreement reached Friday between the park’s operator and the Iowa Attorney General’s Office.

Also Friday, the state served a subpoena-like document on Regency of Iowa Inc. asking for certain information as part of a civil investigation, said Geoff Greenwood, spokesman for the attorney general.

The company has 10 days to respond.

Greenwood and Ben Bellus, an assistant attorney general, declined to say what information the state was seeking but said the investigation was focusing on consumer fraud issues.

The Johnson County Sheriff’s Office this month opened an investigation after allegations came out that Regency, whose corporate owner is Colorado-based Churchill Group, has sold mobile homes without clear titles and without making buyers aware that back taxes are owed.

The Attorney General’s Office will aid in a criminal investigation if requested and Attorney General Tom Miller directed his staff on Thursday to open a civil investigation.

The park also has long-standing issues with its water supply and debris.

Thursday morning, Regency filed eviction notices against the owners of 18 homes for unpaid rent. Residents of those 18 homes who still live in the park, which is just south of Iowa City, will be allowed to stay, at least for now.

“This gives everybody a little breathing room and gives us time to look into this case,” Greenwood said.

An unknown number of the mobile homes were abandoned, according to the Attorney General’s Office, and Regency will proceed with those evictions so they can clear the titles.

Calls to Regency and Churchill Group representatives were not immediately returned Friday evening. Churchill officials have not returned repeated phone calls this month.

Regency residents who believe they were victims of fraud can contact the Attorney General’s Office at 1-888-777-4590 or e-mail consumer@iowa.gov.

About Gregg Hennigan/SourceMedia Group News

I am a reporter in SourceMedia Group's Iowa City office and mostly cover local government and K-12 education, although I help out with public safety news and whatever else pops up.
This entry was posted in Crime, Law and Justice, government and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink.

3 Responses to Regency evictions delayed

  1. You want a secured note, you want a lien on their property. Easy to do, see an attorney. Forms at stationery store. Then you record it against property with county so that title can’t be transferred without you finding out.

  2. I want to start blogging too what do you think, which blog platform is good for beginner?

  3. If there is no paperwork other than titles, no wills, no trusts, etc, then because your father and stepmother are married, she gets everything. (Jointly owned but NOT married would still get tied up in court and could be contested and WOULD be taxed).

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