[Note
that the victim here is the Jewish renter,
not the "goy."] I
can't believe you rented to a
goy,
-- says the voice on
the tape, which Braum has acknowledged as
his in a deposition.
July 22, 2005 Eviction
of Jew and Non-Jew Going to
Trial by Bobbi Murray, Contributing
Writer A FEDERAL court trial,
alleging that the Orthodox Jewish owners
of a Pico-Robertson building evicted a
tenant because he shared his apartment
with a non-Jew, is scheduled to open in
Los Angeles next week. The suit by Lawrence "Chaim"
Stein alleges that he was evicted in
2004 by the board of Torat Hayim, a
nonprofit that is best known for its
Pico-Robertson school and synagogue, but
that also manages a handful of
apartments. Stein's central piece of evidence in
the suit is a voice mail left on his phone
answering machine by Michael Braum,
one of the suit's defendants and the pro
bono manager of the apartment in the 8800
block of Alcott Street. "I can't
believe you rented to a goy," says the
voice on the tape, which Braum has
acknowledged as his in a
deposition. "Two days after that, we get an
eviction notice," Stein said. The eviction was later overturned in
court. However, by that time, Stein had
found another apartment, and his old
quarters had been rented to someone
else. In the federal suit, Stein is seeking
compensatory damages "in an amount
according to proof," and punitive damages
up to three times the amount of actual
damages. Stein; his wife, Balan, and their four
children, were living in a two-bedroom
unit when Torat Hayim bought the building
in 2000. According to Braum's deposition,
Torat Hayim acquired the building
primarily as income property and
secondarily to provide housing for the
needy. The rental income helps support Torat
Hayim's synagogue, private school and
other services to the Iranian Jewish
community. Stein, a computer analyst, said he
decided to let a non-Jewish friend,
Marc Hutson-Montroy, move in with
him after Stein's purchase of a house in
Las Vegas depleted his income. According
to Stein's attorneys, Braum showed up at
the property on Sept. 15, 2003, and found
Hutson-Montroy. Braum acknowledged in the deposition
that he asked Hutson-Montroy if he was
Jewish. Braum told The Journal that
he couldn't believe that an Orthodox Jew
would room with a non-Jew. "If he brings
in one McDonald's sandwich, Stein
cannot eat there anymore," Braum said,
referring to kosher dietary
restrictions. On Sept. 25, 2003, Braum's message on
Stein's answering machine referred to
Hutson-Montroy three times as a "goy." "Are you there? Are you moved out? Why?
What kind of benefit do you get in giving
this apartment to a goy?" Braum asked in
the message, which Stein saved. Days later, the eviction notice
arrived. The suit is not the first run-in
between Stein and Torat Hayim. Another
dispute was settled by a rabbinical court
in 2002. In the 2002 case, Braum blamed a mold
problem in the apartment on the overflow
of a washer-dryer draining into a toilet.
Stein blamed it on poor building
maintenance. That matter was settled in a rabbinical
court, which ordered a $3,000 payment to
Stein for having to "live in uninhabitable
conditions" for three months, Stein
said. -
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