Pubdate: Fri, 15 Feb 2008 Source: Columbus Dispatch (OH) Copyright: 2008 The Columbus Dispatch Contact: http://www.dispatch.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/93 Author: Mark Ferenchik WITH EVIDENCE, LANDLORDS CAN KICK OUT DRUG DEALERS Landlords can move quickly to get rid of tenants they suspect are dealing drugs or breaking the law in other ways. The difficult part is proving it to a judge during an eviction hearing. Police and the landlord had long suspected drugs were being sold at 1766 S. 8th St. before Wednesday, when neighbor Matthew Edblom was fatally stabbed confronting people at the duplex. A man was shot dead outside the same South Side address in December. The landlord, Philip Reynolds of Orient, told The Dispatch it would have been difficult to evict the several occupants because the tenant on the lease, one woman, always paid the rent on time. Ohio law says landlords can evict tenants involved with illegal drugs on the premises, Assistant Columbus City Attorney Robert A. Beattey Jr. said. "If a landlord has reasonable cause to believe drug violations are occurring in the building, they must give a three-day notice to vacate," Beattey said. But it's up to the landlord to provide the evidence during an eviction hearing, said lawyer Bill Willis, who represents owners of more than 60,000 rental units across Ohio and who pursues eviction cases. Simply watching a lot of people running into and out of the house at all hours might not be enough, he said. However, if landlords see money or plastic bags changing hands, or if maintenance workers see drugs or drug paraphernalia in apartments, that is evidence they can add to their case, he said. "Most drug addicts I've encountered aren't that smart," Willis said, explaining they often do something to incriminate themselves. It's not enough simply to believe there's drug activity going on, said Joe Maskovyak, a former Legal Aid Society lawyer who represented tenants in eviction proceedings. Maskovyak said he would challenge as hearsay a letter a landlord might present from police that the house had been raided. Willis countered that he would have a police officer who went on the raid testify in court. State law says landlords can't harass their tenants. They must give tenants 24-hours notice to enter apartment units unless tenants give their consent or it is an emergency. One South Side landlord said Reynolds should have called police immediately when he suspected drug activity. That's what Sherry Maynard said she did in January 2007 when she suspected dealing at her rental property in the 200 block of Woodrow Avenue. "I called narcotics. I called police. I got license plate numbers. I gave those to the police," she said. Police, she said, were fast to react, arresting people at the house on outstanding criminal warrants and finally raiding it. Maynard said she was able to quickly evict the couple whose names were on the lease because of the raid. Reynolds said that before each homicide at his S. 8th Street house he had rented that half of the duplex to single women. Both times, people he had never seen before moved in within a few weeks. After the dealers moved into her rentals, they trashed the new carpeting with cigarette burns, knocked holes in walls and stole appliances, said Maynard, who owns five rental properties. Some landlords don't care what's going on if tenants pay them enough, said Linda Henry of the neighborhood group Southside Neighbors Against Crime. "Landlords are being paid big bucks to turn their heads," she said. Henry said she'll watch suspected drug houses and report her observations to police. Michael Mourne, a sergeant in the police narcotics bureau, said investigators use the information, as well as videos, that neighbors provide to build cases against drug suspects. In the case of Edblom's slaying, no charges have been filed. Police said the case will be presented to a grand jury to determine whether the man who killed him acted in self-defense. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake