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The City of Detroit is once again sounding the alarm involving roughly 400 properties, saying many of them have unsafe conditions for tenants.
After months of complaints, the city of Detroit wins a major legal protection for hundreds of tenants living in blighted properties owned by a cryptocurrency-based real estate platform.
The city of Detroit filed a lawsuit against Real Token, a blockchain real estate company, for health and safety violations at its properties.
City officials are urging a judge to order that all RealToken rent payments must be put into an escrow account, and that no eviction notices will be sent out until all of RealToken’s properties ...
The city of Detroit has filed a lawsuit against blockchain real estate investment company Real Token for negligence of hundreds of Detroit properties.
A Wayne County Circuit judge on July 22 issued a temporary restraining order, barring Real Token from collecting rent until properties are code-compliant.
Conrad Mallett, head of the city’s law department, said that hundreds of rental properties in Detroit are not livable.