A federal judge has temporarily blocked Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s attempt to stop the bankruptcy sale of more than 5,000 rent-subsidized apartments across New York City, posing an early challenge to the socialist mayor’s housing agenda.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge David Jones of the Southern District of New York recently ruled that the city could not intervene in the ongoing sale of properties owned by Pinnacle Group, one of the city’s largest landlords.
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The company declared bankruptcy in May after defaulting on $560 million in loans, and the Mamdani administration has claimed it owes the city $12.7 million in unpaid housing code fines.
Mamdani had directed the city’s Law Department to intervene, arguing the deal could worsen housing instability for thousands of tenants living in subsidized apartments.
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But Judge Jones rejected the city’s motion, saying the bankruptcy auction must move forward.
Pinnacle, owned by billionaire Joel Wiener, controls more than 140 buildings and 9,000 units across the five boroughs.
Court filings show Summit Real Estate Holdings has offered $450 million to buy roughly 90 of the company’s properties.
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“Completion of the bankruptcy auction process will bring financial stability along with the opportunity to stabilize services, outcomes which we would expect the City would not want to disrupt,” said Ken Fisher, an attorney representing Pinnacle.
City lawyers argued in filings that Summit might not have enough money to fix the buildings, warning that “continuing losses and mounting expenses might lead to additional bankruptcies or reorganizations, a state of financial and social chaos potentially worse than the current situation.”
Tenant groups opposing the sale say Pinnacle has neglected maintenance and allowed conditions to deteriorate, while others fear the new owners could raise rents or further reduce oversight.
The battle over Pinnacle’s holdings became a flashpoint during the mayoral race, where Mamdani campaigned on preserving rent-subsidized housing and protecting low-income tenants.
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On inauguration day, he visited one of the properties in Brooklyn to criticize the company’s record.
The court defeat also adds political strain for Mamdani as he defends his choice of Cea Weaver to head the Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants.
Weaver has faced criticism for past posts describing homeownership as “a weapon of white supremacy.”
She later apologized, calling the comments “poorly phrased and not reflective of my work.”
Mamdani also got bad news this week on his “racial equity plan.”
Mamdani is “moving the goalposts” on poverty in the nation’s largest city with his newly unveiled racial equity plan to justify a massive expansion of government intervention, a top city policy analyst warns.
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Mamdani released his “Preliminary Citywide Racial Equity Plan” in early August, which was promptly criticized by President Donald Trump’s Justice Department and Santiago Vidal Calvo of the Manhattan Institute, who told Fox News that the report’s claim that 62% of New Yorkers can’t make it in the city on a “true cost of living” is all a ploy to call a crisis that must be solved with more government.
“What he’s essentially doing is moving the goalposts,” Vidal Calvo explained. “He’s essentially saying that what the federal government qualifies as somebody below the poverty line — which is essentially like $34,000, $35,000 a year. Those might be like 2024 numbers, but it’s pretty close to that — we’re essentially moving the goalposts so anybody under $160,000 with children cannot afford to live in New York City.”
The “reality” of the situation, Vidal Calvo says, is that you “don’t make a place more affordable by making people earn more,” but instead the city needs to “ask the right questions” about policies that drive wage growth and new housing development.
The high cost of living in New York City is driven by several factors, including housing, which is an area where Vidal Calvo says City Hall needs to “encourage more housing being built around the city.”
Mamdani is also in hot water after backstabbing NYC residents with more price hikes.
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