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Some cities have already forgotten the lesson taught by Killdozer

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  • Some cities have already forgotten the lesson taught by Killdozer

    Fail to finish renovations, go to jail.

    Burnsville Man Arrested, Jailed for Siding Code Violation
    A Burnsville man on his way to work was arrested and thrown in jail without bond, and then subjected to electronic home monitoring.

    But it wasn’t for drugs or a DWI or some other major crime.

    Burnsville city leaders say Mitch Faber’s dealings with the law all stem from his failure to properly put up siding on his house.

    Yep, siding.

    Faber says he had every intention of completing the stucco and decorative rock project on his home but he ran into money troubles when the economy soured. Burnsville leaders say they had no choice to enforce the law.

    Here’s how a simple code violation spiraled into a criminal case:

    Mitch and his wife Jean say it all began back in 2007 when they received a letter from the city of Burnsville saying, in part, "you must complete the siding of your home."

    “We were in the process of finishing,” Mitch insists. “This wasn't something that we were trying to avoid doing.”

    But in 2009 there were two more warning letters, and in 2010 yet another--this time requiring Faber to appear in court. Burnsville leaders provided 5 Eyewitness News with these 2010 photos of the Fabers' home as proof there was a problem.

    “I was expecting maybe a $700 fine,” Faber said. Instead he was given an ultimatum -- finish the siding or go to jail.

    So Mitch returned to his house and he and Jean say they spent about $12,000 putting a stucco façade over the plywood exterior. They thought they were finally in compliance. They were wrong.

    Faber was then taken into custody in November 2011 after Burnsville inspectors ruled the work was still not satisfactorily completed. A warrant for his arrest had been issued when, according to the city, Faber failed to turn himself in because the house was still not up to code. Faber is adamant it was. Regardless, what came next, he says, was absolutely uncalled for and humiliating.

    “I'm walking around in a green and white jump suit, I had to shower in front of a sheriff, I was shackled, my wrists were handcuffed to my waist — for siding.”

    “It was insane,” said Jean. “Absolutely insane.”

    After two days locked up, a judge agreed Mitch should be released but required him to submit to electronic home monitoring. In Dakota County, that process requires participants — no matter what their crimes -- to blow into a drug and alcohol device every time an alarm goes off.

    “They could call me at 2 in the morning and they did,” Faber said.

    Burnsville city leaders would not grant 5 Eyewitness News an interview about the Faber case but in an email from Communications Coordinator Marty Doll, he wrote, “”The city feels it provided Mr. Faber ample opportunity (nearly four years) to remedy the situation before issuing a citation…the city’s practice is to only issue citations for property maintenance issues (such as this one) as a last resort. In this case, the city determined a citation was the next appropriate course of action. Once the citation was issued, the matter had essentially left the city’s hands and entered the hands of the court system.”

    5 Eyewitness News also called Dakota County Corrections as well as Midwest Monitoring (the company in charge of the electronic home monitoring) but calls were not returned. In a letter dated February 21, 2012, Dakota County Attorney Jim Backstrom wrote the Fabers, “This was a prosecution initiated by the city of Burnsville through their privately-retained city prosecutor. The County Attorney has no oversight or supervision over city prosecutors…While it was a district court judge who heard this case and made decisions pertaining thereto, judges are employed by the state of Minnesota and not Dakota County.”

    The Fabers point to what they call far more glaring code violations outside other houses in their neighborhood. They’d like to know why they were targeted and others weren’t.

    “It’s selective enforcement,” said Jean.

    Most importantly, though, the Fabers say Burnsville made a mockery of an otherwise law-abiding man.

    Asked Mitch, “What did you accomplish other than wasting the city's money, the county's money, our money, and then all the mental and emotional anguish? What did you accomplish?”

    Mark Saxenmeyer can be reached at msaxenmeyer@kstp.com


    Kudos Loin for the title.
    No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

  • #2
    Could someone please arrest these city leaders for pure crazyness?
    Tamsin (Lost Girl): "I am the Harbinger of Death. I arrive on winds of blessed air. Air that you no longer deserve."
    Tamsin (Lost Girl): "He has fallen in battle and I must take him to the Einherjar in Valhalla"

    Comment


    • #3
      That's a waste of taxpayers money. Just Killdozer them.
      Pool Manager - Lombardi Handicappers League - An NFL Pick 'Em Pool

      https://youtu.be/HLNhPMQnWu4

      Comment


      • #4
        If only he had killed a black kid with his siding this whole mess could have been avoided

        Comment


        • #5
          God, I hate zoning laws (and all the other nosy neighbor local laws)...
          12-17-10 Mohamed Bouazizi NEVER FORGET
          Stadtluft Macht Frei
          Killing it is the new killing it
          Ultima Ratio Regum

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by The Mad Monk View Post

            Kudos Loin for the title.
            Why loin?
            12-17-10 Mohamed Bouazizi NEVER FORGET
            Stadtluft Macht Frei
            Killing it is the new killing it
            Ultima Ratio Regum

            Comment


            • #7
              Yeah they won't even let me build a 100 foot tall penis in my backyard... those dicks
              To us, it is the BEAST.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by KrazyHorse View Post
                Why loin?
                What do you mean? It should be pretty straightforward.
                No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Nope. I'm confused.
                  12-17-10 Mohamed Bouazizi NEVER FORGET
                  Stadtluft Macht Frei
                  Killing it is the new killing it
                  Ultima Ratio Regum

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    He no doubt posted a thread of this title on another forum.
                    Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Ah. Makes sense. The other forum is boring.
                      12-17-10 Mohamed Bouazizi NEVER FORGET
                      Stadtluft Macht Frei
                      Killing it is the new killing it
                      Ultima Ratio Regum

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by KrazyHorse View Post
                        God, I hate zoning laws (and all the other nosy neighbor local laws)...
                        Yeah, look at Asher's village. Every ****ing house had to be rat-colored.
                        Graffiti in a public toilet
                        Do not require skill or wit
                        Among the **** we all are poets
                        Among the poets we are ****.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Dinner View Post
                          He no doubt posted a thread of this title on another forum.
                          Winner, or rather, close enough.

                          He posted that as a response.
                          No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            The city was in the right, up to the point the ordinance was tossed out. then they were just *******s.

                            Home of Roswell ‘chicken man' explodes, body found

                            By Alexis Stevens and Patrick Fox


                            The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

                            It may be later this week before the body found inside a charred Roswell home is identified as that of "the chicken man," officials said late Monday. But Monday evening, neighbors stopping by to see the burned out home were saying their goodbyes.

                            The battle between one man and the city of Roswell that started over his keeping of chickens ended Monday afternoon in a fiery explosion. Investigators believe that rather than be evicted from his home, Andrew Wordes poured gasoline throughout the house and set it on fire.

                            "There was an initial explosion and subsequent fire," Lt. James McGee with Roswell police said during a news briefing.

                            A body was found inside the home, but a positive identification had not been made late Monday afternoon due to the condition of the body, Capt. Paul Piccirilli with the Roswell Fire Department said. The body was taken to the Fulton County Medical Examiner's Office for identification.

                            Positive identification could come as early as Tuesday, but could take longer if dental records are required, a spokeswoman for the Fulton County Medical Examiner's Office told the AJC Monday evening.

                            Investigators discovered an additional device in the home, possibly another explosive, and GBI bomb investigators were at the dwelling, McGee said.

                            In an interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constitution last month, Wordes blamed the city for all of his woes that helped land him in foreclosure. Wordes apparently had fallen behind on his mortgage payments while in jail for violating various property codes.

                            "I'm still trying to get this resolved, but it doesn't look like it's going to be happy," Wordes had said.

                            On Monday, Roswell spokesperson Julie Brechbill said the whole city was saddened by the man's apparent death, but the events surrounding his pending eviction were tied to his failure to keep up payments on his house and did not involve the city.

                            Neighbors and friends of Wordes, known by many as "the chicken man," stood behind yellow crime tape Monday afternoon, shocked at the day's developments. Later in the evening, officers removed the crime tape, giving neighbors a closer look at what remained of the home.

                            John Cherok, who lives across the street from Wordes' two-story home, told the AJC he had just seen his neighbor Monday morning.

                            Wordes had helped Cherok over the weekend clearing tree limbs and piling them by the curb, and the two men discussed Monday whether the debris would be picked up by the local trash removal service.

                            "He said, ‘Today's going to be the day, anyway,' " Cherok told the AJC. "Obviously, he planned to end it this way."

                            Patti Silva, a Milton woman who befriended Wordes a couple of years ago and helped him through his recent troubles with the law, agreed.

                            “He planned this,” she said in a phone interview with the AJC.

                            Silva said she suspected Wordes had turned desperate after learning his property was set for seizure last month. She even shared her concerns with police, hoping to defuse a potentially dangerous situation.

                            Marshals informed the 53-year-old Wordes three weeks ago that he would be evicted, and they arrived at the home on Alpine Drive about 10:45 a.m. Monday, Antonio Johnson with the Fulton County Marshal's Office said.

                            Wordes refused to come out or allow anyone entry, officials said. Officers tried to speak to Wordes through the closed front door and a window. During the two-hour standoff, Wordes was in contact with Channel 2 Action News reporter Mike Petchenik, who was outside the residence.

                            Petchenik said Wordes called him Monday morning and told him to come to the home, and with the Channel 2 truck sitting outside his home, Wordes told Petchenik to tell the marshals to get off his property.

                            "Once he advised us to leave his property, we retreated," Johnson said. "And that's when the explosion happened."

                            Among Wordes' last words to Petchenik were, "I appreciate everything, brother. I appreciate everything you've done."

                            "I can't tell you" what's going to happen, Wordes said. "It ain't pretty, though."

                            Moments later, an explosion rocked the house.

                            Wordes began raising chickens on his .97-acre homestead just off Alpharetta Highway in 2005.

                            In February 2009, the city cited him for raising livestock after a neighbor filed a complaint.

                            Wordes fought back, winning over many residents when he took to the streets, handing out 500 chicks, to promote his cause. Supporters wore yellow T-shirts and "I Love Chickens" buttons to his court appearance.

                            His fight drew the attention of former Gov. Roy Barnes, who represented him in court and persuaded Municipal Judge Maurice Hilliard in May 2009 to throw out the city ordinance.

                            Neighbors told the AJC that financial troubles began for Wordes that September, when much of the man's home was flooded during epic rains that doused the metro Atlanta area.

                            Stacey Gervickas, who lived next door to Wordes for several years, said he couldn't afford to repair his home and take care of the animals he cherished.

                            "He kept picking at the city, and they kept picking back," Gervickas said. "And it's a house that nobody wants. It's so wasteful."

                            In December 2009, the city council approved a new ordinance banning roosters and using lot size to determine how many chickens a resident can keep.

                            Since then, Wordes' life has been a scrapbook of mishaps and scrapes with the law: repeated citations for code violations, nuisance complaints and traffic tickets.

                            Last summer, about a third of the birds on Wordes' property died mysteriously.

                            In November 2010, he pleaded guilty to violating city codes. He was arrested in August for violating his probation related to that citation and recently finished serving 99 days in jail.

                            After his release, he staked out as his home, waiting for authorities to arrive and remove him.

                            Silva, who was hosting an informal gathering of Wordes’ friends Monday, said the fight with the city took its toll.

                            Alpharetta resident Cindy McEntire went further, saying she blamed part of Wordes’ condition on harassment from Roswell.

                            “Andrew gave as good as he received, but there were a lot of citations and traffic stops on him,” she said in a phone interview. “After the flood, everything went downhill.”

                            -- Staff writer Joel Provano contributed to this report.
                            No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              That's crazy.
                              Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

                              Comment

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