Exclusive: A Charter Management Agent on the Company Corruption Scandal
Oct. 5, 2009 — Here are two opinions of James Shields, the whistleblower who accused his former employer, the Forest Hills-based property management firm Charter Management, of mishandling other people¹s money: (1) he was an upright young man who quit in disgust after he saw what he felt were unethical practices; or (2), in his former employer¹s words on the still-existing Charter website, "He was a detriment to the organization [who] regularly failed to perform his job and never called any clients back."
Charter, which a judge had ordered to pay a 48-unit co-op over $350,000 in a separate case, had its say in the July/August Habitat, shortly before owner Michael Richter closed down on August 3. Now Shields tells his side. It isn't pretty.
By his own account — and from letters sent by his clients — Shields. 27, was a popular managing agent at Charter, where he had handled as many as seven buildings at once. "Since you became our principal property manager our situation is dramatically improved," wrote Queens board president Ted Scott. Others cited his "positive energy," and his "competence and leadership" skills. Beyond that, his boss, Richter, had a sterling reputation after 17 years in the business, and was a long-time family friend. "My mother and Michael's wife were very close," Shields notes. Richter did not respond to Habitat writer Bill Morris' interview requests for our accompanying October cover feature, "Corruption Concerns."
Checking Out
Shields, along with fellow Charter manager Leon Manoucheri, was increasingly troubled by what went on at the office. Bounced checks, claims of tight budgets, and then large purchases by Richter — a new house, a new $14,000 scooter, all paid for in cash. "I worked there for two years and bounced checks every month was the norm."
Shields sounds off
Hear James Shields Discuss Charter Management
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When he asked questions, Shields was reassured by Richter that everything was okay. "He chalked it up to being too busy, that he didn't have time to transfer these funds. And I didn't really know enough about the business — as to what was the norm — to take notice until the latter half of my tenure there."
Finally, it got too much for him. "You fight yourself every single day going to work," Shields says now. "You have a family. You have your own set of responsibilities, and as long as you have a paycheck, should you keep going? So going to work every day was distressing for me. You fight with yourself. Is it my place to destroy his livelihood? You know his family. You know his kids. His wife is friends with your mother for 40 years. But at some point, it does give."
Despite angry opposition from some family members — his father and his grandparents told him that he was "an idiot" to give up a lucrative job without having another one — Shields quit in February 2009, which could say to some that he was a man of integrity if not common sense. Cynics might argue that he jumped before he was pushed, or before Richter's house of cards came tumbling down, or that he wanted a reward from the IRS for the apprehension of tax cheats.
Resigned, and Resigned
Whatever the reason, Shields is currently without a job, and worried about from where the next paycheck is coming. He has a wife and a small child and feels reluctant to approach management again. Skeptical that anyone would hire him — although his moral rectitude in resigning, as well as his expertise in running buildings would surely recommend him to most firms — he is looking at $7-an-hour jobs at pizza parlors.
"How do you put Enron on your resume?" he asks sardonically. "It was my first property management job where I was given a great deal of responsibility, which I executed flawlessly. I was very good at what I did. What I'm realizing now is that whether a manager is good or whether a manager is bad has a profound impact on people's lives. You know, tenants in my buildings would stop me in the halls and thank me. It was the most emotionally rewarding job of my life."
Adapted from Habitat October 2009. For the complete article and more, join our Archive >>