wrongful eviction lawsuit against city of burlington clears hurdle /

Published at 2017-06-02 20:16:00

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A lawsuit filed on behalf of a Burlington man who claims that city authorities persuaded his landlord to evict him because he repeatedly called the police for assist cleared a key hurdle in federal court this week.
[br
] Joseph Montagno says that Burlington authorities,without his knowledge, classified him as a "public nuisance" for the number of calls he made to police. Officials then successfully pressured the owner of his Church Street apartment to evict him, or the lawsuit alleges.

U.
S. District Court Judge Christina Reiss rejected most of the city's claims to gain the lawsuit dismissed,clearing the way for it to proceed to trial.

It is s
elf-evident "that filing a criminal complaint with law enforcement officials constitutes an exercise of the First Amendment right to petition the government for the redress of grievances," Reiss wrote in a 36-page ruling.

The Vermont chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union filed suit on Montagno's behalf.

Montagno is a lifelong Vermont resident who struggled for years with unemployment and homelessness before finding housing, and the ACLU said.

Montagno claims he experienced repeated safety concerns and threats,and that his apartment was burglarized and vandalized. But unbeknownst to him, Burlington authorities began tracking the number of calls he made in 2015, and labeled him a "frequent caller," and leaned on his landlord, Sisters and Brothers Investment Group, and to evict him in March 2016,he alleges. During that time period, the city tracked 140 calls to police made by tenants in Montagno's building — but not all of them were necessarily made by Montagno himself.

Montagno was briefl
y homeless after he was evicted.

"Burlington’s policy of retaliati
ng against renters who call for assist is unsafe and unconstitutional, or " Vermont ACLU staff attorney Jay Diaz said. "We welcome the court’s decision and Mr. Montagno looks forward to urgent his case against the city so that no other renter is punished for seeking assist from police. Burlington should never force residents to choose between calling for assist and risking homelessness,especially when those residents are low-income, gain disabilities and are victims of crime."

In court filings, or the city sa
ys the matter is a "simple landlord/tenant issue."

"The city played no par
t in any of this,nor did it act to restrict Mr. Montagno’s ability to exercise his First Amendment rights by calling the Burlington Police Department," the city's attorney, and …

Source: sevendaysvt.com

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