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New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman office announced that developer Yair Levy has been permanently banned from doing business in New York, according to an article by Amanda Fung at crainsnewyork.com.

The Supreme Court of New York ruled that Mr. Levy and his firm are barred from "engaging in any business activity relating to the advertisement, offer or sale of securities - which includes condominium and co-operative apartments - in or from the state of New York," effective immediately, the article said..

The court also found that Mr. Levy defrauded buyers and tenants at Rector Square, Mr. Levy's failed Battery Park City condo conversion, by emptying the condominium's reserve fund, the article continued, adding that "under the judgment, Mr. Levy is ordered to pay Rector Square a sum of $7.4 million in damages or restitution, as well as $360,000 in civil penalties for illegal and fraudulent practices."

"The state of New York has no tolerance for the kind of fraud perpetrated by Yair Levy," said Mr. Schneiderman, in a statement. "With today's judgment," he continued, "Yair Levy is out of business, and tenants and homebuyers in New York are more secure without this predator in the marketplace."

Mr. Levy said he plans on appealing the decision and did not elaborate.

The article said that the attorney general's office said "it has been a long time since a developer has been permanently banned from doing business in the state, other cases were temporary."

"The unit owners have previously faced extraordinarily difficult and unprecedented living conditions and financial challenges in a condominium conversion that was supposed to be their dream home," said Marc Held of the law firm of Lazarowitz & Manganillo, which is representing Rector Square condo owners who sued the developer and other parties involved in the botched condo conversion project for $100 million. The judgment also rules in favor of the condo owners, the article said.

"The office of the attorney general has now taken extraordinary action against Yair Levy, by banning the sponsor from ever selling real estate again," Mr. Held said, adding that "it is the hope and expectation that Mr. Levy will improve the finances of the condominium by making restitution to the unit owners for what was done to them."

In 2009, Mr. Levy's development firm, YL Real Estate Developers, defaulted on its $165 million mortgage on Rector Square. In its defense, YL Real Estate claimed that Anglo Irish, its lender, did not comply with its loan obligations, which stalled the condo-conversion project. In November, Anglo Irish, which was owned roughly $135 million, foreclosed on the 304-unit property located at 225 Rector St.

In January, The Related Cos. took over the residential tower's 232 unsold units, parking garage and commercial space from Anglo Irish Bank for $82.8 million, the same price the bank paid to take back the property at a foreclosure auction in November.

Court documents show that Related, which took over the buildings' unsold units earlier this year, has agreed to work with the condo owners to build a more stable reserve fund and allow Rector Square to operate under its own board, relieving the project of its court-appointed receiver.
Architecture Critic Carter Horsley Since 1997, Carter B. Horsley has been the editorial director of CityRealty. He began his journalistic career at The New York Times in 1961 where he spent 26 years as a reporter specializing in real estate & architectural news. In 1987, he became the architecture critic and real estate editor of The New York Post.