
2 November 2015 | 17 replies
That's got potential to help investors long term.Chicago Renters Can't Afford Rahm's Property Tax Hike, Landlords SayBrian - I think a concern those of us owning in gentrified areas should have is that if this tax hike destroys property values in non-gentrified areas, then City revenue collections will fall in those non-gentrified areas (think pockets of Chicago like Detroit).

5 April 2018 | 4 replies
The credit check will also let you see if someone owes money to previous landlords and such, which could indicate that the destroyed the place.

20 May 2018 | 30 replies
Annihilate all competition not by destroying them, but by completely outdoing and out performing them.GET A WEBSITE!

12 December 2017 | 31 replies
Look at this linkhttps://www.nps.gov/nr/regulations.htm#6015 specifically sec. 60.15a) Grounds for removing properties from the National Register are as follows: (1) The property has ceased to meet the criteria for listing in the National Register because the qualities which caused it to be originally listed have been lost or destroyed, or such qualities were lost subsequent to nomination and prior to listing;Sounds like yours fits this criteria.

22 December 2022 | 11 replies
(completely destroyed properties, put holes in walls, violated leases etc).

29 July 2018 | 53 replies
After Katrina destroyed New Orleans, I hoped to buy property there.

30 June 2018 | 2 replies
Investor carrot is a no brainer.The only bad thing about investor carrot is that if you do it in CT, you will be destroyed by me!

23 July 2018 | 20 replies
Destroyed the carpets and the kitchen island and sold it to me for 190K.He has owned the house for 6 months.This dude would not have showed u in any of the list with the normal filter criteria.Like the MLS, these lists targets people that EVERYONE is targeting.

5 June 2018 | 3 replies
"I had $50,000 worth of electronics destroyed by the burst pipe caused by the bad plumbing on the rental" "Good thing you have renter's insurance, you're welcome."
25 July 2018 | 5 replies
On the flip side, students can sometimes cause more damage than your average renter, so make sure you're asking for a deposit that will cover you if they destroy the place.