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Neighbors of Illegal St. Louis Rooming House Saw Years of Suffering | St. Louis
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click to enlarge RYAN KRULL Tower Grove East resident Joseph Goodman stands in the alley between his home and one owned by Dara Daugherty.
Earlier this week a lawsuit filed by the city of St. Louis limned in 57 pages the human misery brought to bear by a group of slumlords’ sprawling south city operation. The city accused its perpetrators of turning condemned buildings into illegal rooming houses, preying on vulnerable people by taking their cash in exchange for near-uninhabitable spaces.
But for the residents of one block of Virginia Avenue in Tower Grove East, there was nothing new in the suit’s details. They’d had an up-close look as the nightmare unfolded for years.
For the past several years, the slowly falling apart home on Virginia Avenue, three doors down from Sidney Street, had at any given time between six and ten people living inside — some only there a short while, others staying long enough to become fixtures in the neighborhood.
Outside, the house sports a Dutch gambrel roof, a near-ancient retention wall and a boarded front door with “no trespassing” and the date 12-6-23 tagged on it.
Inside, neighbors describe a house that was until recently a reservoir of human suffering. For a while, a man who used a colostomy bag and wasn’t getting proper medical care would be carted off by EMTs in his own excrement roughly once a month. Others living at the house huddled around an electric oven in the winter, the only way to keep warm. One resident died during a summer heat wave in 2022 and left in a body bag.
And then there was the landlord, Dara Daugherty.
“She used to come by at all hours of the night and scream at them to pay her money,” says Brittany Marquardt, who has lived next door for four years.
click to enlarge Courtesy SLMPD A past booking photo of Dara Daugherty, who the City of St. Louis sued earlier this week for being part of a massive illegal operation.
On Tuesday, Daugherty and five of her associates, several of whom are her relatives, were hit with a bombshell lawsuit by the city’s Affirmative Litigation Unit. The suit accuses them of running an illegal operation spanning 39 properties across nine south city neighborhoods.
On Virginia Avenue, the RFT spoke to three neighbors of the Daugherty property who all had up-close looks at one of the places the city’s lawsuit says does not meet the minimum criteria to be considered a “habitable space.” The lawsuit states that between 2018 to 2023, the city’s Building Division issued seven notices of condemnation for the property as well as notices of 159 ordinance violations, according to the lawsuit filed by the city. Yet Daugherty continued to rent it out room by room.
Marquardt got to know many of the people living there. She and other neighbors seem to have genuinely cared about their welfare. They were at times hesitant to call the police for fear that people living at the house would wind up in an even worse spot. She recalls that two men told others in the neighborhood they had previously been living in a tent.
“It’s almost like she was knocking on tents, saying, ‘Hey, I got a place for you,'” Marquardt says of Daugherty.
The lawsuit filed against Daugherty claims that she sought out new tenants in homeless shelters and food pantries. It accuses her of preying on the “vulnerable and indigent” and those suffering mental illness or drug addiction. Daugherty allegedly bragged that she pulled in $40,000 a month from the scheme.
The RFT reached out to Daugherty via phone and Facebook messenger on Tuesday, the day of the lawsuit’s filing. We tried again yesterday for this story. Both times we got no response.
click to enlarge RYAN KRULL The back side of the house on Virginia Avenue condemned by the city.
“I know these were people who had mental issues, but they deserve better. They were humans,” says Joseph Goodman of the people living in the Virginia Avenue rental. Goodman, a nurse, shares an alley with Daugherty’s property and he helps run the Tower Grove East Community Garden at the end of the block.
A lack of basic services combined with untreated mental and physical ailments made for an often bleak scene inside the Virginia Avenue house. The man who lived there with the colostomy bag, who some of the others called “dad,” referred to rats as “his babies” and had trained them to eat off his chest. One adult living there would ask neighbors for help reading basic instruction manuals. For extended periods of time the house seemed to be without functioning plumbing.
Yet Daugherty still got paid. “Tenants report that Daugherty requires them to sign over their government checks to pay rent,” the suit against her says.
Police records indicate they have been called to the Virginia Avenue property 42 times since 2017. City records show 17 complaints made to the Citizen Services Bureau in that same time period. Those complaints were for everything from bed bugs to raw garbage on the premises, cave-ins to rats. Marquardt shared with the RFT emails she exchanged with the police’s Problem Properties Unit dating back to June and messages she sent to a state elder abuse investigator in the summer of 2022. “I’d say I contact someone about that house once a month,” she says.
We reached out to City Hall yesterday inquiring as to why a single house was able rack up so many ordinance violations and CSB complaints. We will update the story when we hear back.
The house at times had no functioning toilet, Marquardt says, leaving the people living there to use a bucket for their bathroom, which they would then dump out the window on the side of the house facing Marquardt’s home. Marquardt built a berm to stop the pee from flowing into her yard.
“I would ask them, ‘Hey guys, I know your situation is dire, but could you dump the urine on the other side where there isn’t anyone living?'” she says.
Goodman helped maintain a food pantry in the community garden, stocked with perishable items, put there in part with Daugherty’s tenants in mind.
“If the property was livable, and had running water and electricity and AC in the summer, heat in winter, I wouldn’t have a problem with a reasonable number of those people living there,” says Goodman, who added that he appreciated how one of the people living there, Larry, kept an eye the alley. “It would have been fine.”
At least one death has occurred at the property since 2017. The lawsuit filed by the city references an instance of “a human corpse being removed from the property by authorities.” Goodman says it was his understanding that when one of the people living at the house didn’t pay their rent, Daugherty turned off the electricity to the entire building.
In the summer of 2022 a man who the neighborhood knew only as Warren was living on the third floor. One day, an ambulance showed up and took Warren out in a body bag. No one knows with complete certainty, but they believe he may have died from the heat.
Marquardt says that the very next day after Warren’s death, someone showed up to the house to install a window AC unit.
“I got into a shouting match,” Marquardt says, incensed that air conditioning was only being installed now. The man replied that Warren’s death was Warren’s fault — he was supposedly too “retarded” to put in a box fan.
click to enlarge RYAN KRULL The Italian renaissance style house, built in 1870, where neighborhood lore has is both Dara Daugherty and her mother, Garon, grew up.
Despite the dilapidated nature of the house, there is some evidence to suggest the block may hold a special significance for Daugherty.
The lot adjacent to the condemned property is a large, two and a half-story Italian Renaissance style house built in 1870. It is also in a state of disrepair. Scaffolding surrounds it, but neighbors tell the RFT the rehab job is incredibly slow moving.
Goodman, who is something of a block historian, says the house would have originally been a farmhouse, the first on the entire block. Portions of a stone wall spanning almost half the block speak to the massive lot it would have sat on more than 150 years ago. (The lawsuit accused Daugherty and her crew of illegally renting this building out as well.)
The whole block seems to have been well aware of Daugherty before her name hit the news Tuesday. The scuttle is that both she and her mom, Garon, who is now deceased but is mentioned in the city’s lawsuit, grew up in that Italian Renaissance style home. Property records show it now belongs to Daniel McAfee, a co-defendant in the city’s lawsuit, listed as “aka Daniel Daugherty.
Neighbors struggle to describe how they interpreted Daugherty’s relationship to her tenants, other than to say it was predatory.
One neighbor said that she often saw Daugherty outside the property she was renting out, though she never saw her actually go inside. She’d see her in the alley, in her car, and saw her occasionally smoke weed in the car with people she was renting her house to. This neighbor said she didn’t want to give her name because “Dara’s family has been around this city a long time.”
Both Goodman and Marquardt say that Daugherty was manipulating some of the people who lived at the Virginia Avenue property, or at the very least she held a sway over them that extended well beyond the usual landlord-tenant relationship.
Goodman recounts one time he offered to pay the man he knew as Larry to do some painting on the exterior of Goodman’s house.
Goodman says Larry replied, “You’re going to have to call Dara. I can’t do anything without Dara’s permission.”
The response struck Goodman as odd, to say the least.
The neighbors say that around the middle of last month, after years of their complaining, the police’s Problem Properties Unit came by and cleared everyone out for good.
As for the people who were living at the house, “I think they’ve been shuffled to different properties of hers,” Marquardt says. “She has so many.”
The neighbor who didn’t want to give her name recalls one evening shortly before everyone in the house got kicked out when she saw Larry in the alley behind the house on Virginia Avenue. He was unusually standoffish. This neighbor had given Larry food,coats, boots and the occasional beer. She’d bought him new waterproof boots for Christmas. Now, she asked him why he was so reluctant to have their usual chat. Daugherty had told him that she, the neighbor who bought him the waterproof boots, had called the police on him. This wasn’t true, the neighbor tried to explain.
“I told him, ‘She’s lying to you,'” this neighbor recalls.
“The poor man was about brought to tears,” she said.
She could see what she was saying sink in, but only to an extent. And only temporarily so.
click to enlarge RYAN KRULL The house on Virginia Avenue condemned by the city.
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Fenton Man Charged in Sword Attack on Roommate
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A warrant is out for a Fenton man’s arrest after he allegedly attacked his roommate with a sword.
Police say that on Sunday, Angelus Scott spoke openly about “slicing his roommate’s head” before he grabbed a sword, raised it up and then swung it down at the roommate.
The roommate grabbed Scott’s hand in time to prevent injury. When police arrived at the scene, they found the weapon used in the assault.
The sword in question was a katana, which is a Japanese sword recognizable for its curved blade.
This isn’t the first time a samurai-style sword has been used to violent effect in St. Louis. In 2018, a man hearing voices slaughtered his ex-boyfriend with a samurai sword. His mother said he suffered from schizoaffective disorder.
As for Scott, 35, the St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office was charged yesterday with two felonies, assault first degree and armed criminal action. The warrant for his arrest says he is to be held on $200,000 bond.
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Caught on Video, Sheriff Says He’s Ready to ‘Turn It All Over’ to Deputy
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Video of St. Louis Sheriff Vernon Betts taken by a former deputy suggests that the sheriff has a successor in mind to hand the reins of the department over to, even as Betts is in an increasingly heated campaign for reelection.
“I ain’t here for all this rigmarole,” Betts says in the video while seated behind his desk at the Carnahan Courthouse. “The Lord sent me here to turn this department around and I’m doing the best I can and I think I’ve done a good job. I’ve got about eight months and I’m going to qualify for my fourth pension.”
He goes on, “Right now I can walk up out of here and live happily ever after and forget about all this…and live like a king.”
The sheriff then says his wife has been in Atlanta looking at houses and that the other deputy in the room, Donald Hawkins, is someone Betts has been training “to turn it all over to him.”
Asked about the video, Betts tells the RFT, “My future plans are to win reelection on August 6th by a wide margin and to continue my mission as the top elected law enforcement official to make St. Louis safer and stronger. Serving the people of St. Louis with integrity, honor and professional law enforcement qualifications is a sacred responsibility, and I intend to complete that mission.”
The video of Betts was taken by Barbara Chavers, who retired from the sheriff’s office in 2016 after 24 years of service. Chavers now works security at Schnucks at Grand and Gravois. Betts’ brother Howard works security there, too.
Chavers tells the RFT that she was summoned to Betts’ office last week after Betts’ brother made the sheriff aware that she was supporting Montgomery. It was no secret: Chavers had filmed a Facebook live video in which she said she was supporting Betts’ opponent Alfred Montgomery in the election this fall. “Make the judges safe,” she says in the video, standing in front of a large Montgomery sign on Gravois Avenue. “They need a sheriff who is going to make their courtrooms safe.”
In his office, even as Chavers made clear she was filming him, Betts told Chavers he was “flabbergasted” and “stunned” she was supporting Montgomery.
“I don’t know what I did that would make you go against the preacher man,” he says, referring to himself. He then refers to Montgomery as “ungodly.”
Betts goes on to say that not long ago, he was walking in his neighborhood on St. Louis Avenue near 20th Street when suddenly Montgomery pulled up in his car and, according to Betts, shouted, “You motherfucker, you this, you that. You’re taking my signs down.”
Montgomery tells the RFT that he’s never interacted with Betts outside of candidate forums and neighborhood meetings.
“I don’t think anyone with good sense would do something like that to a sitting sheriff,” Montgomery says.
Montgomery has had campaign signs missing and on at least two occasions has obtained video of people tearing them down. (Chavers notes that the sign that she filmed her original Facebook video in front of is itself now missing.)
One man who lives near Columbus Square says that he recently put out two Montgomery signs, which later went missing. “If they keep taking them, I’ll keep putting them up,” he said.
Betts says he has nothing to do with the missing signs. In the video Chavers filmed in Betts’ office, Betts says that his campaign isn’t in a spot where it needs to resort to tearing down opponents’ signs.
“If you sit here long enough, a man is getting ready to come across the street from City Hall bringing me $500, today,” Betts says. “I’m getting that kind of support. I don’t need to tear down signs.”
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St. Louis to Develop First Citywide Transportation Plan in Decades
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The City of St. Louis is working to develop its first citywide mobility plan in decades, Mayor Tishaura Jones’ office announced Tuesday. This plan seeks to make it easier for everyone — drivers, pedestrians, bikers and public transit users — to safely commute within the city.
The plan will bring together other city projects like the Brickline Greenway, Future64, the MetroLink Green Line, and more, “while establishing new priorities for a safer, more efficient and better-maintained transportation network across the City,” according to the release.
The key elements in the plan will be public engagement, the development of a safety action plan, future infrastructure priorities and transportation network mapping, according to Jones’ office.
The overarching goals are to create a vision for citywide mobility, plan a mixture of short and long-term mobility projects and to develop improved communication tools with the public to receive transportation updates. In recent years, both people who use public transit and cyclists have been outspoken about the difficulties — and dangers — of navigating St. Louis streets, citing both cuts to public transit and traffic violence.
To garner public input and participation for the plan, Jones’ office said there will be community meetings, focus groups and a survey for residents to share their concerns. The city will also be establishing a Community Advisory Committee. Those interested in learning more should check out at tmp-stl.com/
“Everyone deserves to feel safe when getting around St. Louis, whether they’re driving, biking, walking or taking public transit,” Jones said in a news release. “Creating a comprehensive transportation and mobility plan allows us to make intentional and strategic investments so that moving around St. Louis for jobs, education, and entertainment becomes easier, safer and more enjoyable.”
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