Three years ago, Minneapolis city officials hailed Stephen Frenz's purchase of the rundown apartment buildings owned by one of the city's most notorious landlords.
Now Frenz is under fire himself, on trial in Hennepin County housing court, accused of fostering similar substandard conditions at a south Minneapolis apartment building. Members of a tenants rights organization say he has failed to repair other properties, as well.
City records analyzed by the Star Tribune show that the landlord, Frenz, has accumulated more housing violations than any other landlord of large apartment buildings in Minneapolis over the past three years. He owns upward of 50 properties with more than 1,200 units.
The properties are of particular importance to the city, since the former owner, Spiros Zorbalas, was forced to sell after the city threatened to revoke his licenses. Zorbalas had racked up more than 2,100 violations.
Frenz was on the witness stand Friday, defending himself against tenant allegations that he and his company ignored repeated complaints about rundown conditions at an 11-unit apartment building, including an infestation of bedbugs, roaches and mice.
Tenants said that eventually Frenz brought in a pest control company and people to do repairs, but the problems have continued.
In an unusual turn, a tenant attorney produced a dead mouse in court, which a tenant said she had caught in a mouse trap. Jason T. Hutchison, the house court referee declined to take the mouse into evidence, accepting a picture instead.
Frenz and his attorneys have declined to comment about the case, and would not discuss the city statistics showing that Frenz has far more housing violations than any other landlord.