New York – WABC: Police Find New Clue In Stark’s Murder Case

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    In this Dec., 2012 Google map photo, Stark is seen siting in his Lexus in front of his office at Rutledge St. in Brooklyn, NYNew York – Police have found a new clue in the unsolved murder of a real estate developer whose burned body was found in a dumpster.

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    WABC TV is reporting tonight, that a cell phone was found strapped underneath Menachem Stark’s car that was apparently being used as a tracking device. Police are trying to find the phone’s registered owner.

    Two masked men grabbed New York City real estate developer Menachem Stark outside his office one snowy night and thrust him into a waiting van. His burned body turned up a day later in a smoldering trash bin, miles away in suburban Long Island.

    Stark, a member of an ultra-Orthodox Jewish sect, has been described as an honest family man eager to help his neighbors and friends, a man who had no enemies. But he’s also been called a slumlord. Some of his buildings were in disrepair, and he owed millions to creditors and had declared bankruptcy in 2009.

    Stark, nicknamed Max, was a husband and father of seven, the youngest barely 2 years old, the oldest about 16. He lived in a stately brick building in Williamsburg, a neighborhood where hipsters in skinny jeans live alongside ultra-Orthodox men with ear locks and fur hats and women in modest dresses. Brooklyn is home to the largest group of ultra-Orthodox Jews outside Israel — more than 250,000. Stark came from a large family, and his funeral this week was flooded with mourners.

    “He really was a loving husband and father,” said Abraham Buxbaum, married to Stark’s older sister. “I don’t ever remember getting a ‘no’ from him. He helped people get into the real estate market. He was there for every individual, and the community.”

    Stark and his business partners owned and renovated buildings throughout Brooklyn as the borough became increasingly trendy. Court records show they often borrowed money from banks to finance new ventures.

    But they filed for bankruptcy in 2009 and landed in court several times. He and his primary business partner, Israel Perlmutter, were sued in 2011 after defaulting on a $29 million loan, according to federal court records. In 2012, he was ordered to pay more than $4 million for defaulting on a $2.5 million loan for a separate renovation, court records show.

    A bankruptcy judge on Thursday ordered the company to account for $2 million owed to creditors involved in one of his buildings in 2009. They had filed paperwork saying they were concerned about the money being repaid following Stark’s death and his apparent “financial dire straits.”

    Stark had about 1,000 tenants, maybe more, his family said, and several described him as a terrific landlord. Jordan Brown, 30, said he’d lived in a building owned by Stark for about three years and he thought very highly of him.

    “I knew Max well, and he was actually the only landlord I ever knew who wasn’t a slumlord,” he said.

    Another tenant, Melissa Manning, rented commercial space from him and said he was friendly, flexible and responsive.

    “We had no conflicts, no disagreements, nothing. He was great,” she said.

    But many of his buildings had dozens of serious violations, including working without proper permits. And he was also the target of dozens of complaints of mismanagement, prompting a Sunday headline on the front page of the New York Post that read: “Who didn’t want him dead?”

    Heather Letzkus runs a blog about real estate in north Brooklyn, something she described as a “wailing wall” for residents with bad landlord tales, and Stark and his buildings have played prominently. There are particular complaints about a hotel of single rooms once raided by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency and an industrial building billed as luxury lofts. Stark was fined $25,000 in 2009 for unsafe working conditions at the loft site, according to records. A stop-work order is in place there because of unpaid fines.

    “There’s a pattern,” Letzkus said. “One of the things that really jumped out at me is that you had similar complaints and citations,” she said.

    Many friends point out that a landlord with 1,000 tenants is bound to have some critics. Buxbaum, the brother-in-law, said it would have been impossible for Stark to maintain such split personalities.

    “You can’t hide forever. If you’re a bad person, it comes out,” he said. “No one ever said anything bad; I only heard people say how good he was.”


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    34 Comments
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    Insider
    Insider
    10 years ago

    Every cell phone transmission – and receiving communication is recorded. This is a major clue and hopefully will trace directly to the evil perpetrators.

    justasking
    justasking
    10 years ago

    How long will a cell phone battery keep it’s juice? Makes no sense

    NarishGeret
    NarishGeret
    10 years ago

    Oh boy.

    10 years ago

    gm & all the big car company went bankrupt & us government baild the company out with large amount of money did u called those companies robbers or thifes

    Conscience
    Conscience
    10 years ago

    No words really !

    hmmmm
    hmmmm
    10 years ago

    We have this system at our company. It works that you typically get an old phone that can transmit to a the company that hosts this tracking system. You then get a login that an end user would login to see exactly where the car is , the speed it’s traveling etc. I just hope they use the correct tech savvy folks to look into this lead.

    Avi613
    Avi613
    10 years ago

    Please everyone take a few seconds and simply put a few coins into a pushka and say this is tzedaka to find the people involved in this murder. .. this will surely help beh..

    also there is a known Segulah to put tzedaka leiluy nishmat rebbe akiva Frankforter to find something so put in for him and hopefully soon will find them

    Conscience
    Conscience
    10 years ago

    Went to be menachem on friday , the precious children his beloved wife …… Riboyne shel oylum even in motsraim
    An

    כי ידעתי את מכאוביוו

    And than are we not enduring now far greater torment????
    The eyes of his beloved wife …. Her eyes all it is wailing ” have you seen my beloved”….. Vee halt zich aza tsaar oys – taate zeeser ven ? Ven in tsambrayngen vest zyy byyda
    בביאת מלכא משיחא במהרה!

    ווי לאנג נאך וויל רבוש״ע

    akraus88
    akraus88
    10 years ago

    Tracking devices usually don’t transmit live feeds. They have an internal memory chip, records information until it’s queried, and then it sends out all info stored on the device. A typical device lasts for more than 30 days easily.

    sam46th
    sam46th
    10 years ago

    Why need a phone as a tracking device. I see on amazon there are tracking device for under 150. Seems to be very good ones

    marks1
    marks1
    10 years ago

    FYI, that picture has been circulating the web the past week.
    Evidently it is not really Stark, it is Hatzolah member W-81.

    Similar (but different) car.

    MeirTess
    MeirTess
    10 years ago

    Cellular remain in service by paying for the network, This might shed some light to the dark mystery if action is being taken in a rapid manor, by figuring out who financed the cellular service.

    However, I don’t understand why everything is public info. Yes, we live in a world of free-press, but shouldn’t there be a line which you don’t cross if it might put the investigation at risk?

    By publicizing every tip, and especially a solid lead, it does only harm…..
    When its a race against time to hold responsible the ones in charge of this tragedy before they have a chance to know that the authorized personnel are on a solid trail…

    jonkamm624
    Member
    jonkamm624
    10 years ago

    By this time the murderers could have travelled around the earth 6 times.

    hashomer
    hashomer
    10 years ago

    Generally the police let out info when it suits them. Release of this info is to put more pressure on the suspects, hoping that will make them slip up. Thecommunity needs to come forward w more information. Someone knows who did it.

    All0User0Names0Taken
    All0User0Names0Taken
    10 years ago

    Honestly, too much sharimg info by investigators. And if you hink the car rentL and cell were on the name of the “”boss you Re so naive

    All0User0Names0Taken
    All0User0Names0Taken
    10 years ago

    Rich guys, start using body guards

    Tzi_Bar_David
    Tzi_Bar_David
    10 years ago

    Aren’t there disposable cell phones? Virgin telecom sells them (among others). Strap a disposable phone to the car, and track it from another disposable phone. This was a *very* professional hit; the killers won’t be found and were likely already out of the country by the time the body was found.

    10 years ago

    To the poster that says: Someone needs to come forward!

    Who will turn the murder(s) in? the wife or family members? I think not. Who else would know who is looking suspicious or have privy to such information (confession or plan)? This isn’t teens who brag on Facebook.

    IO100
    IO100
    10 years ago

    Police routinely “leak” information they want leaked and withhold what they feel sensitive to the investigation. We don’t help by second guessing their tactics, or by offering ridiculous suggestions. TV shows are not reality. They are well trained at what they do, and with hashems help the perps will be caught.