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Arts

Whistle Words helps women impacted by cancer share stories

Before she received a Stage 3 breast cancer diagnosis at 39 years old, UVA writing professor Charlotte Matthews lived on a cattle farm. Whenever the farmer found a dead cow in the pasture, he bulldozed a grave and buried the animal. Matthews remembers the farmer whistling to himself in these moments.

“He was so authentic in his whistling,” Matthews says, “Sometimes there just aren’t words. That’s how I felt a lot during treatment. Chemo played with my brain.”

Matthews underwent a bilateral mastectomy, chemotherapy and radiation—mere millimeters from her heart, as she wrenchingly describes in her poem “Whistle What Can’t Be Said,” from her third book of poetry with the same name.

After her diagnosis, Matthews struggled with depression and feeling powerless. As a lifelong writer with a notebook always nearby (she used to have a white dashboard in her car where she scribbled thoughts in black sharpie), it was only natural that Matthews turned to words to process her experiences.

“We have a culture that is very willing to superficially talk about cancer,” she says. “We put a sticker on our car, run a race, buy a keychain.” Though she feels grateful for those efforts, something is still missing. “Do we get deeper?” she asks. “Not yet.”

Matthews became determined to empower other women impacted by cancer to go deeper—to put their stories into words and collectively raise their voices. With the help of friend and filmmaker Betsy Cox, the multimedia Whistle Words project was born. It’s a series of free writing workshops facilitated by Matthews, where participants can share their stories, for possible inclusion in a documentary film that Cox will produce.

“If I meet another woman who has or who has had [breast cancer], it’s like meeting your cousin,” Matthews says. “The veneer drops to the floor. I can ask, ‘How was it when they lopped off your breasts?’ Real kind of talk.”

In a previous workshop, Matthews prompted participants to envision a room—anything from a childhood bedroom to a bathroom at a party—and write for 10 minutes.

“What came of that was so incredible,” says Cox. She remembers the experience of a friend who participated in that session. “She told me, ‘I knew I had things to work through, but placing myself in that room made me realize how much I had to say.’ Has there ever been a more important time for women to speak up?”

After 14 years teaching writing at UVA and institutions like Hollins University and Bard College, Matthews has learned that the answers are only as good as her questions. She believes in the power of silence and play. She incorporates whimsy in every workshop, like having participants play Bananagrams or Scrabble.

For another prompt, Matthews asks the women to bring in a commonplace photo of themselves—not from their wedding, graduation or other major life event—and write for 10 minutes in response to it. The participants share however much they choose, and in turn, the women listening share which aspects of their peers’ stories resonate with them.

“We’ll make a group poem out of the lines they share—it’s immediately a community,” says Matthews, emphasizing that the workshops are judgment-free. “I want these women to walk away from a workshop with tools and a community.”

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: The Black and Global Roots Music Project

The Front Porch teams with Appalachian State University professor and folklorist Cece Conway to explore West African influences and instruments through the folk akonting and the griot ngoni, which can be traced to the modern banjo. The Black and Global Roots Music Project will also feature Piedmont blues performed by Jeffrey Scott, whose mastery is carried forward from his legendary uncle, John Jackson, who handed over the torch before his death. “He said I’ve got to take the blues,” Scott told the Washington Times. “He said that it was just like being in a relay race. You have to take the blues and pass it on to someone else before you go.” Duos Seth Swingle and Fiona Balestrieri as well as Jake Blount and Tatiana Hargreaves will also perform.

Sunday, February 4. $15-20, 7:30. The Front Porch, 221 E. Water St. 242-7012.

Categories
Living

LIVING Picks: Week of January 31-February 6

HEALTH & WELLNESS

Bikes for refugees
Wednesday, January 31

Donate your gently used bicycles and helmets to refugees who have resettled in our area. Both children and adult bikes are needed. Drop off items from 4-5pm, 2111 Michie Dr. facebook.com/intl.neighbors

FAMILY

Father/daughter dance
Friday, February 2, and Saturday, February 3

Dads, grandfathers and uncles are invited to bring their valentines, ages 5-12, out for a night of dancing, refreshments and a photo booth. $7 city resident couples; $12 non-resident couples; $5 for each additional daughter (RSVP required), 6-8pm. Carver Recreation Center, 233 Fourth St. NW. 970-3260.

NONPROFIT

Oceans of Exchange symposium
Friday, February 2

Indigenous curators, scholars and artists of the Australia-Pacific region come together to discuss the role museum collections play in revitalized indigenous practices, among other topics. Free (RSVP required), 10am-2:30pm. Harrison/Small Auditorium, 160 McCormick Rd. kluge-ruhe.org

FOOD & DRINK

Cider-and-cheese pairing
Wednesday, January 31

This food-and-drink pairing features five Potter’s Craft ciders and five premium cheeses. $30, 6:30-8:30pm. Tilman’s, 406 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 964-0271.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Dr. Southclaw’s wild ride

Implementing massive bass riffs, pulsing drums, screaming guitars and sing-alongs, five-piece freak funk phenomenon Dr. Slothclaw bends the genre to its liking and you’re in for a wild ride. The musical titans push the limits of creativity with their outrageously fun “freak shows” and self-declared “hobbies,” such as “erotic baking” and whistling competitions.

Saturday, February 3.  $5-8, 7pm. The Ante Room, 219 Water St. 284-8561.

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News

All eyes on the pipeline

Hundreds of anti-Atlantic Coast Pipeline activists have emerged to monitor construction on the $6 billion gas fracking project.

A coalition of more than 50 anti-pipeline groups called the Allegheny-Blue Ridge Alliance launched the Pipeline Compliance Surveillance Initiative last week to ensure strict application of environmental laws and regulations for the ACP, which they say will wreak havoc on its 600-mile course from West Virginia, through nearby areas in Virginia like Nelson and Buckingham counties and into North Carolina.

Volunteers with Pipeline CSI will initially focus on monitoring the many mountainous areas of the pipeline route, where they say pipeline construction threatens water quality in the headwaters of major watershed systems.

“We will continue to challenge the government decisions involving the project,” says Rick Webb, an activist who has been instrumental in the fight against the pipeline since the project was announced in September 2014, and who now chairs Pipeline CSI. “But with certain pre-construction activities already underway, citizen oversight is essential given the limited resources of government agencies that are responsible for regulating pipeline construction.”

Dominion Energy and Duke Energy are the major companies backing the ACP. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which gave them approval to start building it in October (subject to other state and federal approvals), also approved limited tree felling along the pipeline’s route on January 19.

Dominion has started knocking down trees in Virginia and West Virginia, according to spokesperson Aaron
Ruby, who says his company only needs a few more approvals before Dominion requests a notice from FERC to proceed with full construction, which he expects to happen by spring.

But not without the watchdogs.

“The need for citizen oversight of pipeline construction has been made clear by observations of recent pipeline projects and ineffective government agency response to repeated violations and water resource harm,” says Webb. “We have no reason to expect more from the agencies during construction of the ACP.”

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News

Locals hire attorney, challenge Optima premiums

After Charlottesville earned the dubious distinction of having the most expensive health insurance premiums in the country, some of the area residents who couldn’t afford to pay $3,000 a month formed Charlottesville for Reasonable Health Insurance and retained a lawyer who’s made a career out of keeping insurance companies honest.

Washington, D.C., attorney Jay Angoff was hired to implement the Affordable Care Act in 2010, and before that he was the commissioner of insurance in Missouri. He has worked for Ralph Nader, and he published a landmark study in 2005 that showed how insurance companies artificially inflated malpractice insurance rates for doctors, which in turn increased prices throughout the system.

“He developed a reputation for using the legal system to fight for the little guy against Goliath insurance companies,” says the Washington Post.

And that’s why Sara Stovall and Ian Dixon are happy to have Angoff on their side.

“We’re hoping the name recognition of our attorney and the details our letter has” will get the Bureau of Insurance to take another look at Charlottesville’s rates, says Dixon.

Dixon created a GoFundMe account to raise money to pay for legal fees, and it’s reached $17,636 of its $20,000 goal.

On January 4, Angoff sent a nine-page letter to the Bureau of Insurance detailing ways Optima Health calculated its premiums here that he says are “excessive” and even a violation of federal law.

For example, Charlottesville has a rating factor of 1.579 that far exceeds any other geographic area in the state and that of other carriers, which use 1.07 or lower for this area. Optima executives told Stovall and Dixon that rate was in part because of “the relative health of the population that’s buying.”

And consideration of morbidity in determining that rating factor “violates federal law,” Angoff writes to Virginia’s commissioner of Insurance Jacqueline Cunningham.

Optima spokesperson Kelsea Smith says, “We did not violate the guidelines” and comments the company did “are simply false.”

Angoff also points out that Optima’s own rating factor to insure small groups in Charlottesville is .937, a difference that “would seem to have no rational basis.”

Angoff calls Optima’s 8 percent profit factor in its individual premium rates “unjustifiable” for a nonprofit. And because Optima uses a 5.7 profit for its small group rates, individual policyholders may be subsidizing small group policyholders, says Angoff. He suggests the bureau “may wish to consider whether such a strategy could reasonably be considered unfair discrimination.”

The profit margin “was merely an estimate,” and Optima has lost $32 million over three years on the exchange, says Smith.

Angoff notes that Optima’s ownership of Martha Jefferson Sentara should enable it to negotiate favorable terms for those it insures and to provide leverage with UVA Health System, which Optima has claimed charges higher rates and is more expensive to cover.

That allegation drew a letter to the Post from Richard Shannon, UVA executive vice president for health affairs, who disputes Optima’s assertion that UVA is the reason premiums skyrocketed. He says Optima clients account for fewer than 1 percent of commercially insured patients cared for at UVA, and “Sentara has the opportunity to benefit from these higher premiums while paying itself as a care provider.”

Shannon also takes issue with Optima’s claim that Charlottesville is a high-cost region for health care, and cites a 2015 New York Times article that puts this area 85th lowest among 306 hospitals nationwide for commercially insured beneficiaries.

The challenge could be a first. Dixon says he’s “not aware of a consumer who’s challenged an insurance company on its rates.” And some of the details brought out in Angoff’s letter “are a hard thing for the Bureau of Insurance to dismiss,” he says.

At press time, the Bureau of Insurance had not responded to the letter. “We’re super impatient,” says Stovall. At the same time, she realizes, “We need to give the bureau the space and time to do their investigation.”

In her dream scenario, she hopes “it will motivate the bureau to take immediate action and modify the rates,” she says.

And there’s some urgency for those who lost coverage when their provider pulled out of the area. “Everybody using the Affordable Care Act before qualifies for a special enrollment period until March 2,” says Stovall. “We’re still mad as hell about it and because there’s this special enrollment period, we feel like this is something we can fight for,” says Dixon.

Stovall sees longer-term damage from the tripled health insurance premiums, which could deter someone considering starting a small business and could set a precedent for another insurance company to use the rates as a basis for setting its own.

Says Dixon, “Anyone coming to this area could say this is a very expensive area.”

Categories
News

In brief: Thin Mint mania, cheap(er) hotels, glorious victory and more

It’s Girl Scout cookie season

Good luck getting around town without encountering a wide-eyed girl at a cookie booth who wants to sell you one box of each flavor. How could you say no?

For the past two weekends, girls have set up shop at dozens of locations around town. To get the scoop on this year’s cookie sale, we went straight to the source.

“I love selling cookies because it makes me feel really happy,” says Keri Smith, a Burnley Moran second-grader in Brownie Troop 352. “And the best part is maybe at the end, we get to eat them.”

Keri’s friend and fellow second-grader Lylah Burtner says, “My favorite part is when I meet new people, because I always make friends when I sell the cookies.”

Troops make a 65-cent profit from each box they sell. “I’m hoping I can get a big, big, big mansion and then I’ll get a fuzzy couch,” says Lylah.

It’s Lylah’s first cookie sale, and she’s quickly reminded that girls don’t get to keep their profits. Keri says she hopes their troop raises enough money to go to Virginia Beach this summer.

“I just really, really, really want to go to the beach,” she says.

Janet Driscoll Miller, the membership facilitator for the local service unit, says cookie sales help fund all of the activities and support that the Girl Scouts of Virginia Skyline Council provides. For every box of cookies purchased, 74 percent goes directly back to Girl Scouts.

“Even more important than the funds, however, are the opportunities to learn business and marketing skills,” she says. “I was a Girl Scout as a girl, and as an adult, I started my own business and run a marketing agency.”

The top-selling cookie in Charlottesville and Albemarle? “As is true probably everywhere, our area loves Thin Mints,” says Driscoll Miller. Local girls sold more than 30,000 boxes of them last year.

And if you need to get your fix, there’s an app for that. Sales end March 31, so download the Cookie Finder app today to search for a cookie booth near you.

By the numbers:

  • 70,980 boxes of cookies sold in Charlottesville/Albemarle in 2017
  • 30 percent were Thin Mints
  • 21 percent were Caramel deLites
  • 750 Girl Scouts in the Charlottesville/Albemarle area
  • $4 for one box of cookies
  • $0.65 troop profit per box

Quote of the Week: “We were born for this and built for this. This is what we worked for.”—UVA’s Kyle Guy after beating Duke 65-63 January 27 at Cameron Stadium in Durham for the first time since 1995


 

Storm Team loss

NBC29’s longtime weather guy Norm Sprouse exited the newscast January 23 after 27 years on the air. He’ll continue part-time behind the scene as he eases into retirement.

It’s baaack

Delegate Steve Landes again is carrying a bill that would affect the revenue-sharing agreement loved by Charlottesville and loathed by Albemarle. In exchange for ceasing annexation in 1982, the county has since paid the city $311 million, even after the state halted annexation in 1987. The bill allows localities in such agreements for more than 10 years to renegotiate and calls for reviews after five years in future economic growth-sharing deals.

Another arrest in August 12 beating

This time, police have taken into custody Tyler Watkins Davis, a 49-year-old man from Middleburg, Florida, who they say maliciously wounded DeAndre Harris in the Market Street Parking Garage beatdown.

 

 

 

Downward trend

It costs 44 percent less to book a room at the Albemarle Estate at Trump Winery than it did a year ago when President Donald Trump was inaugurated, according to the Washington Post, which reported January 24 that nine of his most expensive properties have experienced significant price drops.

“Demonized?”

Jason Kessler’s March perjury trial will take place in Albemarle, despite his one-inch thick motion to change the venue because, he says, dozens of news stories make it impossible to get a fair trial. His lawyer, Mike Hallahan, argued “sleeper activists” could slip onto the jury, but Judge Cheryl Higgins said January 30 the publicity wasn’t enough to change the location of the trial, and she’s taking the motion under advisement.


Shoo flu, don’t bother me

We’ve all heard that the flu is particularly nasty this year, but the local area hasn’t been hit as hard as others.

According to the Virginia Department of Health, there’s widespread flu activity in the state’s Northwest region where our Thomas Jefferson Health District is located, but in the second week of the year—the most recent available data—only 4 percent of emergency room and urgent care visits were for flu-like illnesses.

The UVA Health System saw 150 probable flu cases between January 8 and 21, says spokesperson Eric Swensen.

“At this point, we’re characterizing the flu season as an early and moderately heavy flu season, but not outside our recent experience with the flu,” he says.

And according to Charlottesville High School nurse Ann Sandridge, a minimal number of kids in city schools have come down with the illness.

“There are no red flags right now,” she says.

 

Categories
News

Kessler perjury trial will remain in Albemarle

Unite the Right organizer Jason Kessler was in Albemarle Circuit Court today with a one-inch-thick motion to move his March 20 perjury trial out of this area, claiming the dozens of news stories included in the motion “demonized” him and made it impossible to get a fair trial here.

His attorney, Mike Hallahan, argued that a January 4 Daily Progress article “basically calls Jason Kessler a liar.” The story about the motion recounted Kessler’s sworn statement to a magistrate that Jay Taylor had punched him on the Downtown Mall as he collected signatures last winter to remove Wes Bellamy from City Council.

The charge against Taylor was dismissed with prejudice after Charlottesville Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Nina Antony said video disproved Kessler’s claim. The sworn statement Kessler made is the basis for the perjury charge. He pleaded guilty to slugging Taylor.

“The bias continues and continues,” said Hallahan.

However, Judge Cheryl Higgins said the article appeared accurate, and when it said Kessler had been “demonized,” it was quoting from the motion. “I don’t find this inflammatory,” she said.

The motion also said the Unite the Right rally drew “many undesirables from the far right,” called former police chief Al Thomas “a mere puppet of City Council,” and blamed police for the death of Heather Heyer by a “white supremacist.”

Kessler went on to criticize Heyer in the motion: “Charlottesville City Council named a street after her even though she was engaged in unlawful assembly, blocking a roadway and jaywalking, while the Charlottesville City Council ignored the two Virginia State Troopers that died within the same hour.”

Hallahan continued to insist “the media coverage is over the top.” And he saw a further threat: “sleeper activists” slipping on to the jury “because they hate [Kessler] so much.”

Albemarle Commonwealth’s Attorney Robert Tracci pointed out that the Progress article Hallahan put into evidence is factually accurate. 

“The court would be hard pressed to find any jurisdiction in the commonwealth not aware of the events of August 11 and August 12,” said Tracci,

Hallahan disagreed about the significance of August 12. “This is a local issue,” he said. “I don’t think [other localities] care about it. They don’t think about it everyday or care about it.”

Despite the publicity here, Higgins said to expect jurors to be completely ignorant of a case to remain impartial “would establish an impossible standard.” Should Kessler be unable to find impartial jurors, she took the motion under advisement, which gives her the option to move the trial if necessary.

Outside the courthouse, Kessler said told reporters they had “already prejudiced a jury pool.” He added, “This media here locally is a fucking joke.”

Hallahan seemed less bitter when asked if his client could get a fair trial. “I hope so,” he said.

Correction: Robert Tracci said the January 4 Daily Progress story was accurate, and was not speaking of all media accounts as originally reported.

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News

Upstaged: Hillsdale Drive Extension project dedication overshadowed by Garrett protesters

The official ribbon-cutting ceremony for the nearly 30-year-old Hillsdale Drive Extension project was overshadowed by protesters who came to confront a congressman who was scheduled to speak.

Fifth District representative Tom Garrett was swarmed by a crowd of about 25 angry constituents as he arrived at the January 26 ceremony where at least 11 state and local police officers were present.

As City Councilor Kathy Galvin gave her opening remarks about the new roadway, the crowd lambasted Garrett about a bevy of topics, mostly including health care and his alleged refusal to meet with his constituents.

Law enforcement stood between the congressman and the crowd as he took the podium, and warned away protesters who attempted to hold their anti-Garrett signs behind him as he spoke.

Among those signs were “One Term Wonder,” “283 Days Until Midterms” and a blown up photo of the Republican House of Representatives member posing with Jason Kessler, the homegrown white nationalist who organized the summer’s Unite the Right rally that left three dead and dozens injured.

Todd Cone says he’s gone to Congressman Tom Garrett’s office, but he’s never successfully met with him. Staff photo

“You met with him. Why not the rest of us?” said the sign.

At times, Garrett was difficult to hear over the shouts from of protesters, but he commended the cooperative effort of the city and county on the road extension that’s been on the books since the 1990s.

Construction on the two-lane, multi-modal roadway began in June 2016. It runs parallel to Route 29, with dedicated turn lanes from the county’s Rio Road to the city’s Hydraulic Road. It includes 3,600 linear feet of a shared-use path on its east side and 5,800 linear feet of sidewalk on its west side, which is south of Greenbrier Drive. New additions also include the  roundabout at Zan Road and Hillsdale Drive and a new traffic signal at Seminole Court and Hillsdale Drive.

Garrett—along with Galvin, city manager Maurice Jones, Albemarle County Board of Supervisors representatives Ann Mallek and Ned Gallaway and VDOT engineer John Lynch—used a giant pair of shears to snip the ribbon near the roundabout. But the congressman didn’t stick around for much longer after that.

The angry mob followed him to his black SUV and circled it as he tried to leave, and most were responsive when the driver laid on the horn.

But detractors weren’t the only attendees—at least five people brought pro-Garrett signs, and even more showed up in support of him.

John Miska, a local veteran who’s often spotted at political events, said Garrett was able to solve a years-long problem for him in a matter of days.

Veteran John Miska stands next to his camo truck while collecting signatures to get Culpeper resident Nick Freitas, who’s running for Senate, on the ballot. Staff photo

The veteran says he’s taken opiates to manage chronic pain for years, which have caused his teeth to rot. He’s hounded the Department of Veterans Affairs for dental care for two years.

About three weeks ago, Miska filled out some paperwork at Garrett’s office at the congressman’s request, and Miska says he was headed to a dentist to have two necrotic teeth pulled on January 30.

“Something that would have cost a couple hundred dollars to fix if they would have done it in a timely manner is now going to cost the taxpayers thousands of dollars, and Tom is a little ticked off about that,” he says.

Adds Miska, “Tom got involved and I got seen. And so these people complaining about their health care and all, they fail to realize that the whole cascade of problems with health care is because they tried to eat an elephant with one bite.”

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News

UPDATE: Auction postponed for Waterhouse condos

The foreclosure auction of four Waterhouse condos scheduled for Monday, January 29, was canceled, and trustees for the sale are mum about why.

Isak Howell is named as a substitute trustee on the legal notice that ran in the Daily Progress, but the phone number listed is for a Roanoke law firm that says he hasn’t worked there in a while.

Lawyer Jonathan Deem, who represents Water Street Investments LLC, the Chuck Rotgin entity that holds a $20-million credit line deed of trust and that initiated the foreclosure sale, did not return phone calls from C-VILLE.

Nor did substitute trustee David Mitchell, who works for Rotgin at Great Eastern Management and who is a defendant in a case heard in court last week brought by the only buyer of the primo, top-level condos in Waterhouse. Lauren Driscoll found her 2014 purchase was also under foreclosure.

According to her attorney, David Thomas, the would-be foreclosers sent a letter to the court January 26 postponing the sale of all the condos until February 14.

And because the lienholders said in court they didn’t need to re-advertise the sale if it took place within 30 days, should they proceed, the public may not be invited if the million-dollar condos are sold at auction.

Updated January 29

 

Original story

Waterhouse condos head to auction block

What started as a “friendly” $20 million loan is headed to foreclosure and an auction on the courthouse steps of four Waterhouse units because the arrangement between architect Bill Atwood and Great Eastern Management’s Chuck Rotgin has become decidedly less friendly.

The legal notice of a trustee’s sale of five condominiums that recently ran in the Daily Progress caught Atwood off guard, and he told that paper the auction would not take place. But after a court hearing today, four of the five units are still scheduled to be sold January 29 in front of the Albemarle Circuit Courthouse.

One unit—the only residential condo that sold when the top floors went on the market in 2014— got a two-week reprieve in the building that houses WorldStrides headquarters and two top floors of empty units with stunning views.

Its owner, Lauren Driscoll’s HHII LLC, bought a 1,942-square-foot unit for a little more than $1 million, and that property is part of the foreclosure sale because it was one of the units securing a deed of trust for the $20.57 million loan Great Eastern’s Water Street Investments made to Atwood’s Waterhouse LLC.

Even according to court documents, the sale was unusual because most of the purchase price was held in an escrow account for three years because Driscoll wanted to make sure the building would indeed be built out.

The purchase agreement said “the seller’s attorney shall see to the release of this property from the deed of trust.” That didn’t happen and part of the arguments in court were about whether emails and oral agreements that Water Street Investments allegedly made constitute a contract.

“It was reliance on that assurance that Ms. Driscoll went ahead with the closing October 24,” said her attorney, Ed Lowry.

Attorney John Dezio represented Atwood in the sale, and he followed up with Water Street Investments to release the lien, according to Lowry. A representative of the lender asked for changes, which Dezio made, and “WSI never in fact signed it,” said Lowry. “Is that a contract?”

Water Street Investment’s attorney Jonathan Deem argued that the person asking for the changes was an administrative assistant not authorized to release Driscoll’s condo from the deed of trust.

In December, Atwood and Driscoll amended their agreement to release the escrow funds, and according to Lowry, Rotgin had no objection to the release of funds.

However, none of those funds went to Rotgin’s entities to pay off the debt. “That’s the real reason we’re here today,” said Deem.

He said Driscoll has remedies should her condo be sold at auction, such as title insurance or a claim against whoever gave her advice on buying a condo with a deed of trust.

For Lowry, the scenario that his client could sue to find relief wasn’t a good one, especially “if Waterhouse is broke,” he said.

Judge Rick Moore said he needed time to make a decision, and Deem agreed to postpone the sale of Driscoll’s unit for two weeks.

In November, Atwood transferred five units to Rotgin’s LLC for a little more than $5 million. In 2016, he handed over six units for nearly $3.3 million. Atwood, who still owns the remaining three units on the top floor, says he owes Great Eastern $13.5 million “and change.” He says interest on the loan is $6.5 million.

Atwood was not in court, but earlier he said the decision to sell the condos on the courthouse steps “was completely wrong and damages the project. It’s a very bad business decision and hurtful and it damages me.”

Rotgin was in court, and afterward, when asked to comment, he said, “You’ve got to be kidding.”