MMLA Lawyers Recognized as 2021 Attorneys of the Year

On February 17, 2022, outstanding individuals and teams were honored for their exemplary legal work by Minnesota Lawyer. The 2021 Attorney of the Year Awards were presented at an in-person celebration held at the Hyatt Regency in downtown Minneapolis and also live-streamed.

Among the legal teams recognized as Attorneys of the Year were Rebecca Stillman, Anne Robertson, and Justin Perl of Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid (MMLA). The team began their work in 2019 to permanently stop a dangerous landlord under the Fair Housing Act. In Brown, Lee, and Young v. Reese Pfeiffer, the team settled its lawsuit against the defendant for severe and repeated sexual harassment of three African American female tenants.

“These women were all vulnerable, and he had the power to control whether or not they would have a place to live,” said Stillman. “They had no safe place to escape.”

The following year, the Department of Justice (DOJ) brought its own lawsuit showing a pattern of housing discrimination by Pfeiffer. Together, the collaborative lawsuits found 23 victims of Pfeiffer’s sexual harassment and upon settlement in 2021, he was ordered to pay $736,000 to the 23 victims and a $14,000 civil penalty to the United States. In addition to being permanently barred from managing properties, Pfeiffer, and his co-defendants, agreed to pay $140,000 in attorney fees to MMLA. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Ann Bildtsen and Bahram Samie were also honored with the award. Read the article in Minnesota Lawyer.

MMLA Helps Secure $750K Settlement for Harassed Tenants in Fair Housing Act Lawsuit

Last week, the Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Minnesota, announced that it obtained a consent decree in a sexual harassment lawsuit against a Minneapolis landlord. In the Fair Housing Act lawsuit, Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid (MMLA) alleged that the landlord filed eviction notices against tenants over phony charges, then proceeded to sexually harass and retaliate against them. The consent decree resolves the lawsuit filed by the Justice Department in September 2020, as well as a related private lawsuit brought by MMLA on behalf of three women who were subjected to the landlord’s alleged sexual harassment.

Under the consent decree, the defendants must pay a total of $736,000 in compensation to 23 victims of the sexual harassment and retaliation, and a $14,000 civil penalty to the United States. The consent decree also permanently bars the defendants from property management and requires the retention of an independent property manager approved by the Department of Justice at specified Twin Cities properties. The defendants must also undergo education and training on the FHA, with specific emphasis on discrimination on the basis of sex and sexual harassment.

Declaring the decree a victory for tenants, Rebecca Stillman, staff attorney with MMLA and lead counsel for their plaintiffs, said "We put an alleged predator of single Black women out of the property management business.”

Read more about the case on MMLA’s website and at MPRNews.