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  • Michael Marshall

Hubert

6/28/2018

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     It was almost time to lock up, near 10:00pm, when there was a knock at the door of the Catholic Worker. Trent had set up a fire – it had just begun to bloom – and we were settled, both reading, in the living room.
    It is rare for someone to come to the door at night. It is rare for unexpected guests to come to the door at all. Thirty-five years old, the Denver Catholic Worker has earned its reputation, and most know that we are usually a full house, and that we like to keep the atmosphere calm and familiar for the residing guests.
    I was reminded by a glance outside that the snow had formed a soft, white pillow atop Denver’s concrete. For people without shelter, the sudden drop in temperature – to not much higher than zero – was making life much more difficult, if even survivable.
    “We have no room in the house right now,” Trent was telling the presence outside. I got up and walked to the kitchen, afraid of the reality that this was someone kind, someone sober, someone incapable of working, someone I couldn’t blame for his or her fate (it is an ever-present challenge not to do so). From down the hall, I saw only the back of my friend, Trent’s head bowed forward – I couldn’t see who stood before him. “I’m sorry,” Trent said, before asking the person if he or she’d like some food. As I turned toward the kitchen to warm up some leftovers, I heard a voice; it was a mangled, woeful slur, neither intimidating nor intoxicated, a voice of confusion, of fear. The speaker explained that he had just come from the hospital, and that he was dizzy and weak.
    He came inside and sat near the fire. He put his hands out toward it, and I watched his long, dry fingers outstretch. “It’s nice,” he said. His hair was gray, and I realized the main reason for his speech impediment: he didn’t have teeth. “Do you guys drink coffee here?” he asked. “Not at night,” I said, “but I can make you some tea.” “With sugar?” he asked, and smiled.
    Hubert was from New Jersey, like me, and came to Denver to be near his cousin, who had promised he could share his housing with Hubert. But this cousin, who wound up unable to fulfill that promise, instead tried to steal Hubert’s disability income. Hubert seemed unsure as to where the money was, exactly – at one point he seemed to say it was with his father, down south. But based on his appearance – he was perhaps in his seventies – I imagined that Hubert’s father might not still be around. He seemed to me not much different from a lost child, someone who’s been lost, looking for a safe place  for a lifetime. Still, instead of a cold shell, there was a softness about him, something naïve and gentle. His vulnerability alarmed me. Somehow, the fact that the majority of the homeless population is made up of those with untreated mental illnesses hasn’t completely registered.
    “Where did you sleep last night?” I asked as I flipped through our winter shelter resource book. Trent was in the office calling shelter after shelter, each one offering him only the same thing we had already offered Hubert: “Sorry, we’re full.” Hubert, eyes big, gratefully holding the cup of hot tea, answered my question as he took a sip, but his answer was unintelligible. Hesitantly, I asked him again.
    “I slept in an alley. Behind a dumpster. It was real cold.”
    He frowned, and, with his thin fingers, took the tea bag from the mug and placed it in his bag to reuse at another time. “Do you want some more tea bags?” I asked, and he said, “Yes, yes please!”
    I nodded and excused myself. I called a few more places; most of them were closed. I refused to believe that the only option for Hubert, a mentally-challenged man in his seventies, a man with tuberculosis, was to sleep atop ice with only one blanket.
    I invited Hubert into the dining room and gave him some steaming pasta. One of our other guests – an eleven-year-old who has brought so much joy into our house with her talents in song, dance, and comedy – came in and asked me if I would be attending her school play (earlier, when Hubert first arrived, she’d grabbed me by the elbow and asked, “Who is he? Is he homeless?” “Yes,” I said, and instead of shrinking away, she gave me a hug). “Want to hear what I’ll be singing?” she asked, and Hubert looked up at her and smiled. She began, “I don’t want a lot for Christmas…” While Hubert ate, she continued to sing, dance, twirl. There was no apparent hesitancy in her to be loving towards this stranger, clearly in need. It was common sense to her. She gave me another squeeze, affirming, and went upstairs.
    “Have you stayed at any shelters recently?” I asked Hubert. “The Mission. But I don’t like it there. It’s dangerous! People are real mean. They pick on me.” “What about trying to retrieve your disability income?” I knew that gaining control of his SSI (which would only be possible with the support of some kind of case manager) and having someone help him maintain it would be the only way Hubert could ever afford to sleep indoors. “What about St. Francis Center? Have you been there?” He shook his head, remembering. “I can’t go there for two more days,” he said, “but that’s only two days.” He looked hopeful and tried to eat another spoonful of food. “I had to use the bathroom real bad, see? And the line was so long, like an hour, and I didn’t want to have an accident in my pants, and so I left and went outside and found a private spot behind a house. Apparently, a lady at St. Francis saw me.” I couldn’t imagine how the answer to a man’s desperation for a toilet would be to make toilets and similar resources even more inaccessible. “Make him work for it” seems to be the sentiment, even in regards to someone almost entirely helpless. “Make him pay for his mistake.” But in this case, I couldn’t figure out what the “mistake” was. Urinating is not something we can control or repress because it is “bad.” It is a basic need of the human body – when the need is ignored, this can affect already ill health. I wondered why our reaction is so cold-hearted – when we see an old man in need, why are we so concerned with protecting ourselves or our organization from him? I pressed on. “Is there any way you could see a social worker to regain access to your disability income?” He shook his head and repeated his telling of the St. Francis incident. He was confused and tired and stuck in a time and place that no longer was. I wanted to shake him, tell him, “Even if we find you a place tonight, you probably won’t have anywhere to go tomorrow!” But I knew that would have been fruitless.
    After exploring all shelter options, Trent called the non-emergency number for the Denver Police Station and explained our new friend’s desperate situation. About thirty minutes later, a policeman arrived to take Hubert to a motel. We gave him an extra coat, scarf, and gloves, some sandwiches, and plenty of teabags before greeting the officer at the door. “Okay, show me some ID,” he said to Hubert, without taking a moment to look at the old man’s exhausted, scared face. Hubert put his bags on the ground and began to rifle through them. His hat fell off. The plastic forks and bananas we’d piled into one of his bags fell out. I ran to get some more things, and when I returned, the officer was walking back from his car. “Well, the system says you don’t exist,” he barked at Hubert. I suppose Hubert, unable to locate his ID promptly, gave the officer his name. “So, unless you can find your ID, you’re out of luck.”
    Finally, bent over and searching frantically, Hubert found his ID. “Okay,” the policeman said, “Let’s get you to a warm bed.”
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Getting a Man to Shelter

6/28/2018

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   It was Thursday night at 8:00pm, about 10 degrees and windy. While walking by Civic Center Park, Fred ran into a man who had no gloves or real coat and was very cold – Jon. Jon is homeless and was very drunk at the moment. Some other friends and I met Fred at the park, and we talked with Jon about how he could get somewhere warm and safe for the night. I asked him if he wanted us to call detox so he could get in somewhere warm, and he insisted that he did not want to go to detox. I asked him if he wanted to go to New Genesis, the closest men’s shelter, and he said yes. So, the crew of us, now four friends – three of whom are homeless – and our new friend Jon, walked to New Genesis.
    When we made it to the shelter and Jon asked to check in, the shelter staff said he looked too drunk. John asked to go to the bathroom, but in the bathroom he dropped his liquor bottle. Hoping to help Jon be allowed to stay at the shelter, Fred picked up the bottle and claimed it was his. Shelter staff did not like this and kicked both Fred and Jon out, saying they would call the cops.
    Outside, we sat with Jon to try and figure out where else we could take him to survive the cold night. It was now after 9:00pm. It would be a long walk to the Mission, and in Jon’s state, it would not be feasible to get there in a reasonable time. Plus, there was no guarantee that, once we got there, the Mission would accept him – either because he was too drunk (and they technically don’t accept people that are drunk) or because they might be overfull by 10:00pm on that cold night. Past that, there were no other shelters we knew of within walking distance that would be open at that time, much less any that would take an intoxicated man.
    Then, shelter staff came out and said that if we were not all gone in ten minutes, they would call detox. I talked with Jon again, asking if he wanted to go to detox, and he said no. Shortly after, police showed up. They asked about two people causing trouble. We told them that there was no one causing trouble and that we were just trying to help this man get into a shelter, but that he was not allowed at New Genesis because he was drunk. The cops pushed back, asking Fred if he was drunk. Fred just asked if he was being detained, and the cops said maybe. After a bit more of us explaining that we were just trying to help Jon find shelter for the night, the cops left Fred alone. Then someone, either the cops or the shelter staff, called detox. When I learned they were on the way, I told Jon. When Jon heard the name Denver Cares (the other name for detox), he asked me if Denver Cares was on their way and said he wanted to go (I guess there is a lot in a name :)). After a while, detox showed up and took Jon. Ultimately, he seemed glad to have had them come.
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The Laywer

2/1/2018

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by Elizabeth Vonaarons
​    If you have a legal problem with the landlord (tenant/landlord issue) and, if you can get one, I highly recommend getting a lawyer to resolve the issue.     This is my story:

  On Thanksgiving Day of 2016, I received a “notice to quit” my job as caretaker for La Grace Apartments. I was very upset about this because I had been very tenacious about doing the gardening and taking care of the building. The reasons for the notice were not given to me at that time but later it was said that “I was not a good fit” for this job. So, I needed to figure out why. 
  On_November 14th, the SWAT team and the Denver Narcotics took the drug dealer who was living in another apartment. It was_one week later_that the “notice to quit” was issued by the lawyers for, the management company.
  Since I had a lease, which expired at the end of April of 2017, I went to talk to HUD and then with the CHFA people who referred me to Colorado Legal Aid. It was at Colorado Legal Aid that I met a lawyer who took on my case. 
  The manager at Ross Management, Brooke, was known for being a big bully. She would threaten the tenants with legal notices, and, being intimidated by a legal notice, they would vacate their apartments. 
  Les, my lawyer, said that the “notice to quit” applied to just my job and that they would need a judge to issue me an eviction notice. He also said that there were some complications because I had a job with the company that was terminated.
  I told Les, my lawyer, that although Brooke was a big bully, he was a lawyer! After Les took over my case I did not hear much from the management company. I sent my reports to Les, who then sent them on to the lawyers from Ross Management. I paid my rent for February to the management company, but they would not accept it so I gave the check to my lawyer. In March, I did not bother with the management company; I took my check directly to my lawyer. When they did send me an e-mail to leave by March 20th, I talked to Les, who contacted their lawyer to discuss the matter. Ross Management’s lawyer did not get back to him, which brings up an interesting point._
  I never thought much about this, but lawyers can talk to other lawyers in “lawyer language.” This is a benefit for the lay person who just wants their situation resolved. I do not get legal notices about it and I have not heard much from my lawyer (which is good news).  Recently. I found a new apartment and told my lawyer about it. Right now, I am in the process of moving. My life has been peaceful; I have a lawyer._

Elizabeth Vonaarons
​
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Surviving Without a Home

2/1/2018

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by Marie Antoinette Black
    As the sky opened up and the rain poured from the sky, I placed my head against the industrial-sized dumpster and just shook my head. This was the fourth time that the wind had blown the cardboard boxes off of my makeshift tent. I was trying to keep my belongings dry and safe from the rain. I knew that I was on a property and it wasn’t 10pm, so according to the laws of Denver, I could not sleep on the property. But I wasn’t really trying to get to sleep, as it was only 5 pm. I was trying to keep what meager possessions I had been allowed to have safety and be free from the rain. This meant my bedding and pillow, but also my clothes and toiletries.
    You see, I was now without a home or a stable place to live and it wasn’t due to any of my own circumstances. For you see, I was being stalked by a married, ex-Marine killer. This sociopath had a perpetual hard-on for me because I was the only woman to dump his married, black, sorry, fake police ass, not once but twice. And it was, “…not time for you to go yet!”
    Damn! Here I was being forced out of not one, or two, or even three homes, but by my count it was now EIGHT homes and four states that I had run through, yet it still wasn’t far enough to get away from this creep.
    I cried and then went in search of some more boxes and a little bit of weight to hold them down.
    Being homeless is nothing to laugh about and for many of us, contrary to what others may think ,it is often  due to no fault of our own. I have come across people who are without homes due to the rising costs of housing. Some homeowners and landlords realize that they can now charge more money for their rental properties, so many people who were once able to afford, say, 550$ are now being forced to pay 800 and upwards for the same piece of property that they were once only paying several hundreds of dollars for. Some people having lost their good paying jobs are forced to work for much less. Some are barely making minimum wage. Some people have left their homes due to being abused, battered, kicked out or some suffer from mental illness. A few are homeless due to drug and alcohol abuse.
   I searched the streets in an effort to keep moving, because my married police stalker, didn’t want me to ever "get comfortable without him.” I was forced out of home after home, state after state, and cell phone after cell phone, all while he tried to steal my family, life and friends. He had already about me, saying that he wrote my books and not me. Oh really? Dumb mutherfucker is a police officer who doesn’t even know the Miranda Rights! Hell, I know those and I’m not even a cop.
    But this nut job is so diabolical that he persuaded his bosses including the Police Chief and MARTA Internal Affairs Police Lt. 
 
1) Not to investigate the case. 
2) That I was a bum. 
3) That I was a liar. 
4) That I was addicted to him 
5) I was on drugs. 
6) That I was a scatterbrain.

    Oh really? Not only are these things not true, as I graduated in the TOP 10% of my Graduating Class but also I am so much more than he or they could ever be, and I am not just blowing smoke.
    I am, for the record, a Fashion Designer, a Designer, an Author, a Reporter, A Mogul, A Singer, An Entertainer, A Model, a Motivational Speaker and in charge of Developing New Artists, so I guess that would make me an Artist Management, plus I design and draw Comics, eg The Weed Head’s, The Alcoholic’s, Nun Since, MTFS Bitch Shoe Me, Jail House Bones McGee and a few others. I also design Cosmetics including my bath and body line Ocean Breeze. Yet I was now without a home all because I chose NOT to sleep with a married fake man!
    Ouch! I went back to pick up a few of my belongings from the place where I had stashed them so that I could sleep in a dry place for the night. As I turned the corner, I realized that the workers had placed a plastic tarp over my belongings so that they would not get wet. And I cried. I cried and I cried at their human kindness towards me, as I had only asked them to not throw them away.  I was so thankful to the Lord God. If you have never been without a home count, yourself lucky because it is no picnic.
    It's a great effort to move your belongings from place to place and have to carry them with you. It is an even greater effort to get clean and smell nice. It is an effort to find work when you have no place to store your belongings. And it is an effort to come in out of the cold or rain. It is a hardship to sleep on the ground or the hard, cold concrete. It is an effort to not get wet when the automatic sprinkler systems come on at 12am wetting you, your bedding and belongings. It is an effort not to get angry when the Post Office worker tells you to leave the property in the rain.
    Homeless people are accustomed to being told no, turned down, and being yelled at. Why go some normal people treat homeless people as though they are substandard when they are in reality just as real, if not more real, than others I have found that many homeless people share much more frequently than those who have the most to share.
    It has been my experience that a homeless person will stop and ask me if I am hungry, want a drink, doing ok, need a smoke or even want to toke on their marijuana, and as the original The Weed Head’s Creator, I really appreciate that.
     After sleeping on the ground and pissing in a cup so that I wouldn’t foul up the area, I went in search of my dry belongings so that I could start the day fresh. I brushed my teeth and gathered up some fresh clothes so that I could take a wash in the public library sink and get clean. But since it was still early as the City of Denver requires that you leave the Public property and Alley Ways by_6 am_I had some time to kill. So I headed towards 13th_Street, where I was amazed by the Art work on the Morey School Walls.
    As I passed the Library I came across a beautiful, young, single father by the name of Ken. He was unloading his car and had coffee and was feeding the homeless and hungry early this Saturday morning. I noticed that his hands were full, so I asked him if I could help him. He said, “Grab that game.” I laughed and said, “That’s not very heavy.” But I dutifully did as he said, besides I was getting a free cup of coffee out of it. So I smiled.
    But he amazed me even further. He had a line of people and a bunch of doughnuts. Ken, as he later told me his name, was feeding the homeless as he did each and every Saturday, but he had a different message. As a Christian, I wasn’t surprised, but he did surprise me. His was a message of hope. “We don’t care about your religion, or sexuality. Here we feed the body and the spirit.”
    He had a bunch of boxes containing toiletries, shampoo, body wash, tooth paste, deodorant, mouth wash, hand sanitizers, shoes, clothes, books, games.
    “Whatever you want or need please take it” he said.
 Later he put on music, but not before he asked everyone in the audience to share at least one act of human kindness that others had done, witnessed, or shared. I couldn’t help but to share the goodness of having DRY belongings.
    I later had an opportunity to speak with Ken.  It would seem as though Ken got his start by simply observing the human condition of the people of the city of Denver. He started off handing out food and then someone asked him if he could get them a coat.  He used his own money and went to the Good Will and purchased one for them. He then formed a loose partnership with the Good Will  gave him a discount for the items he purchased for us. One thing led to another and now his non-profit called Humane Kindness has successfully completed ten months of feeding and securing the homeless.
    Thanks Ken.
    Because even though I didn’t need all of your help I truly appreciated the cup of coffee, plus I admire the fact that you are so willing to help so many people. As a way of showing my support, I would invite any readers reach out to Ken and see if he could use some of your help. As for me, I am still fighting the Police Officer, whom I shall now call the "Black Satan", and the crooked MARTA Police officers.
    I have been tortured, raped, stalked, had my human rights denied and treated like less than a second class citizen. I have had three miscarriages due to MARTA, moved from four states, lost nine cell phones, had my works and money stolen, delayed and denied. I have been followed, forced out of home after home, all in an effort to get me to drop my lawsuit, which they deleted from my laptop and flash drive. These despicable liars have even called the New Orleans, Memphis and Denver police departments on me, all in an effort to keep me from fighting them for what is rightfully mine while they loot and plunder my good name.
    Please help me get my life back. Contact the Denver Police Department and tell them to Investigate MARTA, or contact The Denver Post and tell them to Please Stop MARTA.
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Seven Days Without a Home or Homeless for Seven Days

10/27/2016

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by Marie Antoinette Black
            Being homeless for seven days is no laughing matter. Yesterday as I lay on the grass, my stomach full of cramps because it was “that“ time of the month. All I could think about was the fact that I should have been at home in bed. My bed. And normally I would have been but that wasn’t the case thanks to Black Satan, otherwise known as Z of the Crooked MARTA Crew.
            You see, he once confessed to me that he wanted to see me homeless and on the streets so that he could bring me some leftovers and laugh at me. Sad. How utterly sad. It was sad that he got his wish because I was, or for the moment am, sleeping on the streets. And very sad because normally at “that” time of the month, I don’t even like to be around people, yet here I was forced to do some things that were and are totally against my nature.
            It is also sad because I am guilty of a crime known as monogamy. As I choose not to sleep with a married man. I mean after all, I was once married and never once during the entire time did I ever cheat on MY husband, therefore why should I 1) Lower my standards. 2) Give in to a bully? 3) Dis-respect his wife. And 4) Dis-respect myself.
            As I lay on the ground trying to still the cramps that were really getting to me, I tried to think on the positives but also keep a wary eye out for the Denver Police as it is a crime to be homeless, well, not actually a crime, but as a homeless person we are told that we have to keep moving and are not allowed to sleep in public places until 10 pm and it was only 11 am in the morning.
            Although I am homeless due to the selfish nature of a man, I will not cry about it, instead I will choose to make the best of each and every situation while I continue to fight for my rights as 1) A female. 2) A United States Citizen. 3) A Christian and 4) A person. See, Black Satan had it in his mind that if he could hold me down long enough he could 1) Steal all of my ideas, books and businesses. And 2) That I would somehow magically come back to him and welcome him and his wife with open arms. Boy was he ever wrong, because I am an Intelligent, Black, Single, Christian, Woman worthy to be praised for still having morals in an immoral world. I am still strong and caring and I will never forsake the Lord God, nor Jesus The Christ. But he is the Anti-Christ and he hates Christians. Just look at the despicable things that he chooses to do.
            He hacked into my laptop, cell phone, and business computers and camera systems. Everywhere that I go he is able to spy on me through the automatic camera systems thanks to MARTA and BRS LABS. But like artificial intelligence, I too am a whole lot smarter. I too am able to break down their barriers and I too am a warrior. Why just last night I believe that I was able to pull down another of their strongholds. And today when I tried to write this original piece, they hacked into the system that I was using and deleted it. But I got smarter and just re-wrote it again.
            You see that you can’t keep a good woman down, and especially a good Christian Woman. But like the Terminator, I too have a message and it is this, “Karma is a bitch, so you had better be careful what you wish for because you just might get it.” You see I have this theory. The Lord God knows our hearts and sometimes he will give you exactly what it is that you want, but you had better be careful because HE knows your heart. Black Satan prayed to the wrong God because OUR Lord God heard him and He also knows me. So he asked for certain things and so did I, only now I am owed so much more money for my trials and tribulations, but I also asked for a Yacht, one that sleeps ten people and is wood grain and I NEED for it to be top of the line, because I am Top Of The Line. And I deserve it. So see you at the finish line. Although I was crying before, I will be the one with the biggest smile on my face, that is, me and Usher!
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Just Another Day of Lost Hope and Dreams...

10/27/2016

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by Anonymous
Here I sit at the Denver Central Library
Another day of crap to deal with (drama)
I feel lost and confused..
Just another day of lost dreams and hope!

I feel angry that society is feeding
the younger generation full of BS
Getting them to live in Denver or
the surrounding areas just because
of pot and breweries.
Letting them think that it's okay
to live the drug addict and alcoholic
life and leading them to destruction.

What hope do the future generations
have when we feed them this stuff?

I've been here homeless almost 2 yrs.
The missions tell you "we'll help
you find housing." When is that
going to happen? The average time
seems to be 5 yrs on a waiting
list! I'll be dead by then if I don't
move away.

I'm tired of the meals the missions serve!
Indescribable food and bread and
pastries that are so dried out that
you can hardly eat them!


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Door Checker a Dangerous Dude

10/27/2016

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by Marie Antoinette Black
This morning while standing in line, I was greeted with those words from another female Homeless Friend of mine named Deborah! I tried very hard not to laugh but it was very funny. She had slept in her car. She had done every night for the past year! Being homeless is not a joke. It seemed as though there was another homeless man who had been going up and down the streets of this residential neighborhood checking the door handles for a way in.
           Another man with a home had placed a note on her car telling her about the broken sprinkler on his lawn. She wanted to curse him out and tell him that she was not the person who had broken his sprinkler, in fact it was actually the man who was trying to get into his car. She is such a Good Samaritan, that she followed the man with her bright lights on, harassing him to get out of the neighborhood.
           And I know just how she felt. It seems as though I too had a few problems over the weekend. I too am without a home and I too sleep on the streets only I do not have the luxury of sleeping in a car. Thanks, Z also known as Black Satan! But I sleep and keep my belongings in a separate place. The owners of the property where I keep my belongings have given me permission to keep my things there as long as I do not sleep there, which I have not. Well Saturday night? Sunday morning as I was going to the Laundromat to wash my clothes I found all of my stuff had been gone through and my sugar had spilled. Well apparently another HOMELESS MAN had gone through not only my belongings but those of my friend. He had pulled EVERYTHING from my bags and strolled them all over the place. He had done the same to her, only he slept on her clothes. She told him off and he started a fight with her. Thank God that she had a boyfriend who came to her rescue.
           Then yesterday night I had to fight to keep my place to sleep. Once again, another man had taken over the place where I slept. Well I kindly told him that that was my spot and kicked him out. He tried to lie to me and tell me that he had slept there the night before. "Liar!" Because I slept there the night before and for the week before that had been my spot.
           Now I was mad, fighting to keep my belongings. Fighting to keep my place to sleep! [Z, L, S, W, do you have to fight like me?]
           And I am still working on: My greeting Cards line, Picking Up new Artists, helping artists like: Nicki Minaj, Drake and of course my Baby Usher Rayme! Vote for Usher Raymond as People's Sexiest Man Of The Year! Look for his new album Hard II Love, Drake is coming to Denver, and Support Nicki's Drink MYX or Purchase some of her clothing from K-Mart!
           My shit is for sale at The Gathering Place and Our dance Teams will come forward.
           Now MARTA, In the words of my friend, R.I.P, ODB, "Give Me My Money!" And I took a shower today, so I ain't dirty, but then as long as I have a bottle of water, a washcloth and some soap, I ain't NEVER dirty!

Marie Antoinette Black
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Ralph Fights Eviction Proceedings

10/26/2016

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                                                                                                                                                        Ralph Mills

Ralph came to us at Get Loud sharing his experience with eviction court. He first shared what he was planning on submitting to the judge to ask why he ruled the way he did. The second portion is what he shared with us after he made his statement to the judge. It is an example of just how messy these things can get for a variety of reasons. It could happen to anybody...even you.

Your Honor,
I will show you every element of the extensive criminal enterprise that has actually used your court to further their illegal activities.

1. Greed! They gave me 3 days to move my pool table. I complied when I saw the notice.

2. On 8-25-16 I mailed my rent from New Jersey.

3. On Thursday 9-15-16 Wymtita Mills called her mother, stating that I would be evicted on the 20th of the month.

4. I had mailed September rent the last of August. That is when the idea came into their head. Because of them thinking I was out of the state and would come back after the event had taken place.

5. They understand that if I am a no-show then I would be evicted with nothing and with nothing I can say.

6. The tenant court has never give the tenants a fair shake. This management company manages over five properties. And Your Honor, you are more of a victim than I because it’s you they used to take many many many people’s properties. Plus making them homeless.

7. They should be put in jail because this is the first time they didn't get the proceeds of their work.

8. Honor, I did not lose anything by the grace of God, but I ask you what about the many people you evicted just like me that didn't have the ability to make their voice heard.

9. If I had never received that pool table, then they never would had wanted me out of there.

10. When people are from out of state they have a tendency to stay over rent time. Mailing in rent may be the factor because Ms. Sonja Wells who stayed in New Orleans for over a month mailed her rent in and when she came back all of her things were outside. Oh, except the TVs computers and washer and dryer which were missing.

11. Every eviction you did for this management which wasn't about non-payment of rent was an illegal eviction. That actually made you part of each and every one of them.

12. They feel that if they have the paperwork they posted that that justifies their actions.

13. The fact of the matter is people are being evicted that pay their rent on time because someone in the management wishes to have something that they see in a tenant’s place.

14. Furthermore, I am one of the many people that you illegally evicted that did not lose anything. However, the many other victims that all took the loss should be compensated for these illegal evictions you imposed.

15. Sir, if you do not hold yourself accountable, then I would think that you are in partnership with these perpetrators.

I’ve made my case. I will rely on the integrity of the court that everyone will get their Justice.
May the blessings of God be with you in everything you do.

Ralph Mills


Epilogue:
9-21-16 Court date, judge upheld eviction to move immediately.
9-22-16 I wrote what I wrote so that the judge would have to choose a side. I expressed a criminal enterprise was happening, therefore, her place was to send the letter I wrote directly to the prosecutor’s office. If she did that, then she is trying to get to the bottom of this. However, if she says the prosecutor has not received the paperwork I gave her, then that in itself is proof of her involvement and desire to cover it up.

Turns out, the judge was actually down with them. For a judge to make a decision to uphold something that is not right, then that judge is a sellout and the integrity of a judge should never be in question.

I will have three days after they post the notice to move. After that, I will spend every waking hour in order to make the judge take responsibility for making 100s or even 1,000s of Denverites homeless and to bust up this thing where they can evict anyone without them even having knowledge of the violation preceding. I did not ask for this. They tried to take my possessions, but they did not get them. So it’s not about me, but about all the victims out there that come home to find all their things gone. It is you that my heart goes out for and I will do my best to make all involved take the accountability for their part. Know that God is good! And He is my protector and insurance.


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Huffy Money

9/27/2016

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Homeless Bob
Sometimes I fly signs, but not always to make money.  Occasional I'll fly them just to see the different reactions I can elicit from people just like you.  
    On this particular day, my sign only had one word on it.  I flew if for about 4 hours (no money) when a snazzy car pulled into the parking lot there on my corner.
    A tall, statuesque beauty stepped out of the car and was followed by 2 adorable little girls.  The two were hopping around begging mom for some money to give to me.  All mom said to them was hush , no and stand still.  However, they continued to pester their mom.  In a huff, she stood up screamed fine!  She then walked toward me and extended her hand and haughtily said “there!”  She gave me a crumpled dollar and stomped off.
    The two little angels were dismayed and pouted because mom had ruined what so far
was going to be the highlight of their day.  The word on the sign...  Compassion.   I gave that only dollar I made on that sign to someone I knew who was begging for change. I couldn't keep the dollar it wasn't given to me in the context it was asked for.

P.S. Lady, you should have given them the dollar.
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Shelter Life is NO Life!

2/11/2016

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​Lyn Kaminski
    I arrived in Denver Oct 5, 2015. I came to Colorado from Connecticut for personal reasons. After a few days in a motel I was running out of money. My apartment in Idaho Springs would not be ready until Nov 3. So I ended up staying at Holy Rosary Women’s Shelter of Samaritan House for three weeks.
    This was a new experience for me as I had always had my own apartments in CT. 
    The staff for the most part were supportive. I did have trouble the third day with one young man.
    They had a trailer where belongings were stored overnight, but had to be out in the morning. My belongings were too great for me to carry around all day and, as I am somewhat physically disabled, it would have been impossible for me to go anywhere with them. I told the young man I would have to sit outside the property on the sidewalk all day so as to not have my stuff stolen. He finally came up with a solution: store my stuff at a public storage facility a few blocks away. So this I did which depleted my funds considerably.
    So here I am new to Colorado. No idea what to do all day. We are awakened at 5am and after breakfast have to leave by 7am not to return until 5:30 pm. A woman at the shelter told me about The Gathering Place but, how to get there. I finally found my way to St. Francis, where I spoke to a social worker. He was very helpful. I finally got a Colorado ID and bus passes and directions to The Gathering Place to get a shower and a lunch.
    At Samaritan House there were frequent arguments between women and staff. Verbal abuse by staff. I felt like I was not a human being. The men who worked in exchange for their shelter treated us like we were animals. Dirty Animals.
    This place has a sign opposite the offices that states that the women would be expected to come up with a plan to 

      1) find a job,
      2) save money, and 
      3) get an apartment of their own.

    This is a farce. Many of the women had various types of mental illness and would be unable to live on their own. Other women were only interested in obtaining drugs and spending their days in an altered state of being. A few I saw on the 16th St Mall with signs begging for money. A sad few were pregnant. What kind of life would these children have?
    After three weeks I found myself more disabled than when I got to Denver. My feet hurt 24/7. I already suffer from chronic pain in my back, knees and ankle.
    I am fortunate that my stay was only temporary and the weather was mostly agreeable. I am now in my apartment in Idaho Springs.
    Shelter Life is NO LIFE. It’s just shuffling from point A to point B all day every day.
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