Midtown Leader and Role Model
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  1. #1
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    Midtown Leader and Role Model

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    Money issues resurface for Rep. Darryl Rouson: Lawmaker failed to pay taxes on Tallahassee condo 
    
    Susan Taylor MartinSusan Taylor Martin, Times Staff Writer? ?
    
     
    Tuesday, June 4, 2013 10:29am
    
    
    
    Since 2010, state Rep. Darryl Rouson has missed three years of property tax payments on a townhouse in Tallahassee, falling so far behind that the unit soon could be put up for auction. 
    
    SCOTT KEELER | Times
    
    Since 2010, state Rep. Darryl Rouson has missed three years of property tax payments on a townhouse in Tallahassee, falling so far behind that the unit soon could be put up for auction.
     
    
    In 2010, state Rep. Darryl Rouson bought a townhouse in Tallahassee.
    
    Since then, he has missed three years of property tax payments, falling so far behind that the unit soon could be put up for auction.
    
    That's not all. Last fall, Rouson borrowed $20,000 from a relative using his already heavily mortgaged St. Petersburg home as security.
    
    And this spring, Rouson parted ways with the Tampa law firm of Morgan & Morgan, which had been paying him as much as $565,000 annually.
    
    Is Rouson, the future House Democratic leader, in financial straits again?
    
    "No, other than someone who just loses their main source of income in the last couple of weeks,'' Rouson, 58, said Tuesday.
    
    A hard-charging lawyer who said he was once addicted to crack cocaine, Rouson declared bankruptcy in 2002 while owing $360,000 to the IRS. He was still in bankruptcy proceedings when he and his wife Angela borrowed money to build a two-story, 4,400-square-foot home that they later refinanced for more than $550,000. 
    
    Three years ago, the Rousons bought the Tallahassee townhouse for $90,000 from former state Rep. Ken Sorensen of Key Largo. Through a family trust, Sorensen took back a balloon mortgage with the Rousons agreeing to pay $750 a month until the balance, $75,437, came due last July. 
    
    But two weeks before the Rousons were to make their final payment, Sorensen died at 77. Public records do not show a satisfaction of mortgage, which lenders typically file when a loan has been paid in full. 
    
    Did Rouson make the balloon payment? 
    
    "We're working with him,'' Sorensen's daughter, Susan Sallet, said this week. She declined to comment further.
    
    When asked whether he has been paying the mortgage, Rouson did not answer directly but said: "I've been on the phone as we speak to resolve the situation.''
    
    Under terms of the mortgage, the Rousons were required to pay the property taxes on the townhouse, but they failed to do so in 2010, 2011 and 2012. As of this week, they owed $5,604. 
    
    Florida law says real property becomes eligible for a so-called "tax deed sale'' when the taxes are more than two years past due. The highest bidder can take title to the property after paying the delinquent taxes. 
    
    Rouson, who once served on a state tax commission, has been sent repeated warning letters from the Leon County Tax Collector but missed the most recent deadline, April 24, to pay up. Preparations are underway for a tax deed sale later this year, but Rouson or the mortgage holder could pay the delinquent taxes plus interest right up until auction time. 
    
    Rouson said "it was just an oversight'' that the taxes hadn't been paid in three years.
    
    "Obviously I don't live there full time and I have someone who gets the mail,'' he said. "That's no huge excuse, please forgive me, I'll immediately take care of it.''
    
    Rouson did not disclose either the condo or the mortgage on his 2010 financial disclosure statement despite a requirement that Florida lawmakers annually report assets and liabilities exceeding $1,000. He listed the condo on his 2011 statement, the most recent one filed, but not the mortgage. 
    
    Penalties for nondisclosure could include reprimand, removal from office and, most commonly, civil fines up to $10,000.
    
    "It was an oversight,'' he said. "Nobody's trying to get over on somebody.''
    
    As of December 2011, Rouson reported a net worth of $50,000. His main asset was his St. Petersburg home, valued at $470,000, while his liabilities were loans totalling $692,000. That did not include the $81,000 mortgage on the townhouse. 
    
    According to Pinellas County records, Rouson used his main residence as security last October when he borrowed $20,000 from a brother who lives in California. 
    
    Why did he borrow the money? "To buy you a birthday president,'' Rouson told a reporter. 
    
    A former president of the NAACP in St. Petersburg, Rouson won election to the House in 2008 after switching parties from Republican to Democrat. He joined the law firm of John Morgan, a major Democratic fundraiser, and made $565,000 in 2010 and $420,500 in 2011, records show.
    
    But Rouson, who passed a bill this year to crack down on the sale of pot pipes, opposed his boss' support of a drive to legalize medical marijuana. 
    
    "He' a great lawyer but right now this isn't the right fit,'' Morgan told the Times/Herald last month, confirming Rouson was leaving the firm.
    IF IT LOOKS LIKE A CRACKHEAD, WALKS LIKE A CRACKHEAD AND TALKS LIKE A CRACKHEAD: IT''S PROBABLY A CRACKHEAD! or just going with the Obama Financial Planning Guide.

  2. #2
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    Re: Midtown Leader and Role Model

    Why hasn't it already been sold for back taxes? Why hasn't DR been evicted from the legislature? Why oh why? :idea:
    Time for the legislature to bring him up on ethics charges. He can't be trusted to represent the people when he can't manage his own life. Just another POS who couldn't get a real job. Wasn't he already reprimanded for fraud with his state paid trips home to preach???? :roll:

  3. #3
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    Re: Midtown Leader and Role Model

    This is the kind of guy we want running our government? Give me a break. It's no wonder things are so F-ed up. We elect people to public office, who #1 have no clue what they should be doing, #2 are serving their own self interest, #3 can't handle their own affairs and problems, and #4 seem to do whatever they want, when ever they want and aren't held accountable like the rest of us.

    If this is what we elect, then we deserve to fall apart. Things will never change until we start electing RESPONSBILE individuals to public office.

  4. #4
    Guest

    Re: Midtown Leader and Role Model

    Obama selected Geithner as head of the US Treasury and Congress approved him even though he owed the IRS about $160k in back taxes. So why pick on Rep. Rouson? He is consistent with the rest of the crooks in the Obama administration.

  5. #5
    Guest

    Re: Midtown Leader and Role Model

    Talk about corruption, just check out where he is living. Run him in DAVID and check out the address, it will make you say hmmmmmmmmmmm.

  6. #6
    Guest

    Re: Midtown Leader and Role Model

    Don't take the bait and run him in DAVID. Run him through open sources...

    This for the two or three people that always seem to take the bait.

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