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Brinshore’s background check policy discriminates against black renters, lawsuit claims


A man filed suit after being turned down from renting in a Brinshore building because of an 18-year-old robbery conviction


Brinshore Development CEO David Brint and the Park Apartments (Credit: Brinshore)
Brinshore Development CEO David Brint and the Park Apartments (Credit: Brinshore)

Brinshore Development’s policy of not renting to those with convictions in the past 25 years amounts to housing discrimination, a new federal lawsuit argues.

The Northbrook-based developer is being sued by a man who said he was turned down from renting in a Brinshore apartment building on the South Side because of a conviction from 18 years ago, according to Crain’s.

Brinshore’s policy may not be discriminatory at face value, but the practice has the effect of discrimination because it mostly impacts African-Americans, the suit alleges. African-Americans make up about 15 percent of the state’s population but more than 57 percent of all state inmates, according to the suit.

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Federal housing laws protect against policies that appear to be neutral but in practice have a “disparate impact on the basis of race,” according to the lawsuit filed this week in U.S. District Court. Housing & Urban Development guidelines suggest landlords use a period of the last two years as the standard for conviction-based denials.

The man who’s suing, 50-year-old Victor Adams Jr., served three years for armed robbery nearly two decades ago and has since gone to college and started a family. He is represented by the Chicago Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights, according to Crain’s.

Brinshore, established in 1994, has a portfolio of more than 6,500 residential units valued at more than $1 billion, according to its website.

The company recently teamed with a Southwest Side nonprofit to spend $7 million rehabbing 15 vacant buildings totaling over 50 units. Brinshore has also recently teamed with Michaels Development Company on plans to build a 164-unit complex in Bronzeville. [Crain’s] — Joe Ward 

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