
Tenants said they didn’t want their names published for fear of retaliation.
The clarion apartments windows#
Other Infinity tenants outlined to CT Examiner some of the problems: garage and exterior doors stick open or don’t lock, allowing anyone to enter from the street and break into cars or access living areas apartment windows and sliding doors leak, allowing mold to grow elevators regularly break down and sometimes get stuck between floors, faulty smoke alarms sound for no reason. “They jury-rig just to satisfy a complaint.” He’s speaking out because AJH Management’s approach to maintenance puts him and his neighbors at risk, he said. His attorney is preparing a lawsuit, Perez said. It ran under the wood laminate flooring and stayed there.” “I think when they finally stopped the leak to my neighbor’s apartment, whatever they did made the water back up in my apartment. “They worked on my AC several times, but I didn’t know it was because water was leaking down,” he said. He would learn that his air conditioning unit had been leaking water into his downstairs neighbor’s apartment for more than a year, Perez said. “I told them I wanted the contact information for their legal counsel. “I told them this apartment model has a problem, and I asked them to reach out to other tenants to let them know, because I didn’t want someone else to get hurt,” Perez said. The day after he returned from the hospital, he visited the Infinity property management office, Perez said. “I was having panic attacks,” Perez said. They prescribed him steroids and sent him home. In the lobby, the concierge told Perez he didn’t look good and called an ambulance.Īt Stamford Hospital, emergency room doctors ran an electrocardiogram to check his heart. “As I was going downstairs the watch showed 152 beats per minute, as if I was running. Perez, 42, who runs his own cybersecurity company, wears a watch that records heart rate. “I decided to go to the lobby to see if I could find the concierge.” I thought I should be near someone because I was starting to not feel good,” Perez said. So I walked around the danger area, the way I came, and went to the circuit breaker to kill the power.” “All I could think was that I didn’t want my dog to get hurt. “I felt pins and needles in my right foot,” Perez said. Perez saw that it was sparking – and under water.

Near the sill of the floor-to-ceiling windows in his luxury apartment, beside the couch, there’s an electrical outlet in the floor. Perez said he was electrocuted and thrown into the couch. “I felt water pool under my foot,” Perez said. It was 5 p.m.Ībout 20 minutes later, he got up from the couch and took a step. The smell and the water were still there, so Perez called the office again and left a second message. about a burning electrical smell and water on his living room floor. Perez sat on the couch and wondered whether the property management office for the high-end Harbor Point high-rise would return his call. STAMFORD - On a late afternoon in June, Victor Perez finished a day of work in the home office of his apartment near the top of the 22-story Infinity building and went into the living room.
