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Judge grants emergency receivership for Lowry Apartments in downtown St. Paul

What's next for the Lowry Apartments in St. Paul as court steps in
What's next for the Lowry Apartments in St. Paul as court steps in 01:52

ST. PAUL, Minn. —  Conditions have gotten so bad at a downtown St. Paul apartment building that the courts are stepping in.

Residents of the Lowry Apartments are ready for their living nightmare to be over.

"My plan is to get out of here as soon as possible," said Ciela Arguelles.

The city has condemned seven apartments in the building.

WCCO cameras have come across needles and feces in common areas.

"There's big cockroaches here," Arguelles said. "There's [mice]. There's people that come in and out the building that's violent, people breaking into my apartment."

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Conditions inside the Lowry Apartments building WCCO

Edward James, another resident, says his mailbox has been inaccessible for about a month, and he needed to have important medical equipment shipped elsewhere to get it.

At the request of the city, a judge put the property into receivership on Tuesday, saying "An emergency exists at the Lowry Building."

A Bloomington real estate company called Frauenshuh, Inc. will now be in charge of managing the building instead of the owner, Madison Equities, a St. Paul company.

The city says it'll work with Frauenshuh to develop a plan for what's next.

Frauenshuh didn't respond to WCCO's request for comment on Wednesday.

Mayor Melvin Carter helped city staff get rid of garbage and furniture that had been blocking emergency exits and stairwells.

An attorney for Madison Equities places blame for the building's deterioration squarely on Carter and the city, saying unchecked crime, homelessness and drug use have led to the decay of downtown.

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