On a June afternoon in 2018, a man named Mickey Barreto checked into the New Yorker Hotel. He was assigned Room 2565, a double-bed accommodation with a view of Midtown Manhattan almost entirely obscured by an exterior wall. For a one-night stay, he paid $200.57.

But he did not check out the next morning. Instead, he made the once-grand hotel his full-time residence for the next five years, without ever paying another cent.

In a city where every inch of real estate is picked over and priced out, and where affordable apartments are among the rarest of commodities, Mr. Barreto had perhaps the best housing deal in New York City history.

Now, that deal could land him in prison.

The story of how Mr. Barreto, a California transplant with a taste for wild conspiracy theories and a sometimes tenuous grip on reality, gained and then lost the rights to Room 2565 might sound implausible — another tale from a man who claims without evidence to be the first cousin, 11 times removed, of Christopher Columbus’s oldest son.

But it’s true.

Non-paywall link

  • dogslayeggs@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    So I’m trying to figure out what is stopping someone else from using this rule to get a rent-controlled room there. I think this forces the hotel to offer a lease to anyone who stays there, and maybe at rent-controlled prices, too. He pushed it too far by trying to seize the building and then impersonating being the owner after being told by a judge to stop. But it sounds like the hotel is stuck under a weird law that it can’t change to get out of.

    • Dieinahole@kbin.social
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      8 months ago

      Please go stay a night, then ask for a lease!

      The face on the attendant alone would stop most people I bet