However, Allan said she and Gonzales moved out of the plaza in 2019 — chased away by those who pitched tents and brought drugs and violence to what had been a private oasis.“The bank didn’t do anything wrong,” Allan said. “They’re just going about their business.”
The city has declined to publicly detail specifics of their interactions with Gonzales or say what help was provided to him. David Swammy said he grew up with Gonzales and attended Oyster Adams with him. They bonded over their outsider status — Swammy moved to the District from London, while Gonzales came from the Dominican Republic.
“The last thing I told him — ‘Don’t end up on the street.’ He had the condo. I was like, ‘Don’t give that condo up,’” Swammy said.Cynthia Pols, a telecommunications attorney and Adams Morgan resident, said she became an “accidental expert” in property law helping with the neighborhood’s case against Truist and researching how Gonzales lost his home.Gonzales’s building — the Pasadena at 2633 Adams Mill Road NW — was a co-op that converted to a condominium in 2004, according to Pols.
Those remembering him. Couldn't anyone of them housed him in their house? We fail to help the needy and when they are no more we turned to show Love. Double standard. He died a lonely man with no friends. Let him be.
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