Quote:
Originally Posted by OPRFIllini
Could be that the city sent its' health and building departments there to check on any code violations. I don't recall seeing anything wrong, but if they found something and slapped the owner with fines (and also ordered repairs that can be expensive depending on what the violation is), the owner could deem everything as too expensive to continue and close up voluntarily. This is one sneaky way that Rahm/Dart could close AMPs without having to resort to using LE resources.
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It doesn't have anything to do with that.