The Red-Stamped Plan That Turned a Condo Meeting Into a Fraud Hearing-QuynhTranJP

The woman in the gray trench coat did not hurry across the lobby.

That made it worse.

Her shoes clicked once, then again, on the polished stone floor while every resident in the room turned to watch her. Rain streaked the glass doors behind her. A cold draft followed her inside, carrying the smell of wet pavement and construction dust from the street.

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Grant Keller’s hand dropped from the edge of the table.

For the first time that night, he did not look polished.

The woman stopped near the front row and looked at the projector screen. The red-marked internal note still filled the wall behind Grant’s shoulder.

DO NOT DISCUSS PHASE II VIEW IMPACT DURING RESIDENT SALES WALKTHROUGHS.

She did not ask who had put it there.

She already knew.

“Mr. Keller,” she said, opening the city folder in her arms. “I’m Dana Whitmore, Office of Inspector General liaison to Planning and Development. Please do not shut off that projector.”

Grant’s attorney stood so fast his chair scraped backward.

“We need to pause this meeting.”

Dana looked at him once.

“No.”

One word.

Flat.

The room held its breath around it.

The attorney touched his yellow legal pad, then his phone, then the pen he had been clicking all night. His fingers could not decide where to hide.

Grant tried to recover with the soft voice again.

“Ms. Whitmore, this is a private homeowners’ meeting.”

Dana stepped closer to the projector. Her badge swung slightly against her trench coat. The plastic sleeve made a tiny tapping sound that somehow carried all the way to the elevators.

“It became a public matter when city-submitted documents were contradicted by sales disclosures across 84 residential transactions.”

A sound moved through the residents, not a gasp exactly, more like air being pushed out of a hundred lungs at once.

Eighty-four.

I knew my stack was blocked. I knew the west side was affected. I did not know the number was that high.

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