I was looking through a list of Alefantis building permits, which can be found Here
I noticed one address, 1613 13th Street, NW, which I haven't noticed before, with "Moving truck" as the description.
Let me first say that a search of that property shows the owner to be Julian A. Lampietti. He's a World Bank Agriculture guy by the looks of things.
A search of that address with regards to permits brings these results Here
Now, there could be legitimate reasons for a moving truck to be the only thing going on here, but it was the names that caught my eye.
Molly Cox - I don't know, possibly worth a dig.
James Alefantis - We know all about him, except what he has to do with this property or why he's ran a moving truck from there when he's a restaurater.
Matthew Berns - Could possibly be the former trial attorney in DC, now Assistant Attorney General/Senior Counsel to the Attorney General, in NJ.
Blake Gopnik- Looks like he could be the art critic who is also married to Lucy Hogg (remember her pictures with Alefantis? Alefantis also owned paintings of hers, too).
Aristotelis Papageorgiou - I don't know. Could be worth a dig.
So why are these people linked, either rightly or wrongly, to a pretty typical looking house in DC?
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Vindicator ago
Why would anyone need a permit to change wall coverings? Or for that matter, for a moving truck?
ORDOTEMPLIINTERNETIS ago
RE: Public Permits
Saw this with Epstein, Alefantis, and The Finders investigations. Terms like "wall coverings" could just be the designation of the permit they pulled and filed with the municipalities, and not actually the work done. For example, with a little shady maneuvering you can pull a permit for "A garage" and build a large subterranean bunker. Though it appears banal on the record, a "partially furnished basement" could be used for much more.