
Raul Serrato, an attorney representing the owner of the building, said it was unfair of the city to hand out the violations after a fire. Serrato questioned the city’s motives in issuing them now.
“They don’t want to be seen as maybe that they had a hand in it (by) not aggressively enforcing whatever they needed to enforce against my client,” Serrato told the Chicago Sun-Times.
Chicago Building Department spokesman Gregg Cunningham dismissed the suggestion. He said that during prior visits to the building, city inspectors “were given partial access or, in some cases, no entry to parts of the building.”
Investigators said no adults were at the home at the time of the fire, and the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services is investigating “allegations of neglect” involving the children. The DCFS inspector general is also investigating whether caseworkers “missed opportunities” to ensure better supervision at the residence.
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