Saturday, August 06, 2005

D.C.: Land Buying For Stadium Can Proceed 

Land Buying For Stadium Can Proceed
Court Denies Injunction To 3 Property Owners

By Carol D. Leonnig
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, August 6, 2005; Page B01

Quotes:
A federal judge yesterday declined to issue an emergency 30-day injunction that would have stopped the District from purchasing or taking 33 properties it needs to build a baseball stadium in Southeast Washington.
U.S. District Judge Richard W. Roberts said the three property owners seeking the injunction failed to show that they would be irreparably harmed if the city was allowed to proceed in trying to buy the parcels required for the stadium project. He said the group also failed to convince him that it would prevail in its lawsuit, which alleges that the city's efforts to acquire the property are illegal.
"The loss of property is easily compensated by monetary damages," Roberts said. "Clearly, the city council has concluded a stadium is in the public interest. . . . The public interest is not served by blocking the city's effort to build the stadium."
The judge's decision means that the District can continue working to meet its deadline, under an agreement with Major League Baseball, to obtain the 33 properties by the end of the year. His ruling also suggested that it would be futile for the property owners to pursue the case.
But the judge also chided the District during yesterday's two-hour hearing, saying it had not explained to the owners the city's timetable for trying to obtain their property. The owners said they feared that they would get a city offer with no warning and have only 24 hours to accept it or face condemnation. If the city and an owner do not reach agreement on a purchase price, the city can take the land through eminent-domain proceedings.

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