By Eric Williams for The Highland Park Review


It is my understanding that the lawsuit did not go forward because Ms. Gros could not continue with the case without an attorney. Neighbors were intimidated into silence or approached by a neighbor who warned them about a ‘crazy lady from out west that sues everybody’…. as I was approached by John Sachs’ son Aaron and told the same thing. Once the deadline passed, the hoa hoax conspirators claimed victory, even fooling Google over their ‘Victory’… on a case that never even made it to trial or review, whatever the term is, since I am not a lawyer. If you can discern the following images, I am pretty sure the judge would have been able to do so as well.
I am Ms. Faith’s long time across the street adjacent neighbor, and the last time I saw her shortly before her passing was at my first wife’s (Dena, my beautiful Dena) funeral. We hugged, we cried, she left the service, and I never saw her again.
Ms. Faith was the original HPCA President. When she passed they (the folks who would eventually be the people she discusses in this post, and others) did not know what kind of association she had set-up, and by their own written admission they ASSUMED it was an HOA. It was not. Ms. Faith’s son found the paperwork in a closet and it revealed that IT WAS NOT AN HOA, it is a COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION. By this time it was too late, they had already communicated to the whole neighborhood of this supposed ‘hoa’ and started requesting funds for ‘repairs to the dam’ and a $100 per year fee. Not only for Highland Park but from every home in Lakeview West. I knew Ms. Faith, and I KNEW she had not set up an HOA. So, I never paid a dime. I was never contacted or fined over non-payment of dues, which further solidified that they KNEW they had no legal standing to collect the moneys from ANY neighbor in EITHER neighborhood.
So in search of this mysterious hoa, which included combing through every Deed in both
neighborhoods going back to 1945. Well, it was located. And you are going to be SHOCKED. It
turns out that in January of 2015 a house was sold in Highland Park Subdivision. To who, you might ask?
To a realtor, who slipped in a sentence into their own Closing Papers, mentioning an ‘hoa’, a
short sentence that DID NOT INCLUDE verifiable PROBATE LOCATION DATA. In contrast,
when Ms. Faith’s home was sold after she passed, you will see that the Deed DID INCLUDE
verifiable Probate Location Data pointing to what? Highland Park Community Association.

We can only assume that a Title Company would not have missed this when selling a home in
Highland Park Subdivision, which means the Realtor served as Purchaser, Realtor and circumvented any third party Title Company Oversight by using a NOTARY, which I assume is a pretty bad no no. 9 months later in October of 2015, is when they released the first news letter, telling neighbors about an ‘hoa’ meeting. Names have been redacted, but the original files, countless conspiratorial communications, threats and other grievances are Secure and in the hands of…a well known local celebrity and legend in her own time if I said her name you would know it immediately for all the controversy in protesting this fake hoa.

Everything I say is OPINION after a simple review of a few files. It is up to you to discern it’s
contents. Ms. Gros, We Thank You For Your Service and for standing up for the Truth, under
extreme duress, slander and under threats of bodily harm. When these few conspirators realize
what they have done and begin to turn on each other and pointing fingers as to who the ring
leader was, it will be a sign for you. They are going to blame it on the dead guy. They already
are. A simple math calculation should let you know exactly how much $$ was on the line if Ms.
Gros would have been unsuccessful in obtaining a lawsuit of any kind that at least slowed them down and stopped them from continuing their racquet. There are 100 or 110 homes in Highland Park Subdivision and who knows how many in Lake View West Subdivision (thre is no Lakeview Estates Subdivision, (that is a fraudulent name). The plan was to collect $100 – $300 per year per home, on top of assessing every home ‘dam repair fees’ to rebuild the dam which they are now backtracking and calling ‘donations’.

Sherry Gros says, Faith Lods’ papers are now in the possession of Mike Damoff and Arlene Davis according to Mike Damoff. They have refused to show them to anyone who asks to review them over the years.


