Sunday, May 4, 2008

Did Casci die from Stress St.Paul Vacant Buildings

Posted as Jim Casci owned 58 propertys near
Question to City Officials did Casci die from Stress?
his Home was in Forclosure, Denied Due Process etc.

Vacant house tour

297 Bates, 5 bedrooms, 2 fu

May 01, 2008

Last weekend there were home tours in both St. Paul and Minneapolis, but on May 3-4 Dayton’s Bluff will have its first vacant house tour. Of the 8 to 10 homes that will be shown, all are owned by banks except one, which is owned by the city of St. Paul. The Dayton’s Bluff vacant house committee wants to save homes from the wrecking ball.

Some 232 homes stand vacant in Dayton’s Bluff, with 1700 vacancies in the entire city of St. Paul. Three to four years ago residents the city had only 400 to 500 vacant homes.

The Dayton’s Bluff vacant home tour is free of charge and open to the public from noon-5 p.m. on Saturday, May 3, and from 1-5 p.m. on Sunday, May 4. Meet at 798 E. 7th Street for maps and free trolley rides. For more information email karin@daytonsbluff.org or call 651-722-2075.

For information on the City Living Program for low or moderate-income families, call 651-266-6598.



The Dayton’s Bluff neighborhood sits on the east side of the Mississippi River, on a plateau across from downtown St. Paul. Lyman Dayton (1810-1865) developed the area as a suburban residential location in the 1840s. Because of attractive landscape and scenic vistas, many wealthy residents chose to construct handsome estates on large lots. A sizable group of prosperous German-Americans clustered together.

“Dayton’s Bluff has the largest concentration of old Victorian homes,” says Karin DuPaul, “some of which are over 100 years old.”

However the Bluffs were never exclusive to the rich. During the prosperity of the 1880s through the early 1900s, the middle class built the majority of the homes. Residents worked at nearby lumber, farm equipment, Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing (3M), or Whirlpool companies.

“A healthy neighborhood has mixed incomes households living together,” says DuPaul. “There are high end Victorian homes and worker cottages on the east side.

“In the 1980s and early 1990s we had similar [foreclosures and vacancies] happening. You could then buy a house for one dollar but strings were attached, with the renovations and mortgages sometimes being $250,000 at the end of the project. For those wanting to buy a vacant home today, [rehabbing] will require skill, money, and lots of commitment. Vacancies are due to bad mortgages and it often requires families with two incomes. If nothing is done about these vacancies, these houses could be broken into with the intent for drug use or stealing of copper pipes.”

DuPaul, board member of the Dayton’s Bluff vacant home committee, became interested in her community in the 1970s when she studied the history of her own Dayton’s Bluff home. She started working with Steve Trimble, a local historian, as a board member for Dayton’s Bluff History Project in 1978.

Next, DuPaul started a block club that became known as Upper Swede Hollow Neighborhood Association.

“Community development is great when you have successes,” says DuPaul. “Otherwise you just have to be strong. I will consider our tour a success if we get lots of interest or even purchases of homesll baths, unfinished attic, rehabbed in the late 1980s

Please direct all comments concerning issues or legislation
to your House Member or State Senator.

For Legislative Staff or for directions to the Capitol, visit the Contact Us page.

General questions or comments.
Perhaps the court should be noticed about Casci's Death, in the event of Probate?




From: Sharon4Anderson@aol.com
Date: Sun, 4 May 2008 10:41:11 EDT

Subject: Danger of MicroWaves-Jim Casci Death MS149a.90


Click here: Shocking Dangers of Microwaves Part 1 <
> I do not like talking on the phone, Nancy is in the fight of her life right now, I do not want to mess her up with public defendar..... www.ademocracy.blogspot.com http://www.ademocracy.blogspot.com/
>

Jim Casci used to talk the same way on the phone,

Ramsey Co. Coror ner mn - Google Search http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=Ramsey+Co.+Cororner+mn&btnG=Google+Search

Other Minnesota Statutes http://home.earthlink.net/~mc-mea/id2.html Jon keep the e-mail, I believe POA becomes Invalid at Death,? Casci informed the City of all his propertys, which I will list in a few days? Jon keep track LATER
Casci talked a lot on the phone, last nite the cops and dogs
were at 267 Bates Property Identification Number (PIN) 32.29.22.41.0049
Property Address 267 Bates Ave
St. Paul 55106-5538
Escrow Agent Jim Casci Enterprises
Jimcasci@hotmail.com
Po Box 28430
St Paul MN 55128-0430


Property Look Up Information - Owner Information http://rrinfo.co.ramsey.mn.us/public/characteristic/Parcel.pasp?scrn=Owner&pin=322922410049&cnt=2>

149A.90 https://www.revisor.leg.state.mn.us/stats/149A/90>

149A.90 DEATH; REGISTRATION AND REMOVAL FROM PLACE OF DEATH.
Subdivision 1. Death record. (a) Except as provided in this section, a death record must be
completed and filed for every known death by the mortician, funeral director, or other person
lawfully in charge of the final disposition of the body.
(b) If the body is that of an individual whose identity is unknown, the person in charge of
the final disposition of the body must notify the commissioner for purposes of compliance with
section 144.05, subdivision 4.
Subd. 2. Removal from place of death. No person subject to regulation under this chapter
shall remove or cause to be removed any dead human body from the place of death without being
licensed by the commissioner. Every dead human body shall be removed from the place of death
by a licensed mortician or funeral director, except as provided in section 149A.01, subdivision 3.
Subd. 3. Referrals to coroner or medical examiner. Referrals to the coroner or medical
examiner are outlined in section 390.11.
Subd. 4. Certificate of removal. No dead human body shall be removed from the place of
death by a mortician or funeral director without the completion of a certificate of removal and,
where possible, presentation of a copy of that certificate to the person or a representative of
the legal entity with physical or legal custody of the body at the death site. The certificate of
removal shall be in the format provided by the commissioner that contains, at least, the following
information:
(1) the name of the deceased, if known;
(2) the date and time of removal;
(3) a brief listing of the type and condition of any personal property removed with the body;
(4) the location to which the body is being taken;
(5) the name, business address, and license number of the individual making the removal; and
(6) the signatures of the individual making the removal and, where possible, the individual or
representative of the legal entity with physical or legal custody of the body at the death site.
Subd. 5. Retention of certificate of removal. A copy of the certificate of removal shall be
given, where possible, to the person or representative of the legal entity having physical or legal
custody of the body at the death site. The original certificate of removal shall be retained by the
individual making the removal and shall be kept on file, at the funeral establishment to which the
body was taken, for a period of three calendar years following the date of the removal. Following
this period, and subject to any other laws requiring retention of records, the funeral establishment
may then place the records in storage or reduce them to microfilm, microfiche, laser disc, or any
other method that can produce an accurate reproduction of the original record, for retention
for a period of ten calendar years from the date of the removal of the body. At the end of this
period and subject to any other laws requiring retention of records, the funeral establishment may
destroy the records by shredding, incineration, or any other manner that protects the privacy of the
individuals identified in the records.
Subd. 6. Removal procedure. Every individual removing a dead human body from the
place of death shall use universal precautions and otherwise exercise all reasonable precautions
to minimize the risk of transmitting any communicable disease from the body. Before removal,
the body shall be wrapped in a sheet or pouch that is impervious to liquids, covered in such a
manner that the body cannot be viewed, and placed on a regulation ambulance cot or on an
aircraft ambulance stretcher. Any dead human body measuring 36 inches or less in length may
be removed after having been properly wrapped, covered, and encased, but does not need to be
placed on an ambulance cot or aircraft ambulance stretcher.
Subd. 7. Conveyances permitted for removal. A dead human body may be transported
from the place of death by any vehicle that meets the following standards:
(1) promotes respect for and preserves the dignity of the dead human body;
(2) shields the body from being viewed from outside of the conveyance;
(3) has ample enclosed area to accommodate an ambulance cot or aircraft ambulance
stretcher in a horizontal position;
(4) is so designed to permit loading and unloading of the body without excessive tilting of
the cot or stretcher;
(5) if used for the transportation of more than one dead human body at one time, the vehicle
must be designed so that a body or container does not rest directly on top of another body or
container and that each body or container is secured to prevent the body or container from
excessive movement within the conveyance. A dead human body measuring 36 inches or less in
length may be transported from the place of death by passenger automobile. For purposes of this
subdivision, a passenger automobile is a vehicle designed and used for carrying not more than
ten persons, but excludes motorcycles and motor scooters; and
(6) is designed so that the driver and the dead human body are in the same cab.
Subd. 8. Proper holding facility required. The funeral establishment to which a dead
human body is taken shall have an appropriate holding facility for storing the body while awaiting
final disposition. The holding facility must be secure from access by anyone except the authorized
personnel of the funeral establishment, preserve the dignity of the remains, and protect the health
and safety of the funeral establishment personnel.
History: 1997 c 215 s 36; 1Sp2001 c 9 art 15 s 32; 2002 c 375 art 3 s 9; 2007 c 114 s 41-47