By John Kramer
The Current Issue
For most of her 36 years in Atlantic City, Vera
Coking, an elderly widow, ran a tidy little boarding house just off the
Boardwalk. She convinced her husband to buy the property because she loved the
house, the beach and Atlantic City. There, long before gambling was legalized
and towering casinos rose up around her, she greeted guests from around the
world with one of the six languages she speaks. She raised three children in
the house, and one daughter still lives with her.
Retired now, the house is her only residence and
only asset. But if tycoon Donald Trump has his way, a New Jersey government
agency will use its power of eminent domain to condemn Vera's property, take it
away from her at a bargain-basement price, then transfer the ownership to Trump
for a fraction of the market value. Trump then plans to park limousines where
Vera's bedroom, kitchen and dining room now stand. In short, New Jersey will
take from one private owner and transfer that property to another private owner
for his exclusive gain.
Unfortunately, Vera Coking is not alone in this
battle. Other private property owners in Atlantic City and nationwide find
their property rights under attack from unethical marriages of convenience
between developers, local governments and state agencies. The result is an
erosion of a fundamental constitutional right. And the legal
landscape-especially at the federal level-is stacked against the land holders.
On December 13, 1996, the Institute for Justice
joined Vera's attorney, Glenn Zeitz, in asking the New Jersey Supreme Court to
reverse an appellate decision allowing the condemnation of Vera's property and
to hold that the condemnation violated the New Jersey and federal
Constitutions