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The Denver Post
The Denver Post
Business
Megan Ulu-Lani Boyanton

Colorado landlord succeeds in evicting Twitter over unpaid rent

A Boulder, Colorado, landlord succeeded in obtaining an order to evict Twitter over unpaid rent, according to recent court documents.

A judge for Boulder County’s district court permitted law enforcement to evict the tenant on May 31, directing the tech giant to evacuate its suites at 3401 Bluff St. in Boulder and return them to the owner and landlord, Lot 2 SBO LLC.

On May 12, Lot 2 SBO — a Delaware limited liability company related to Chicago’s The John Buck Company — filed a complaint against Twitter, alleging unpaid rent.

Twitter and the landlord signed a lease for four building suites in February 2020, but the corporation failed to pay its rent, according to court documents.

The landlord issued a default notice to Twitter, which went ignored. Through the end of March, Lot 2 SBO instead used a letter of credit deposited by Twitter for $968,000 to pay the rent, “which serves as security for Tenant’s performance under the Lease.”

Twitter was then required to replenish the letter of credit back to its original amount, which the landlord requested on April 4, the complaint details. On April 28, the landlord asked Twitter to either fulfill that demand or return the property to Lot 2 SBO.

Twitter didn’t respond to either, the documents allege.

The landlord sought not only possession of the building, but also the past-due rent, attorneys’ fees and costs, and both pre-judgment and post-judgment interest. Lot 2 SBO didn’t aim to terminate the lease yet, but could pursue that option in the future.

A representative for Twitter didn’t appear or send an answer by the return date of the summons, according to the court documents.

The Denver Business Journal first reported on the eviction notice Tuesday.

This isn’t the only lawsuit the corporation is facing in Colorado. Last month, Boulder’s Avalanche Commercial Cleaning sued Twitter in the same court to get around $93,500 for alleged unpaid invoices.

Last year, Twitter terminated 87 employees at its Boulder office. Another 38 voluntarily resigned, according to a Nov. 25 notice to the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment.

The landlord’s attorneys, Timothy Gordon and Ryan Lundquist at Holland & Hart LLP, didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Twitter’s press email auto-replied to a request for comment with a poop emoji.

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