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West Village ‘grifter’ Kate Gladstone evicted after more than three years

The West Village “grifter” who lived rent free for three years in one of NYC’s priciest neighborhoods, partly by exploiting New York’s eviction moratorium, has finally been given the boot.

Kate Gladstone, who also uses the name Katherine Klein, was evicted from owner Valentina Bajada and Heidi Russell’s two-bedroom Barrow Street pad Thursday, in an hours-long spectacle attracting a small crowd of workers and neighbors.

The saga began in June 2019, when Gladstone moved in with her child, paying $2,000 for a room in the apartment on a month-to-month basis. Similar apartments in the neighborhood can rent for nearly $7,000 and up.

Almost as soon as Gladstone moved in, Russell asked her to leave, so she could give the spare room to her own mom, who needed surgery.

Kate Gladstone peeks her head out of the living room at 129 Barrow Street.
J.C.Rice
A locksmith, Russell, and City Marshall Robert Renzuli discuss installing a new lock on the apartment.
A locksmith, Russell, and City Marshall Robert Renzuli discuss installing a new lock on the apartment.
J.C.Rice

But Gladstone refused to budge and stopped paying, according to court records.

Russell went to court to oust Gladstone in December 2019, alleging in legal papers the woman took over the living room, bathroom and kitchen, wrote “bizarre messages directly on the walls,” removed smoke detectors, and accused her of stealing.

Gladstone eventually agreed to leave by March 31, 2020, but got a reprieve when then-Gov. Cuomo issued the COVID-19 eviction moratorium.

In August 2020, a desperate Russell, who spent days wandering the streets with her poodle to avoid Gladstone, sued in a bid to get her out, prompting a front page in The Post.

Gladstone’s face was plastered on posters around the neighborhood, with the phrase “#WestVillageGrifter” and a warning to other residents to “please alert your neighbors.”

Officers remove Gladstone's items from the property.
Officers remove Gladstone’s items from the property.
J.C.Rice
Heidi Russell first tried to evict Gladstone in 2019.
Heidi Russell first tried to evict Gladstone in 2019.
J.C.Rice

Russell tried to change the locks when Gladstone left for a few weeks one summer, only to have a Housing Court judge order her to let the freeloading tenant return.

Gladstone’s behavior only got worse, claimed Russell, who said her unwanted roommate sprayed chemicals, recorded her, and blasted music.

Gladstone, her dog, and her daughter were finally evicted this week.
Gladstone, her dog, and her daughter were finally evicted this week.
J.C.Rice

By July 2021, the court greenlit a warrant to evict Gladstone, but required a status conference first. Gladstone claimed financial hardship, which paused the case for months. In March, Gladstone filed a state Emergency Rental Assistance Program application, which again halted the eviction effort.

On Aug. 5, free of pandemic rules which tied the court’s hands and with Gladstone’s ERAP bid denied, Housing Court Judge Evon M. Asforis ordered the eviction to go forward, noting Gladstone had made life “unbearable” for Russell.

In the three years living there, Gladstone — who has a pending 2019 criminal case for forgery and grand larceny after allegedly stealing an ex’s credit card to pay for hotel rooms — paid only a single month’s rent.

It’s the third West Village home she’s been accused of squatting in over the years.

Gladstone covered her face and refused to talk to reporters.
Gladstone covered her face and refused to talk to reporters.
J.C.Rice

On Thursday, an hour before city Marshal Robert Renzulli arrived with a locksmith to enforce the 10 a.m. eviction, Gladstone snuck out the building’s back exit, ignoring questions from The Post.

Renzulli entered the apartment to find Gladstone, 46, had left behind her teenaged daughter and tiny dog, a Cavalier King Charles named Happy, as she ostensibly sought yet another reprieve from the courts.

NYPD officers then warned Gladstone to come back for her daughter. Eventually, she returned, shielding her face and refusing to answer questions.

“I have mixed emotions,” Russell said Thursday, as she worried Gladstone would accuse her of stealing her belongings.

Gladstone “has used every angle she can think of to avoid leaving,” Russell and Bajada’s attorney, Arthur Schwartz, wrote in one legal response.

It is not clear if the Thursday eviction is the final chapter: Gladstone is due in court Monday as she again appeals to get back in.

Her lawyer didn’t respond to a message.

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