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Chukes Okoro | National Development Partners

Chukes Okoro | National Development Partners 
Okoro v. Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, No. 1:2015cv03370 - Document 26 (D. Md. 2016)
Okoro Development - Baltimore, Maryland,ProView,
www.thebluebook.com

There are some ‘black’ people who like to exploit ‘black’ works, without crediting ‘black’ people.

Unknown

He may believe that money makes you a better person.

You Got Me By Grayscar Films

Chukemeka Okoro (Chukes) the computer scientist has pulled down all those pages purporting him to be a multimillionaire.
I guess his days of fooling those waste-of-space foster care social workers and the plebs of Leytonstone are well and truly over.

Chukemeka Okoro recently stepped in to admit it was him.

What are you going to do for me when the chips are down?

“Compliance is the only way to get our freedoms back. If you think that’s true, you are the problem.” The person who was telling them how to facilitate contact between a child and their mother was Chukemeka (Chukes) Okoro. The community kept on asking who is the person facilitating contact that way.

It was him. Okezie was found dead alone in his flat, have a guess who found him?

The liar’s punishment is not the least that he’s not believed, but that he cannot believe anyone else ! Trull will always prevail !

Chukes is trolling me for years.

I changed my settings everywhere.
Had I never changed my settings I would have seen my child when they needed me.

What this man has been trolling me on social media for over a decade. In the meantime, we will begin with Okezie, my father’s first son.

Life is full of many lessons Those who want to be God play at being God, but God sees.

They are skilled at trying to make you feel there is never a way out. Enough is enough.

Chukes (Chukemeka) Okoro was making a mockery of my pain. The man is an abuser. He uses social media to turn himself into some form of God. Some people refuse to fall for it.

Others see only money and fall for his stories proving they are just the same as him. You will never age well.

For Chukes Okoro it is all a sick game.

The computer programmer is currently running around deleting content which he can remember from the internet. The question is why?

Chukes Okoro is typical of the smaller developers the Baltimore Development Corp. has met with in recent months as it tries to improve its record of turning around dilapidated, city-owned real estate. If the strategies the BDC uses are successful, it could help the quasi-public agency shake off the perception that it’s a meddler in private real estate and bolster its credentials as a helper (By Kevin Litten  –  Reporter, Baltimore Business Journal, Feb 13, 2015).

Okoro Development Revitalizes West Side of Downtown Baltimore With Team Of Minority Professionals

By Megan Sayles,
AFRO Business Writer,
Report for America Corps Member,

Before London native Chukes Okoro traveled to the states for a job opportunity, he expected America to be full of opportunity. 

In England, he felt that there was an unbreakable glass ceiling preventing him and other minorities from pursuing their ambitions. In the United States– as far as he knew– the only color anyone cared about was green. 

He quickly learned this was not the case, but was determined to open doors for other minorities to follow. 

When Okoro arrived in 1998, he worked as a computer programmer in Connecticut, but he quickly learned that the tech industry wasn’t for him. He moved to Maryland a year later and decided his next career would be in property development. 

“I fell into real estate because when I was in England, I renovated my first house, and I kind of thought to myself, I’ll do the same,” said Okoro. “The process of renovating a house or property was kind of similar to the steps you take in building a computer program. I used the project management skills that I learned in computer programming and transferred them to developing.” 

He founded his Baltimore-based firm, Okoro Development, in 2003 and decided early on that he would only go after vacant properties because he was familiar with the city’s vibrant history and wanted to restore its beauty. 

Okoro began with renovating row houses in Baltimore’s Reservoir Hill. Then, in 2007, he moved into the westside of Downtown Baltimore and began responding to requests for proposals (RFPs) from the Baltimore Development Corporation (BDC). The organization works to grow the city’s economy by retaining, expanding and attracting businesses and promoting investment. 

This allowed him to expand from developing strictly residential properties to including commercial properties. 

Most recently, he renovated a derelict vacant commercial building on the 100th block of W. Lexington Street. Okuro took the six-story dilapidated building and turned the top five floors into 15 apartments. The project started in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic and was completed in April. 

“When you see a building that’s transformed it kind of just makes you happy to be living in that location or to be part of that city,” said Okoro. “It just gives a sense of pride, and it kind of gives a sense of hope that you’re in a place where better days are on their way.”

Access to funding is critical to developers’ success, including Okoro, particularly because it’s not possible to self-fund their projects. Fortunately, Harbor Bank of Maryland, the state’s only Black-owned and -managed commercial bank, has supported Okoro for nearly eight years.

With the bank’s backing, Okoro has been able to consistently overcome the challenges that often come with construction without jeopardizing his projects. 

Okoro intentionally chose to work with a minority-owned bank, and with each of his projects, he also ensures that he is generating opportunity for marginalized and underserved groups. Each project he’s completed on the Westside of Downtown has been with 100 percent minority participation. 

He’s worked with Black female architects and electricians, Black engineers, and minority trades people. When developing commercial properties, Okoro also aims to lease space to minority businesses that are typically denied by other landlords in the Downtown Baltimore area.

Recently, Okoro even started National Development Partners, a company that coaches minority developers on starting and growing a business. 

Throughout his nearly 20 years in business Okoro believes the secret to his success is always getting the job done. If he starts a project, he finishes it no matter what obstacles arise. 

However, his success cannot just be attributed to his drive. His team of Black and minority professionals that support his vision and desire to revitalize Baltimore are what makes Okoro Development’s work so impactful.  

Because opportunity is seldom provided to minority groups, Okoro and his ecosystem of Black professionals have learned to join forces to create a better, more beautiful, Baltimore for Black residents.

Okoro Development has destroyed two lives the body count could be higher. Who knows what else he has done?


Mark never lived to tell the tale. Mark was Okezie’s good friend they went to college together. Mark never needed to follow anybody on social media to construct his feelings about Okezie.

Okoro Development stated he doesn’t care for the words of a dead man. Fair enough.

https://www.redditmedia.com/r/namenerds/comments/rt0vhc/naming_kids_after_deceased_older_siblings/hqpqvmn/?depth=1&showmore=false&embed=true&showmedia=false

The Matrix