The 7News WJLA News I-Team obtained pictures of inside U.S. Senate candidate Angela Alsobrooks’ former home in Northeast Washington, D.C., just before she sold it in January 2018. She was deeded her grandparents’ home at 1060 48th Street Northeast from her mother in 2003.

Alsobrooks’ campaign told 7News in September that she rented out the house until selling it in 2018.

The house was listed for sale a month early on Redfin.

Photo inside the home showed ripped carpet, missing wood flooring, and stains on the walls and carpet.

D.C. Code requires landlords to provide safe and livable dwellings and make all repairs. Rentals must be clean, and floors must be in good repair.

So, who rented the U.S. Senate candidate’s home for 15 years?

7News found only four names that used Alsobrooks’ home address on voter registration cards, according to D.C.’s Board of Elections.

Her grandmother who last voted in 2002 and the new owner. Plus, two other names.

Jesselene White registered to vote using Alsobrooks’ home address in July 2003.

That date was four months before Alsobrooks was deeded the property from her mom.

White told 7News she lived at Alsobrooks’ home with her aunt Darlene Mclean.

Online records confirm Mclean lived at the address from 2003 to 2004. White last used her voter registration card with the same address in October 2017, three months before Alsobrooks sold the house.

The second person? Nathaniel Fitzpatrick used Alsobrooks’ property address for his home address when he registered to vote on Oct. 9, 2012 — an important date. He also voted on Nov. 6, 2012, using the same address.

We found Nathaniel’s dad, Tim Fitzpatrick, showing off what he called his “Whip 2” vehicle, outside Alsobrooks’ home in August 2014 on Facebook.

Online records show Timothy Fitzpatrick started living at Alsobrooks’ property in 2005.

On July 17, 2003, White’s voter registration, and on Oct. 9, 2012, Nathaniel Fitzpatrick’s voter registration both used Alsobrooks’ property address with the D.C. Board of Elections.

This later became an issue because the district had no record of Alsobrooks renting out her property from 2003 to 2012.

If you are renting in D.C., the property owner is required to be properly licensed by the Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection.

District records show no rental license, called a Basic Business License (BBL), in Alsobrooks’ name from 2003 to 2012 when it appears people were living at the home. A BBL is required to rent out a property in Washington.

D.C. records confirm Alsobrooks never had a rental license for 10 of the 15 years she claims she rented out her home. She did have a valid BBL to rent the property from November 2013 to October 2015 and from August 2016 to July 2018.

In D.C., the consequence for renting without a valid BBL is a Class 1 or Class 2 infraction. You can be fined $2,000 for a first offense and it can rise to $16,000. A judge can order a landlord to return all rent to a tenant at triple the amount paid.

Last week, 7News asked the Alsobrooks campaign eight questions about her 15 years as a landlord. 7News requested copies of her rental agreements with tenants, her D.C. rental licenses and housing inspections, and if rental payments were paid to her in cash.

“QUESTION 1: When did Angela’s grandmother move out of the DC property? It appears she moved out within a year of her husband’s passing in 2001.

QUESTION 2: Can she provide a renter’s agreement between Angela and Darlene Mclean and/or Timothy Fitzpatrick or any renter between 2001 to 2018?

QUESTION 3: Can she explain why DC doesn’t have a copy of her DC Basic Business License on the property that according to DC Code must be filed with the district to rent the property from 2003 to 2012?

QUESTION 4: What were the monthly rental payments and who received the rent for the DC property from 2003 to 2018? Can you provide a copy of any rental payments or was it a cash transaction?

QUESTION 5: Can Angela explain why there is no record filed with DC that she was renting her property from 2002 to 2013?”

Her campaign hadn’t responded.