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Discarded furniture lays on the ground at the Cove Village apartment complex on July 30, 2019 in the Baltimore suburb of Essex, Maryland. Cove Village is one of several apartment complexes in the Baltimore area owned by President Donald Trump’s son in law and senior White House advisor Jared Kushner's real estate company. Mark Wilson | Getty Images

Of the more than 200 complaints detailed in documents Baltimore County's Department of Permits provided to CNBC about Kushner Companies-owned buildings, more than 75 complaints related to apartments infested with rodents. Cummings, a Democrat, represents the 7th Congressional District, which encompasses parts of Baltimore County and the City of Baltimore. The six Kushner complexes where rodent complaints were recorded in records obtained by CNBC are not in Cummings' district. "Their [sic] is a major infestation going on between the rental townhomes," said another complaint filed in February 2018 at the Commons at White Marsh. "These mice are everything and everywhere including my kitchen table ... They poop and pee all over the house in bathrooms, pots and pans, beds, tables, etc." Peter Febo, the chief operating officer of Kushner Companies, in an interview with CNBC said the company only has two open complaints related to its seven properties, which contain 4,469 apartments, in Baltimore County. Febo said he did not know if those open complaints were related to rodents or some other issue. "They could be anything," he said. Febo also said the company prides itself on being very responsive to complaints and to quickly fixing issues that tenants have with their units. But McCoy-Mohhammed, an older woman who lives alone in the Kushner-owned Harbor Point Estates Complex, says that when she moved in, the leasing office swore there was not going to be a rodent problem. However, McCoy-Mohhammed says now "I am unable to have company because I am too embarrassed of the rodent problem." Like other residents interviewed about their rodent complaints, she was unaware that the Kushner Companies owns her complex and as a result did not know the connection between her landlords and Trump's son-in-law. "If (Trump) is calling Baltimore rat-infested, but his son-in-law owns property that is a major part of the problem, what is he going to do about it?" she asked. Another former tenant who had complained of rodents, and who asked that only his first name, Jason, be used, said, "It is hypocritical." The White House did not respond to a request for comment by CNBC for this article.

A split image of President Donald J. Trump (L) and U.S. Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (D-Md.) The Washington Post | Getty Images

Jason said he moved out of the Kushner-owned building, in the Highland Village Townhomes complex in Baltimore, because of fear that his young child was going to be bitten by a rodent. "Our landlord didn't do s---. They didn't do a damn thing," Jason said. "All they said was don't worry about (the rodents) until they get into your house," Jason said. Cierra Angeles, a tenant of Highland Village, said, "It's not safe and sanitary for my kids" and that her landlord "doesn't do anything to help the customer." "They just care about the money," Angeles said.

She conceded that rodents are a problem in other Baltimore buildings but said she "shouldn't have to be worried about one jumping out of the wall and onto my kids, though." A federal government worker who agreed to speak to CNBC under the condition of anonymity out of fear of losing her job said that "the rodents were having orgies in my house; I was sweeping the babies up off of the floor." That woman said the infestation at the property was so bad that she and her family skipped rent and moved out over fear for the conditions her four children were living in.

Senior Advisor Jared Kushner listens while US President Donald Trump announces an agreement with Guatemala regarding people seeking asylum in the Oval Office of the White House on July 26, 2019 in Washington, DC. Brendan Smialowski | AFP | Getty Images