Tag Archives: Federal investigators

HOA Halloween Jerks!

Crazy, how HOA Amerika has become so fascist.

This HOA in Silver Spring, Maryland has decided that one homeowner goes a little too far in her decorations. The kids in the neighborhood absolutely love it when this homeowner puts out her annual Halloween display. But this HOA does what HOAs do. They sue. They ‘farm’ certain homeowners to find cases to refer to their chosen law firms. They figure that ‘farmed’ homeowners will surrender, pay the fines, the jacked-up legal fees and excessive collection costs.

It’s all about money. Follow the money.

This kind of neighborhood retaliation should be illegal! It’s unconscionable.
But these lawn Nazis know no bounds.

(click here for Halloween story)

 

Not HOA Related, But Really Hilarious & Lovely Corruption!

From The London Times: 

Outside England’s Bristol Zoo there is a parking lot for 150 cars and 8 buses.

For 25 years, its parking fees were managed by a very pleasant attendant….. He charged car owners $1.40 for parking, buses paid about $7.

One day, after 25 solid years of never missing a day of work and collecting all those fees he just didn’t show up. Managers of the zoo called the city council asking for someone to send down another parking agent to take his place.

The council did some research and replied that the parking lot was the zoo’s responsibility, not theirs. 

The zoo told the council that the attendant was a city employee, not theirs.

The city council replied that this parking lot attendant had never 
been on the city payroll.

After two and a half decades, this ‘parking attendant’ is undoubtedly sitting in his villa some where on the coast of Spain, Italy or France, laughing at the sucker he’d made of the system. 

He apparently charged the parking fee on his own. People gladly paid the parking toll to visit the zoo. 

All he had to do was show up each morning, collect the parking fees and stash them in his personal account.

For 25 years, he collected about $569 a dayl After 25 years, that amounts to a paltry 7 million dollars.

LOL! At this point, nobody even knows this shyster’s name. But he’s a genius.

And a millionaire. And nobody knows his name!

God bless you in your retirement, Sir!

Great Column in Las Vegas Newspaper

Rana Goodman

On My Soap Box

The Mess Continues, The Government Does Nothing!

For the past two months, I have been telling you about the issues of the Crossroads III Condominiums homeowners. Unfortunately, nothing has been resolved as of this date, since the wheels of the Nevada Real Estate Division (NRED) move painfully slow – even in the face of this emergency situation.

Terry Williams, Public Information Officer for the Nevada Department of Business & Industry, did speak to me about the case and promised to see what she could find out. She wrote me a long email ending with the following which I found very troubling:

“When an intervention affidavit is filed, the case is considered the state’s case. It is not the complainant’s case. The state has no further duty to report the status of the investigation until the investigation has been completed. The Division caseload is extremely heavy and while a complainant may feel a particular sense of urgency for resolution, the division can only complete an investigation as resources and circumstances (including responsiveness of the other parties named in the complaint, etc.) of individual cases allow.”

Perhaps that is why I have another homeowner incident on my desk that is now going into the fourth year. It has simply languished (or perhaps, been ignored?) by NRED’s bureaucracy.
And perhaps that is why Jerry Marks, who is a Supervisory Community Association Manager, (licensed by the NRED) turned to Channel 13 TV for help when he ran into problems with the HOA he lives in, rather than go through the tedious steps of “going by the NRED book.”

Jeez, the new forms alone would give you angina.

In my attempt to help the Crossroads III board and homeowners, I reached out to their Las Vegas Councilman, former Senator Bob Coffin. I sent several emails via his web page, as well as the previous Vegas Voice editions. I also enclosed a cover letter listing the problems and contact information for the board. The Councilman did not even have the courtesy to respond. No email, no phone call – nothing!

With no end in sight, Crossroads III homeowners cannot even get simple repairs made. The common areas are simply neglected by Sherryl Bacca, the community manager, even though she is paid by the “other” group that claims to be the “rightful board.”

There is now a 4 page recall petition for the “second board” that has been signed by many owners in the complex. Now that they have the required amount of signatures, by law, management has 90 days to hold that election.

If they refuse to do so, the homeowners would have to go back to the Real Estate Division to force compliance. However, as previously stated, no help has been forthcoming from NRED.
Believe me, I am very familiar with the cliché: “If you don’t like living in a HOA, why did you buy a home in one?”

Well, let’s be realistic. The largest percentage of homes built in the Valley over the last 15 or 20 years are in HOA communities. There is very little choice. Reading your governing documents only tell you the rules; you do not have any idea as to the type of board or management you are going to get.

When I was first introduced to the NRED Ombudsman’s office around 2007, a homeowner’s first “HOA problem-solver”, they were happy to give help and instruction. These days, that office is tied up for unlimited amounts of time with bureaucratic layers of forms and rhetoric that lead nowhere.

At the 2011 legislative session, few legislators wanted to talk about presenting HOA bills. However at the last session, there were hundreds of HOA bills, since legislators were besieged by homeowners who were having so many types of problems and needed help.
Things are only going to get worse and help will not be available since while “a complainant may feel a particular sense of urgency for resolution, the division can only complete an investigation as resources, circumstances… allow.”

Suffice to say, any homeowner wishing to sell and bail out of Crossroads III might as well forgetaboutit. There are disclosure laws in this state and sellers must “show and tell” if there are law suits pending, defects they are aware of, and/or “trouble in “River City.” A potential homeowner would have to be out of his/her mind to buy into that mess.

Unless of course, they are into war games!

Rana Goodman is The Vegas Voice political editor and a “trouble shooter, advocating for seniors.” She also maintains a community web site, Anthem Today; a forum for residents in Sun City Anthem. She can be reached at: rana@thevegasvoice.net.

 

How Can We React?

It has dawned on me several times over the past few years that HOA outrages are most often reversed when a rogue HOA gets a ton of phone calls and email from angry people across the country. If you know that you, as a board officer or manager, are being watched by the whole country, you might be a little less rotten to your neighbor. In a well publicized case where an HOA official’s viciousness is widely publicized, would that official be more willing to step back and mull over the action he or she is planning to take? Certainly, when you lift up a big rock the vermin tend to scatter in the light of day.

We currently have more than 31,000 people regularly reading this blog. That means an army of folks in every state. Should we begin publicizing home phone numbers, HOA phone numbers, email addresses and management phone numbers whenever we hear of the actions of a rogue HOA board?

I’d like to hear your thoughts publicly or privately. And if we ever began such a policy it would require your help to look up and verify any numbers or addresses of those we publicize.

Your thoughts?

Conviction In Massive, Massive Corruption Case

You can’t get any closer to organized crime than this one! A former city manager in a small suburb of Los Angeles has pleaded no contest to dozens of counts of fraud, embezzlement, rigging city elections and a bucket load of other felonies connected with a scandal that has rocked people across Southern California. Five former city council members, a former assistant city manager, and the former mayor of the City of Bell are still awaiting trial. More charges and indictments could still be coming, including possible federal indictments by the U.S. Attorney.

Robert Rizzo was the longtime city manager of Bell, California, a small, lower income community immediately southeast of Los Angeles. His assistant city manager was Angela Spaccia. Over a period of years Rizzo and his “gang of eight” looted the community, putting it millions of dollars into debt and driving it to the brink of bankruptcy. The crimes sound awfully similar to the organized crime scam that looted the treasuries of at least a dozen private homeowners associations in the State of Nevada.

Because of inappropriately high salaries in a number of California communities, the state enacted laws prohibiting city officials from voting themselves massive amounts of income. Rizzo, his assistant city manager, the mayor, and five city councilmen held an almost secret municipal election to get the city officially chartered to avoid the state limits. Despite a population of 38,000 people and just 10,000 registered voters, only 390 votes were cast, a majority of them by absentee ballot. And many of those ballots were forged to reflect that a solid majority were in favor of the proposed charter.

Over a period of several years, Rizzo arranged for himself annual pay hikes that put his salary at nearly eight hundred thousand dollars. That’s twice the salary of the U.S. President! Rizzo’s eventual salary was to be one and a half million a year, almost four times the salary of the President.

But Rizzo obviously thought that wasn’t enough. He began stashing millions of dollars in secret retirement accounts to benefit him and a majority of his buddies on the city council. He was set to begin receiving a pension of more than a million dollars a year, all paid for by low income homeowners, phony city contracts and excessive property taxes. In fact, the salaries and pensions arranged by Rizzo and approved by the Mayor and city council made Bell the second highest taxing district in all of Los Angeles and its surroundings. Tax rates were even higher than those in affluent Beverly Hills. When at least one homeowner complained about excessive salaries for Rizzo and the city councilmen, Rizzo and his assistant city manager, forged documents to show he was only earning 180,000 a year and his councilmen around 2400 a year.

In the months to come, we should be hearing a lot more about outrageous siphoning of taxpayers’ money by officials in communities across California. There are reportedly at least a half dozen investigations going on and the FBI is deeply involved in even more.

(click here for LA Times story)