Saturday, September 27, 2008

FEDS SEARCH MORE BUSINESSES IN FRAUD CASE IN NEVADA....

This article is reprinted in whole from ReviewJournal.com...we hope they in the name of education and free press and that we give them full credit for all information contained within...you can read the article at ReviewJournal.com by clicking our headline to go to their site...besides, theere is more to read there on this issue.

Looks like what happens in Vegas ain't staying in Vegas...


CORRUPTION INVESTIGATION:
Agents pursue HOA records

Board members, lawyers, construction firms scrutinized

By ADRIENNE PACKER
REVIEW-JOURNAL

In its sweeping investigation into homeowners associations, the federal government is digging up documents and correspondence related to association board members, attorneys and construction companies, according to a search warrant issued in the probe.

During searches of seven common-interest communities governed by homeowners associations, FBI agents sought ballot lists, ballots, envelopes and nomination forms.

Authorities are investigating whether individuals were planted on homeowners association boards to funnel business stemming from construction defect lawsuits to certain attorneys and construction companies.

In one case, according to a source close to a construction company alleging it was frozen out of the bidding process to fix construction defects, the owner of a property management company referred so many cases to the same law firm she was rewarded with a trip to Cabo San Lucas.

Agents are searching homeowners association records and ballot information dating back to 2001. The properties listed on one search warrant include Vistaña, Chateau Versailles, Pebble Creek, Park Avenue, Sunset Cliffs, Chateau Nouveau and Mission Pointe.

The government also seeks seven years of correspondence involving 43 people including Lisa Kim, president of the property management firm Platinum Community Services, which was raided by agents Wednesday. Some of the others include current and former homeowners association board members around the valley.

An attorney for Platinum, Blaine Beckstead, said Thursday that the warrant Platinum was served with on Wednesday did not include the names of Kim or any other Platinum employee. The Review-Journal verified Thursday night that Kim, who could not be reached for comment, was not listed on the warrant served at that location.

Agents are also interested in documents related to political consultant Steve Wark, who served as president of the Vistaña Homeowners Association, as well as prominent construction defect attorneys Scott Canepa and Nancy Quon.

Being named in a warrant does not necessarily mean individuals were involved in wrongdoing. No arrests were made as a result of the raids.

Canepa and Quon were unable to be reached for comment.

Wark did not sound surprised that his name was listed in the warrant. He was president of the Vistaña homeowners association between late 2005 and fall 2007, he said.

Quon was one of the attorneys who represented the association in its 2005 lawsuit against Rhodes Ranch. The company fought Rhodes over faulty plumbing and other problems.

"I was president of the association, and I would expect at some point that people need to talk to me," Wark said.

He said he wasn't involved in any wrongdoing and that he has not been contacted by law enforcement.

Search warrants were executed Wednesday on nine valley properties, including a building on Bertsos Drive, near Flamingo Road and Arville Street, which is owned by Silver Lining Construction owner Leon Benzer. Federal agents are also after contracts and invoices related to Benzer's construction company.

But a source close to Silver Lining Construction said that the company was not involved in any wrongdoing.

Instead, the source said, it was another firm, Draeger Construction, that monopolized the construction defect rehabilitation industry, freezing out other bidders.

According to the source, competitors of Draeger, including Silver Lining, are looking into filing a federal anti-trust lawsuit against the construction company, property managers and attorneys. The gist of the complaint is that Draeger has monopolized the market because it is in cahoots with the property managers and attorneys.

Draeger Construction is listed in one of the warrants.

A message left for Draeger representatives was not returned Thursday.

According to the source, one property management company, Castle Management, referred all construction defect complaints to a local law firm which would then suggest to the homeowners board that it hire Draeger Construction to do tests and make repairs.

Other competitive bidders, such as Silver Lining, are not even considered even though they may offer the best deal, the source said.

At one point, the law firm treated Castle Management owner Diane Wild on a trip to Mexico, the source said.

Wild did not return calls seeking comment.

Draeger Construction landed the jobs in part because it showered homeowners association board members with gifts, the source said. But it also pitched itself as the only company that could provide properties with certain materials, weeding out other bidders.

Review-Journal writer Lawrence Mower contributed to this report. Contact reporter Adrienne Packer at apacker@reviewjournal.com or 702-384-8710.

LIFE PAINT SAYS Thanks for finding one of our sample boards...


I gave Life Paint a spank for their AL sample board I spotted at Miners Ace Hardware a few weeks ago using language that ICC specifically forbids using...here's their reply after they read my blog...and a picture of their corrected header...

when their sales guy comes up to get the board and replace it, they should take me to lunch, hint hint...sure would be nice to have that board as a souvenir, hint hint

Good to know that I'm being read out there!

Thank you Bill for finding one of the boards that went out with that printing. A few were released before the error was caught. We had the headers for those boards adjusted immediately when the error was found and we've been looking for the boards (one which you have found) to replace them. I tried to attach a picture of the corrected board to you in this post. If it did not attach I can email you a picture of the corrected header. Thank you, Life Paint

QUEST BUILDING PRODUCTS, A New Distributor of Concrete Flooring/Coatings Ready's For Opening in Anaheim






Down on North Patt Street in Anaheim is a new set of industrial buildings...in one of these buildings a new distributor of flooring and concrete coating materials and surface preparation is preparing to open their doors to wholesale/trade sales.

Quest Building Products, the brainchild of Ron Webber of Pro-Coat Systems, large decking/waterproofing/concrete coating firm in Orange, has hired Dennis Chevrier, previously with La Habra, to head up the company as General Manager.

Quest will have their own line of flooring products, including Liquid Lava, a unique epoxy type coating that has multiple flooring uses-homes, business' , restaurants, wineries and warehouse...
Blastrac will be carried, rentals and sales of equipment

The pictures are of Quests floors and warehouse, showing off the Liquid Lava Flooring...

Quest is located at 1129 N Patt Street Anaheim CA 92801. Telephone 714-738-6640, fax 714-738-6950. Find them on the web at www.questbuilding.com

Dennis can be reached at dennis@questbuilding.com or by cell at 714-715-5703.

Opening day is scheduled for about 2 weeks from Monday, a grand opening is planned in several months.

Training, demo's and more will be coming...look for more news and Quests official announcement that they are open for business here.

Picture of the Week





So I got a call last week from a client in Grover Beach; she'd had her deck redone by a local company a couple years ago.

She said "there's rust coming through from the chicken wire". I rushed right over...

The patient had signs of serious distress; rusted lath all over the deck. Close examination and an autopsy revealed what looked to be Tufflex or some type of urethane troweled over the lath. Some sloping work was done, we could see the built up materials over an old existing fiberglass system that went over the original urethane surface we found buried down below...

The deck was flat in many areas, attempts at crickets to move water to the scuppers were done poorly, water ponded on the deck just from the heavy fog we get on the coast in corners adjacent to scuppers, and out on the field of the deck.
Clearly who ever did this was guilty of not knowing what they were doing...

Demo'ing the stucco walls, where i could see the flashing was rusting through, we found serious amounts of water damage to the plywood and metal. Removing the plywood in one corner revealed the damage below to the TGI Trusses (Engineered Truss System, uses wood and OSB for strength).

This brought our work to a screeching halt; a general contractor will be needed to fix this problem, then we can come back and waterproof.

This job for us is around 10K, the owner now faces another 10k in wood repairs before we can waterproof her properly...

Lesson, you can cheap out on your job, but your job won't get any cheaper!

Do it right the first time, not the second or third.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Another Condo Project Slides Into Oblivion in SLO County


Atascadero CA
In the Tribune this morning, there is an article on Southside Condo's, which has had work stopped for over a year now, has had it's lender file suit against the builder.

Charnley Development/Pembroke Builders started the project several years ago, when the heady days were around...I actually sold the decks and stairs on the project through a company I worked for.
We did three buildings, 2 were 100% completed and the 3rd was 75% done when work stopped.

Sun scorched building paper is drying out, plywood and trim is cracking and drying out. When/if this building ever starts to go again, it's going to need some help to ensure deteriorating materials are removed and replaced...

Rabobank has filed for payment of 7 million, the Trib said an appraisal of some sort valued the property at 3.5 million. Huh...and there's the poor folks who bought a unit and are stuck probably...and then there's this huge eyesore of a lot, and an unfinished building...

Massive Fraud in Construction Defect Litigation in Nevada?

FROM NEVADA, a story of massive alleged fraud involving construction defect litigation, steering jobs to "preferred" contractors, law firms in cahoots with the management company...all brought about by a raid by the FBI.

Read the byline and see a copy of the news cast here...

Federal and local law enforcement officers raided nine sites around the valley on Wednesday in a sweeping probe into possible collusion between homeowners associations and businesses benefitting from construction defect lawsuits.

The raids are part of a "pending public corruption case," according to Federal Bureau of Investigation spokesman Dave Staretz, who refused to release details. He said no arrests were made.

According to a law enforcement source, the FBI is investigating whether individuals were placed on homeowners association boards who, in turn, would direct business stemming from construction defect lawsuits to select companies.

At issue, according to the source, is whether HOA members were steering contracts to certain construction companies.

Other sources said there has long been speculation that some HOA representatives were hiring certain law firms to handle construction defect lawsuits in exchange for kickbacks.

State Sen. Mike Schneider, D-Las Vegas, a lawmaker who has been involved in homeowners association issues before the Legislature, said the speculation involved management companies steering construction defect business to law firms in exchange for kickbacks.

One of the companies raided Wednesday by FBI agents and Las Vegas police was a business in an industrial area near the Palms owned by Leon Benzer, who is involved in a variety of businesses.




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