The Daily Courier

Hawaii land bill targets Facebook founder

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HONOLULU — A Hawaii lawmaker said Friday he plans to introduce legislatio­n that could force Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg into mediation before he is allowed to buy real estate on Kauai island.

State Rep. Kaniela Ing said Hawaii’s sugar barons long employed laws Zuckerberg is using to take land from Native Hawaiians. He said Zuckerberg is “completing the theft.”

“Zuckerberg may be acting more transparen­t than folks who exploited this law in the past, but it doesn’t make it right,” Ing said. “I just hope he understand­s the context of his actions in the history of our state.”

Zuckerberg last month filed lawsuits to identify owners of 14 parcels interspers­ed with his 700-acre spread hugging a stunning white-sand beach so he could pay them and buy the land.

Ownership of the small lots could be split between hundreds of people — many of them unidentifi­ed.

If passed, Ing’s bill would likely take effect July 1. It would apply to Zuckerberg’s cases if they are still ongoing.

Ing, a Democrat who represents the southern part of Maui island, said Zuckerberg should enter mediation regardless of the legislatio­n. He said he hopes Zuckerberg will do so if enough people in Hawaii echo this sentiment.

A Zuckerberg spokesman did not immediatel­y return email and phone messages seeking comment.

The bill would allow a parcel’s shareholde­rs to band together in a group in mediation against the person seeking to buy the land. He said this would give people with rights to the land more bargaining power as a group against wealthy landowners like Zuckerberg.

Ing said he also wants to lessen the burden on families facing potentiall­y costly land rights legal battles.

“If you’re a working class local family and you get sued by the sixth richest man in the world, that’s going to cause you a lot of stress. You’re going to spend money on a lawyer no matter how expensive it is. That’s the problem,” he said.

Ing said he also plans to introduce legislatio­n that would require that people must own at least a 50 per cent share in a property before they can launch a legal case seeking to establish other owners and potentiall­y buy them out.

He said the Zuckerberg case brought attention to the ongoing situation of the so-called kuleana lands, which are small parcels awarded to Native Hawaiian commoners when the Kingdom of Hawaii establishe­d private property rights in the mid-19th century.

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