Los Angeles Times

Lobbyist fined after $51,000 birthday bash

- By Emily Alpert Reyes emily.alpert@latimes.com Twitter: @LATimesEmi­ly

The Los Angeles City Ethics Commission fined lobbyist John Ek more than $11,000 on Tuesday for inviting dozens of city officials to a birthday party with free food, drinks and musical entertainm­ent, saying he had violated city rules that restrict gifts from registered lobbyists.

But politician­s and other city officials who attended the expensive event were able to repay Ek for party costs and avoid any penalty. Sergio Perez, the Ethics Commission’s enforcemen­t director, said that under city and state rules, if someone quickly reimburses the gift giver, “it’s as if a gift was not received.”

Nearly two years ago, Ek paid more than $51,000 to celebrate his 50th birthday at Perch Los Angeles, hosting an invitation-only party for roughly 250 guests at the downtown bistro. An Ethics Commission investigat­ion found that he had invited 37 city officials to the event and had, therefore, offered them an improper gift.

Registered lobbyists are barred from offering or giving gifts to elected officials under city rules, and elected officials are barred from accepting them. Lobbyists are also prohibited from giving gifts to other city officials if they are seeking to influence decisions in their agencies.

City officials are also banned from accepting such gifts. Ek invited members of the Los Angeles City Council, the controller and the mayor, as well as other city employees, but city investigat­ors did not identify which politician­s or their staffers ultimately went to the party. None of the partygoers faced fines: Ethics Commission officials said all of the city officials who attended had later reimbursed Ek for their share of the party costs — $205.06 each — “negating acceptance of the gift.”

Mayoral candidate Yuval Kremer, who attended Tuesday’s meeting, said it was “disturbing” that the Ethics Commission was not naming the city officials who attended.

“They were not whistleblo­wers or witnesses — they’re politician­s who broke the rules,” Kremer said in an interview. “Not only are they not willing to fine them, they’re not willing to name them.”

Kremer also publicly questioned the independen­ce of the commission, arguing that it had a “double standard” and avoided punishing sitting politician­s. Members of the Ethics Commission are appointed by city officials, including the mayor and the City Council president, and the agency relies on the City Council and the mayor to approve its budget.

At Tuesday’s meeting, Ethics Commission member Andrea Sheridan Ordin asked staffers why the city had found no violation on the part of the city officials who went to the party. Perez, the enforcemen­t director, replied that city investigat­ors didn’t have a choice. Because the city officials had quickly repaid Ek, “there is no receipt of a gift in violation of city law,” Perez said.

The Times reviewed photos of the party and confirmed that Councilman Mitch Englander and Councilwom­an Nury Martinez attended.

Although an Ethics Commission report said that partygoers reimbursed Ek after being contacted by city investigat­ors, Martinez spokesman Adam Bass said that the councilwom­an knew that going to the party amounted to a gift and had paid Ek back without being contacted by the Ethics Commission.

Martinez aide Alexis Marin, Jessica Duboff, who was an aide to Councilman Mike Bonin at the time, and Justin Wesson, an aide and son of Council President Herb Wesson, also went to the party. Vanessa Rodriguez, a spokeswoma­n for the council president, said Justin Wesson had seen the event as “nothing more, nothing less than a birthday party for a colleague.”

Ek spokesman Robert Alaniz said the lobbyist found out only after the birthday party that inviting city officials was considered offering them a gift.

“Mr. Ek, who has no prior enforcemen­t history with the Ethics Commission, has never seen this interpreta­tion in his 25-plus years as a city lobbyist,” Alaniz said in a statement.

Members of the Ethics Commission said Tuesday that a seasoned lobbyist like Ek should have been aware of the rules. “He was in the business of being a lobbyist .... So I don’t know how that mistake could have been made,” Ordin said.

Ek could have been fined more than $22,000, but Ethics Commission staffers decided to cut the proposed penalty in half because he had cooperated with the investigat­ion.

The Ethics Commission also handed out fines Tuesday to technology company Cisco Systems, which must pay $12,500 for failing to accurately report more than $90,000 in lobbying expenses; Crest Real Estate, its president and project manager were penalized $15,000 each — for failing to register and report lobbying; and former mayoral candidate Emanuel Pleitez, who must pay more than $36,000 after failing to properly maintain spending records or turn over copies of ads from his campaign four years ago.

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