Los Angeles Times

PARTY CRASHING

L.A. city attorney begins crackdown on Hollywood Hills homes known for loud, late-night bashes that draw hundreds

- By Joseph Serna

It’s one of the worst-kept secrets of living in the Hollywood Hills.

Many of those raucous parties hosted above the glittering lights in those midcentury boxes of glass and beams are not hosted by people who actually live in the upscale canyons and hillsides.

Rather, homeowners and property managers rent out their homes to short-term guests who throw events f lowing with booze, loud music and hundreds of guests.

Residents have been complainin­g about the problem for years. But critics say the parties have gotten worse in recent years — especially with the rise of short-term rentals. There have been angry public hearings, neighbors collecting evidence against out-of-control partiers and calls for tougher laws.

Now City Hall is getting involved.

The Los Angeles city attorney’s office is looking to turn down the volume on two Hollywood Hills homes reportedly known for loud, late-night parties.

In separate criminal complaints filed Tuesday, City Atty. Mike Feuer has charged the owner of a single-family home in the 7800 block of Electra Drive and the property manager of a home in the 2600 block of La Cuesta Drive with multiple misdemeano­rs related to maintainin­g a public nuisance.

“It’s completely unacceptab­le for residentia­l homes to be rented out every few weeks for massive parties that attract hundreds of guests, blast music throughout the night and block streets, disrupting peace and quiet in our neighborho­ods,” Feuer said in statement.

Perhaps the most highprofil­e party-palace landlord was Danny Fitzgerald, the owner of four properties on Weidlake Drive in the Dell neighborho­od near the Hollywood Reservoir. The address hosted numerous bacchanals that were publicized on social media from 2012 to 2015.

Neighbors reported seeing a caged lion at one party and an elephant at another. The biggest of the homes was used to film a Playboy TV show about swingers.

The partying at those properties eventually quieted down after both the city attorney and Building and Safety Division sent Fitzgerald notices in summer 2015, officials said.

The latest offenders, however, have ignored similar notices, officials say.

In May 2016, Feuer’s office sent the owner of the home on Electra Drive, Kamran Younai, 46, a cease-and-desist letter requesting that he stop allowing short-term rentals that host large parties and music.

Officials even met with Younai that September, Feuer’s office said. Despite the meeting, at least a dozen other large parties have occurred there, officials said.

“All we want to do is have a peaceful existence,” said Felicia Present, who lives across the street from Younai’s property.

Neighbors there say they’ve worked to gather evidence that the home remains a nuisance. They’ve photograph­ed hundreds of guests flowing into the home and the many cars that clog the neighborho­od’s narrow streets. They’ve also recorded the thundering bass that causes neighborin­g homes to vibrate.

Younai did not immediatel­y return a request for comment Wednesday, but the property manager of the La Cuesta Drive estate, Rose Garcia, 43, said neighbors were too sensitive.

“It’s like if anyone talks in the pool area or sneezes, complaints are filed that have no validity,” Garcia said.

The property had a history of complaints before it was sold in November (the city attorney’s office said the current owner is a “Belgian princess.”) Garcia said she could recall only one visit from police since the property changed ownership and said there was no party going on at the time.

“It’s sort of an inherited issue,” she said. “It’s really dishearten­ing and strange.”

Both Younai and Garcia are scheduled to be arraigned Oct. 6. Younai faces 16 misdemeano­rs: 10 counts of maintainin­g a public nuisance after receiving a written notice and six counts of engaging in illegal shortterm rentals. If convicted, he faces up to eight years in jail and $16,000 in fines.

Garcia is charged with 10 misdemeano­rs: seven counts of maintainin­g a public nuisance after receiving a written notice, two counts of permitting the emission of loud and raucous noise through an amplifying device and one count of excessive noise. If convicted, she faces up to three years in jail and $7,000 in fines.

Complaints about loud parties in the Hollywood Hills are not new.

In 1924, The Times published a front-page story about a revolt by Laurel Canyon residents after a birthday party got out of hand.

Members of the Laurel Canyon Improvemen­t Assn., the paper reported, demanded the city prosecutor file charges against the homeowner and party guests.

The prosecutor vowed to take action to “discourage such affairs in the future.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? LOS ANGELES officials are trying to stop raucous parties at houses on La Cuesta Drive, top, and Electra Drive, above, in the Hollywood Hills by filing misdemeano­r charges against the owner or property manager.
Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES officials are trying to stop raucous parties at houses on La Cuesta Drive, top, and Electra Drive, above, in the Hollywood Hills by filing misdemeano­r charges against the owner or property manager.
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