Los Angeles Times

Real estate firm faces $71,000 ethics fine

- By Emily Alpert Reyes

A Los Angeles company owned by a real estate developer faces a proposed fine of $71,000 for reimbursin­g donors to a City Council candidate, hiding the true source of the money and exceeding city limits on campaign contributi­ons.

Five years ago, real estate developer Bruce Makowsky gave $700 — the maximum donation allowed at the time — to support candidate Joan Pelico. Makowsky then asked his assistant to seek more contributi­ons for Pelico from his employees and associates and tell them they would be reimbursed for their donations, Ethics Commission investigat­ors found.

Ten people linked to a company that Makowsky owns, 1181 N. Hillcrest Road LLC, gave to the Pelico campaign and were reimbursed by the company, investigat­ors said. Under city law, campaign donors are barred from giving in the name of someone else, a practice that can be used to sidestep limits on how much each person can contribute.

In a report, Ethics Commission staffers recommende­d a penalty of $71,000 for the company — the maximum fine — because reimbursin­g donors is “an extremely serious violation,” they wrote in a report.

The company has agreed to pay the proposed fine if it is approved by the Ethics Commission, which will vote on it this week.

Makowsky’s company “accepted responsibi­lity and is gladly paying the agreedupon amount to help the city root out corruption and improper influence, none of which was present here,”

said its attorney Ronald Richards.

Richards emphasized that the fine is being imposed on the company, not Makowsky personally, who “was not a party to this resolution nor is he liable.”

Makowsky signed the document agreeing for the company to pay the fine, listing himself as its president, and city investigat­ors said in their report that he “controls the contributi­on activity” of the company.

Pelico, who has long served as chief of staff to City Councilman Paul Koretz, was running to represent a council district that stretches from Sherman Oaks to Miracle Mile. She said she took an unpaid leave from her City Hall position while she was campaignin­g for the seat, which Councilman David Ryu ultimately won four years ago.

City investigat­ors initially stated in their report that Makowsky had formed his company for a developmen­t project in the Westside district that Koretz represents but later revised the document to note that the Hillcrest Road address is in Beverly Hills.

Makowsky was the developer behind a lavish home at 1181 N. Hillcrest Road that was eyed by Jay-Z and Beyonce before being purchased five years ago by the billionair­e creator of the video game “Minecraft.”

Ethics Commission investigat­ors said they found no evidence that Pelico knew the donations were improper.

Pelico said Friday that when investigat­ors first brought the issue to her attention, she was “pretty pissed off.”

“It goes against everything I stand for and believe in,” Pelico said.

Pelico said she did not know Makowsky well, but had met him at a holiday party and asked him to donate to her campaign and encourage others to do so. At one point, Pelico said, Makowsky contacted her because he wanted to get a street resurfaced in another council district at his own expense, and she called the Bureau of Street Services to let the staff know about the request.

Pelico also said she was unfamiliar with the company facing the fine.

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