Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

To stop alleged plot, feds faked a murder

A very Hollywood ruse leads to arrest of developer accused of ordering a hit on two.

- By Noah Goldberg

Arthur Aslanian wasn’t taking any chances when he met his employee, Sesar Rivera, on the side of a road last month.

Only after patting Rivera down to check if he was wearing a wire and making him leave his phone in Aslanian’s pickup truck did he look at the photograph Rivera had brought.

It was a gruesome image of a dead man who had been shot in the face.

The real estate developer studied the photo to make sure it was the proof he wanted. “That’s him, man, that’s him,” he said.

Rivera asked Aslanian what to do with the photo.

“F— shred it,” Aslanian responded.

Aslanian left the roadside meeting believing the photo confirmed that a plan he set in motion had succeeded, according to an account of the meeting provided by the U.S. attorney’s office. The man in the photo was a banker who had been fighting to recoup about $3 million Aslanian owed him. Instead of paying, prosecutor­s allege, Aslanian had hired an assassin.

Aslanian, however, had

just been fooled.

Agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives had been tracking him for months and had nabbed Rivera weeks earlier as he was trying to find a hit man for his boss, authoritie­s say. Rivera had agreed to cooperate with the investigat­ion and, despite the pat-down, Aslanian failed to find the two recording devices agents had concealed on him that captured the chilling exchange, according to federal prosecutor­s.

And the banker was alive and well. The photograph was the work of a makeup artist — the coup de grace of a straight-out-of-Hollywood ruse agents had devised to ensnare Aslanian.

Hours after his meeting with Rivera, Aslanian was arrested at his upscale La Cañada Flintridge home. He was indicted Thursday along with Rivera on two counts of conspiracy to commit murder for hire. Prosecutor­s allege that on top of plotting to kill the business associate, identified by his initials S.E. in court papers, Aslanian planned to have another man killed as well.

“Mr. Aslanian denies all the allegation­s against him and maintains his innocence,” said Melanie Killedjian, Aslanian’s attorney in the criminal case.

Weeks earlier, Aslanian’s other alleged target, attorney Mark Young, was in court when he got a message: ATF agents wanted to meet with him. Immediatel­y.

As the longtime bankruptcy lawyer drove from the courthouse in Alhambra to the ATF’s Glendale office, he and his assistant Hallie Browne tried to determine if he was being scammed. The pressing reality did not settle over Young until he and Browne exited the elevator and he saw the ornate carpet of the ATF office emblazoned with the Department of Justice’s insignia. Several agents sat them down in a conference room, Young recalled.

“We need to inform you that you’re the intended victim in a murder-for-hire plot,” Young said the agents told him. “There’s a hit that’s been put out for you.”

The color drained from Young’s face, Browne recalled.

The agents asked if he knew Aslanian.

Young told them he had represente­d Aslanian in a bankruptcy proceeding from 2018 to 2021. Aslanian, he said, was refusing to pay more than $250,000 he owed in legal fees. Young had last contacted Aslanian about the debt in April, when he sent him a letter detailing how much he owed and putting him on notice that he could be sued.

The agents informed Young that Aslanian had launched a plan to hire a hit man to have him killed. They did not tell him Aslanian was also planning the murder of another man.

While he knew Aslanian to be an aggressive businessma­n, Young had never seen a violent side of him, he said.

“I was scared. I didn’t know whether I should go into witness protection or something. When I told my wife, we were shaken and spent the next three nights at a hotel,” Young said in an interview.

The diminutive developer, described by tenants as standing just a few inches above 5 feet, lives with his wife in a well-kept, two-story house on a street lined with pine trees in the rolling hills of La Cañada Flintridge. Photos of Aslanian with his daughters line the front hall alongside diplomas. On a recent day, a white terrier barked at the door.

When reached by The Times, a colleague described Aslanian as a “family man” and was incredulou­s that he had been arrested.

People who live at properties Aslanian owns, however, were less surprised. Several renters described him as a “slumlord” who mistreated them.

“He’s been harassing a lot of his tenants,” said Jonpaul Rodriguez, who lives with his wife in a bungalow complex Aslanian owns in North Hollywood. The couple are currently on a rent strike. “He is a slumlord.”

Rodriguez and his wife, Clare Letmon, claim that Aslanian has allowed the property to fall into disrepair so that he can demolish it and build a larger complex. Raccoons live in some of the empty bungalows, and the tenants say that Aslanian ripped out parts of the walls while renters were living inside. Some of the bungalows on the property are boarded up and red-tagged, and charred detritus is strewn about from a March fire.

Aslanian’s checkered history at his properties dates back decades. He was charged with a misdemeano­r in 1998 for allegedly failing to pay more than $100,000 to workers for repairs at a homeless shelter in Koreatown. His company was found guilty of a labor code violation in the case, court records show.

He was busted again in 2007 after another one of his companies was found to have violated city rules requiring building permits. The company was placed on probation for a year, according to court documents from that case. On top of the criminal cases, Aslanian and his companies have been named as defendants in lawsuits more than two dozen times, court records show.

Nonetheles­s, Aslanian continued to grow his real estate portfolio. He owns three adjacent plots on Hartsook Street in North Hollywood through a company, Andalucia Project LLC, according to property records. He also owns a handful of other properties throughout the San Fernando Valley, including a modern apartment building a few blocks away, records show.

But Aslanian was also building a mountain of debt. On top of the legal fees Young said he owed, Aslanian owed S.E. nearly $3 million over a dispute involving a Brentwood property that led to years of litigation, according to a judge’s ruling in the case.

During an interview with ATF agents, Rivera recounted how Aslanian had explained to him that he wanted S.E. killed because he believed the man was a “piece of s—” and a “no good motherf—” who “probably deserves it,” according to the criminal complaint.

At Aslanian’s behest, Rivera in April approached a gang member both men knew to carry out the killings, prosecutor­s allege. The gang member, who is not identified in court records, had conviction­s for assault with a deadly weapon, burglary and other crimes, according to the complaint.

After Rivera explained what Aslanian wanted done, the gang member responded that he was interested in the job. The two met again in July and Rivera informed the would-be killer that Aslanian wanted the men killed “as quickly as possible,” according to the complaint.

At the meeting, Rivera pulled up a photo of Young online and confirmed for the gang member that Young was the lawyer Aslanian wanted dead, the complaint said.

The two negotiated a $20,000 payment for Young’s murder. The gang member asked for half the money to be paid in advance, but Rivera refused, saying Aslanian would only pay when Young was dead, the complaint said.

And, he added, his boss wanted “photograph­ic proof ” that the murder had taken place, according to the complaint.

Soon after, the gang member went to police. He spilled the plot and played a recording he had secretly made of the recent meeting with Rivera, according to the complaint. He claimed that he had planned to take Aslanian’s money but not follow through with the killings, according to the criminal complaint. And he said he hoped that in exchange for bringing Aslanian and Rivera’s plan to light he would be given leniency in a separate criminal case, the complaint said.

The ATF opened an investigat­ion into Aslanian and Rivera, and had the gang member, who is referred to in court documents as a cooperatin­g witness, set up a meeting with Rivera on Aug. 24, the complaint said. He brought with him “a friend from Arizona” who told Rivera he could “get the job done,” the complaint said.

The friend, an undercover agent with the ATF, tried to sell Rivera on his credential­s, telling him he hung out with sicarios, Spanish for hired assassins, according to the complaint.

He offered Rivera different scenarios for the murders, the complaint said. It could be a burglary gone wrong or a road-rage incident. Or he could just “cap the dude,” the undercover agent suggested.

Aslanian didn’t care how it got done, Rivera responded. Aslanian would pay for the killings but wanted nothing else to do with them, Rivera explained, according to the complaint.

“Whatever happens, accident, whatever,” Rivera said, according to the complaint.

After the meeting, ATF surveillan­ce teams tracked Rivera and Aslanian. They watched as the men drove later in the afternoon to Skinny’s Lounge, a bar in North Hollywood. Agents took photos and videos as the men talked for several minutes in the bar’s parking lot before driving off, the complaint said.

Authoritie­s detained Rivera on Sept. 7. He told them that it had been the gang member who approached Rivera to ask if he needed someone to be “gotten rid of ” — not the other way around. Rivera also said Aslanian only wanted to kill S.E. and not Young, whom he just wanted “intimidate­d.”

Agents convinced Rivera to help them nab Aslanian. They hatched their plan.

The following day, they had Rivera wear a wire and meet with Aslanian, according to the complaint. Rivera informed Aslanian that the gang member was “going to handle” the murder of S.E., according to the complaint.

Aslanian reminded Rivera to be careful.

“Make sure [the gang member] and yourself have an alibi,” Aslanian said. “After today, we don’t talk about it ever again.”

With Aslanian believing the murder of S.E. was imminent, agents had S.E. made up to look like he had been shot and staged the photos of the killing.

Young said that agents asked him if he too would be game to stage his murder. He recalled them telling him that if he went along with the plan he would need to stay out of sight for up to a week. Agents suggested a trip to Palm Springs, Young said. He and his wife considered visiting Pismo Beach on the Central Coast.

He agreed to do it, but in the end, he said, agents told him it wasn’t necessary because Aslanian wanted S.E. killed first.

Aslanian is being held at the Metropolit­an Detention Center in Los Angeles without bail. Rivera was released on bond, according to his attorney.

Nobody was hurt, but the ordeal was jarring nonetheles­s for the 67-year-old Young. Throughout it all, he was allowed to tell only his wife and his assistant, who had joined him at the first meeting with the ATF, about what was happening. He and Browne would share knowing glances at the law office. She said she asked him for updates occasional­ly, but did not want to add to his stress.

With the murder plot foiled, Young said he feels he has cheated death three times in a year, having recovered from a pulmonary embolism and surgery for colon cancer.

“I don’t know how many more of my nine lives I have,” he said.

‘I didn’t know whether I should go into witness protection or something. When I told my wife, we were shaken and spent the next three nights at a hotel.’

— MARK YOUNG, a target in an alleged murder-for-hire-plot

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? ATTORNEY Mark Young was one of the targets in an alleged murder-for-hire plot by Los Angeles developer Arthur Aslanian, who owes him more than $250,000 in legal fees, according to federal officials.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ATTORNEY Mark Young was one of the targets in an alleged murder-for-hire plot by Los Angeles developer Arthur Aslanian, who owes him more than $250,000 in legal fees, according to federal officials.

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