Los Angeles Times

Donor fined over excess gifts

Real estate investor faces $17,000 penalty for checks to Mitch O’Farrell in 2013.

- EMILY ALPERT REYES emily.alpert@latimes.com

The Los Angeles City Ethics Commission imposed a $17,000 fine Tuesday on a real estate investor who wrote checks through more than a dozen different companies to help elect Councilman Mitch O’Farrell.

The checks, signed four years ago by investor Leeor Maciborski, came from limited liability companies tied to apartment buildings in East Hollywood and Los Feliz, a number of which shared the same majority members.

City investigat­ors found that the donations ran afoul of campaign finance restrictio­ns that limit how much each contributo­r can give to each candidate, exceeding city restrictio­ns by a total of $3,000.

The Times had previously highlighte­d the donations as an example of how hard it is to tell who is behind campaign contributi­ons from business entities.

At the Tuesday meeting, city investigat­ors said it had taken “a good amount of investigat­ive effort” to uncover who was behind the limited liability companies. Many business entities — particular­ly small, privately held LLCs — don’t have to publicly report who owns them, making it harder to tell who is giving donations and whether rules are followed.

“I’m troubled by the use of LLCs as, essentiall­y, illegal pass-throughs,” said commission President Jessica Levinson, adding that she feared donations from such entities could threaten the fairness of campaigns.

Levinson voted against the fine because she was concerned about whether $17,000 was appropriat­e for $3,000 in excess donations, but the proposed penalty passed 4 to 1.

O’Farrell spokesman Tony Arranaga said the councilman was not aware that any of those donations might have come from the same sources before the Ethics Commission examined them, adding that campaign staff had handled the fundraisin­g and donor documentat­ion four years ago.

Neither Maciborski nor Jane Leiderman, who served as treasurer for O’Farrell during that campaign, responded to requests for comment.

The Ethics Commission also fined lobbyist and former City Hall aide Jimmy Blackman $22,500 for breaking “revolving door” rules that restrict how and when former city officials can try to sway city decisions.

Blackman had been paid to advocate for the firefighte­rs union and had repeatedly reached out to city officials to tell them where the union stood on budget issues, according to city investigat­ors. That violated rules because it happened within one year of Blackman leaving his city position.

 ?? Albert L. Ortega Getty Images ?? COUNCILMAN Mitch O’Farrell was unaware of violations, his office said.
Albert L. Ortega Getty Images COUNCILMAN Mitch O’Farrell was unaware of violations, his office said.

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