Los Angeles Times

Is anyone running City Hall?

The scandals in L.A. are piling up. When will the mayor and city attorney take responsibi­lity?

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It can be hard to keep up with all the scandals emanating from Los Angeles City Hall these days, with its various indicted City Council members and ongoing federal investigat­ions into corruption and self-dealing.

This week, the dirty laundry comes from the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. A lawyer hired by City Atty. Mike Feuer’s office in late 2014 to deal with the utility’s overbillin­g debacle pleaded guilty to bribery in a kickback scheme that involved a sham class-action lawsuit ostensibly on behalf of ratepayers. As part of the plea agreement, lawyer Paul Paradis also admitted he’d bribed the former DWP general manager and a former DWP commission­er.

Paradis’ case is the first, but probably not the last, to come out of the federal investigat­ion into the DWP billing system fiasco and the subsequent legal shenanigan­s. The FBI is still investigat­ing, and Paradis is cooperatin­g, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

But whether or not charges are filed, Paradis’ plea agreement raises big questions about Feuer’s role. Feuer, who is running for mayor, hired Paradis and was ultimately responsibl­e for overseeing his office’s management — and mismanagem­ent — of the DWP case. It’s also a strike against Mayor Eric Garcetti’s record. He ran in 2013 on the promise of reforming the DWP and protecting ratepayers, but two of his appointees are accused of scheming to accept bribes from Paradis in exchange for backing a $30-million no-bid contract to his company.

All of this began in 2013, when the DWP rolled out a flawed computer system that produced wildly inaccurate bills that collective­ly overcharge­d ratepayers by tens of millions of dollars and saddled them with unwarrante­d penalties.

The city attorney’s office hired Paradis to go after Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, the firm that oversaw the launch of the billing system. At that time, Paradis was also representi­ng a ratepayer who had filed a claim against the city for overbillin­g charges, the plea agreement said. Unbeknowns­t to the ratepayer, Paradis recruited a lawyer from Ohio to take over the class-action lawsuit as part of a plan to quickly settle customer complaints in a manner most favorable to the DWP. At least one senior member of the city attorney’s office was present as the plan was hatched, according to prosecutor­s.

Meanwhile, Paradis made a secret kickback agreement with the Ohio lawyer to receive 20% of any attorney fees from the case, which worked out to $2.2 million that was funneled to Paradis through shell companies, prosecutor­s said.

Feuer has said he directed his office to sever ties with Paradis when he learned of suspected impropriet­ies in 2019 — several years after observers raised red flags about the class-action lawsuit and settlement. He said in a statement that he is “beyond outraged that anyone would breach their duties to the public we serve.”

Paradis created a company called Aventador Utility Solutions to continue working with the DWP. In his plea agreement, Paradis said the DWP general manager at the time — who was David Wright, though he has not been named or charged by prosecutor­s — would work to pass a $30-million no-bid contract with Aventador in exchange for a job with the company when he retired from the utility. Wright would receive an annual salary of about $1 million and a new Mercedes SL 550 as his company car, according to the plea deal. Paradis also said he did free legal work for a former DWP commission­er to win approval for the contract. The commission­er, Bill Funderburk, denies any wrongdoing and has said he acted honorably.

The DWP billing system has been a case study in botched decision-making and government bungling from Day One. Now it’s another example of how corruption has been allowed to fester and grow within city government. Feuer and Garcetti, as well as City Council members who have oversight responsibi­lity, need to account for how this corruption was allowed to happen under their watch and what they’re doing to make sure it doesn’t happen again.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? FBI AGENTS leave Los Angeles DWP headquarte­rs in July 2019 after serving a search warrant.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times FBI AGENTS leave Los Angeles DWP headquarte­rs in July 2019 after serving a search warrant.

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