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Case of the Reluctant D.A.

ORANGE COUNTY COMMENTARY

August 26, 2001|D. ELIZABETH PIERSON, \o7 D. Elizabeth Pierson is president/CEO of the Fair Housing Council of Orange County. and \f7

Complaints about the retention of security deposits make up 12% of the landlord-tenant calls received by the Fair Housing Council of Orange County, a private nonprofit agency that provides information about housing laws to both landlords and tenants. This amounts to more than 3,000 calls a year about security deposits alone. The state law governing security deposits is simple. Landlords may retain a tenant's security deposit for unpaid rent, reasonable cleaning costs and damages beyond normal wear and tear.


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So why do we receive so many complaints about security deposits from former tenants of apartments managed by Arnel Management Co.? The company, owned by George Argyros, has been accused by former tenants and an investigator for the Orange County district attorney's office of stealing security deposits from tenants for bogus damage claims and excessive repair costs. Argyros is a major Republican party fund-raiser and was recently nominated by President Bush as ambassador to Spain.

Don't most landlords at some time have a security deposit dispute with prior tenants? Probably. So why did the district attorney's office investigate what is normally a civil dispute?

The differences are the number of complaints, the consistency of the complaints, the amount of money in dispute in each complaint and the total amount of money involved in this case. If you add up all the disputes, this case involves potentially millions of dollars allegedly taken from thousands of people over a 15-to 20-year period.

Over the years, the council received a disproportionate number of security deposit complaints from former Arnel Management tenants, and the amounts in dispute were consistently larger than other security deposit disputes. This by itself is not proof of wrongdoing, but it does raise concerns.

The Fair Housing Council addressed these concerns by providing complaining tenants with information about their rights under landlord-tenant laws and advised them of their option of resolving disputes through Small Claims Court and mediation. We also assisted former Arnel Management tenants with making complaints to the district attorney's office.

The office investigated, according to a July 29 column in The Times by Dana Parsons, who interviewed Steve Douglass, the district attorney's lead investigator in the case. Douglass said he believed the evidence warranted filing charges against both Argyros and Arnel Management but that Dist. Atty. Tony Rackauckas refused to include Argyros' name in the complaint. The district attorney later withdrew the complaint against Arnel Management altogether, saying it had been filed prematurely.

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