National Sons Commander Plants Tree in Palisades

Sons National Commander Bill Clancy III (purple shirt), plants a tree at Palisades high School, while his sons Geir and Stenn look on. Charles Curtis helps with the digging, as past California Commander Tomidan Jordan looks on.

On a swing through Southern California, the National SONS Commander, William “Bill” Clancy III made a trip to Pacific Palisades to visit Ronald Reagan American Legion Post 283. Sons of the American Legion are a group of males who have parents or grandparents who served in the U.S. Military.

One of Clancy’s goals this year is an initiative to plant 250 trees across the United States, commemorating the United States 250th Anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence.

The Palisades lost so many trees during the January 2025 Palisades Fire, residents are actively working to replant to restore the streets canopy. Clancy’s campaign aligned perfectly with the Palisades need and one more tree was planted on March 19.

This was about #120 for Clancy’s tree campaign. An Island Oak was selected and placed between stadium seating and the bathrooms at the Palisades High School Stadium by the Sea.

CTN asked why the tree wasn’t planted in one of the parkways and was told that the Community Council wanted the infrastructure built back before new trees were planted.

The Commander, who had been given a tour of the area by locals, was asked his thoughts about the fire destruction, which was still evident. “It was devastating that this was allowed to happen,” Clancy said. “It was gross incompetence.”

Clancy said his father served during Vietnam and was based in Fort Org and his grandfather was in the Navy on a Bangor Mine Sweeper, both were carpenters. He said he joined the Sons because “I think about young people and the country and showing service.” He joined because he wanted to lead by example.

A founding member of SAL Squadron 156 in City Island (Bronx Borough), New York, Clancy was elected in August 2025 at the national convention in Tampa, Florida. He represents 400,000 members and set a goal at the beginning of his term as commander to recruit even more members. At the convention, he stressed achieving that goal would be a team effort.

“All of my thoughts always bring me back to one word. It’s the word we,” Clancy said. “We’ is infinitely more powerful than ‘I’. We is the word that our founding fathers chose when they wrote one of the best documents ever written, when they opened it with, ‘We, the people.’”

In addition to Pacific Palisades, the Sons Commander, who was in town with his wife and two sons, also had visits planned Riverside, Azusa and West Covina in his Southern California sweep. Kansas, Georgia and Indiana are on his schedule for later this year.

The National Sons Commander (purple shirt) was joined by (left to right) Tracey Price, Kevin Niles, Tomidan JOrdan Kurstal, geir Gill and Stenn Clancy, Charles Curtis, Larry and Cindy Kirven and Audrey Price to plant a tree in the high school stadium.

Posted in Community, Palisades Fire | Leave a comment

6,000 Homes Burned Only 7 % in the Rebuild Process

The January 2025 Palisades Fire destroyed a town: businesses and homes. It was estimated that of the 7,000 destroyed structures, about 6,000 were residences.

About 14 months after the fire, how many actual houses have started construction? The city counts permits rather than structures and L.A. Mayor Karen Bass said that 1,300 rebuilding plans had been approved.

Pali Builds, a local company that tracks permits for new home fire rebuilds, found 574 permits. “Our permit numbers are based on new home fire rebuilds,” said co-founder Kambiz Kamdar said.

Huntington resident Craig Weston, who lost his home and is rebuilding, has been driving around neighborhoods and counting. He said that roughly about 400 homes have started or are in construction (excluding Castellammare), which would more closely align with Pali Builds numbers.

Weston said he started building in August and strictly from observation, it didn’t seem like a lot of houses were going up. He started counting to satisfy his curiosity about the numbers in news stories. “We’re they double counting?” he asked. “Are the houses actually going up or not?”

Weston counted again yesterday and said his numbers might not be “to the penny, but it’s close.”

Weston went neighborhood by neighborhood.

In the Alphabet streets, “They lost about a thousand homes and currently about 140 are going up.” By “going up,” he doesn’t mean that fencing has been put up, but that grading and framing are occurring.

In his neighborhood, which had 550 homes and lost 200 in the Palisades Fire, there are 38 under construction.

South of Sunset between Temescal and Potrero Canyon, the Via bluffs/Swarthmore, “There are about 50 houses going up.

“That’s a lot better than a few months ago, when I was taken aback by how little was going on there,” Weston said.

South of Sunset in the El Medio, Bienveneda area he counted about 50 new homes going up.

In the Marquez Knolls area south of the school to Sunset, he counted about 40 homes. In the upper Knolls he counted 50.

This editor drove around Los Lomas today (above Sunset) with Weston to about Bienveneda and counted about 16 houses under construction. This area wasn’t as decimated as the Alphabet Streets or the Via bluffs. There were rows of homes gone and there were also blocks of homes still standing that had not been touched by the fire.

In the Highlands, Weston said he was surprised at how many homes were still standing. “There wasn’t as much damage, except for the huge complex [the Woodies] on the left.” (The Woodies burned on January 8.)

(Editor’s note: A Castellammare resident counted for CTN and said that currently 12 homes are undergoing a rebuild.)

If one totals Weston’s count over the past few days, “We estimated about 400 houses that are actively going up,” he said. “People are saying about 6,000 homes burned down so that takes us just to under 7 percent.”

He was asked if he had a guess as to why so few homes were going up.

“It all comes down to money,” he said. “The houses that are going up first had good insurance or the people had money in the bank.”

He also explained that many residents like those on the Alphabet Streets had homes on flat lots, which meant construction was cheaper and easier, without the need for retaining walls or caissons, like houses built on the hills.

Weston thinks the next round of building will include, “people who had to get a loan, work with insurance companies, or have help with family money.”

“If we can get the lawsuits settled, we’ll see a huge number of homes going up,” he predicts.

There are a thousands of residents who are waiting on a lawsuit that’s been filed against the City and State for failure to protect them and their properties from the fire.

He also worries that maybe as many as 20 percent never come back.

Weston said Pacific Palisades is “a little pocket of serenity. I’m praying for everyone who wants to come back, that they can.”

There are fields of weeds in Pacific Palisades on lots that formerly held houses/homes.

Posted in Palisades Fire | 6 Comments

Don’t Get Bit: Pools/Mosquito/West Vector Information

A mosquito bite could spread West Nile Virus.
Photo: LA VECTOR CONTROL

After the Palisades Fire, although houses had burned and firefighters complained about the lack of water to put out fires, the sad truth was about every third yard had a full swimming pool.

Many residents with pools drained them others had not. A pool guy regularly came to clean a neighbor’s pool on Radcliffe. In February 2026, he put holes in the bottom of the pool. He said he had lost 55 customers because of the Palisades Fires.

Others who had not put holes in their pools watched them fill up again with the rain.

Regarding standing pools and the possibility of mosquitos breeding, CTN received several suggestions:

  • My neighbor’s property does not drain well, and I submitted a service request when it flooded after the first winter rain. I was contacted by the department to confirm that they visited the property and treated it a little more than a week later. Resident can contact LA county Vector Control and submit a service request online.
  • Our pool had standing water in it and in June of 2025 we paid to have it drained.  The rains have since added about five feet of water. I went to Vector Control and picked up a bag of mosquito-eating fish in November 2025.  They distribute them for free.We had evidence of mosquitoes before the fish, but none after the fish were added to the pool. Others should try this easy fix.
  • We have been in contact with vector for over a year now. My husband has even provided them drone footage with addresses of problematic pools. Please encourage people to use this link or call – they’re out here often. https://www.lawestvector.org/
  • I saw the article in Circling the News regarding the potential mosquito outbreak. This is clearly an important concern for our community, especially given the very real risk of West Nile Virus.
  • Given the current situation in the Palisades, it would be quite feasible to use drones to quickly and efficiently identify undrained pools throughout the area. Aerial surveys could pinpoint problem locations far more efficiently than ground-based efforts. Additionally, drones could potentially be used to safely and precisely drop mosquito “bits” into affected pools to help prevent larvae from hatching—without requiring property access or raising concerns about trespassing. With so many properties still unoccupied, this may be a practical and scalable solution worth exploring at a community or municipal level.

 

 

 

Posted in General | 3 Comments

Pali High Players Make All-City Soccer Teams

Senior forward Mechal Green scored 30 goals on her way to earning All-City honors.
Photo: STEVE GALLUZZO

 

By STEVE GALLUZZO

CTN Contributor

The CIF City Section has released its All-City selections and Palisades has players on both the boys and girls teams.

Representing the Dolphins on the boys side are senior midfielder Crew Norris and senior defender Carter Schwartz. Norris scored the tying goal on a header early in the second half of Palisades’ 2-1 victory over Bell in the quarterfinals of the Open Division playoffs February 12.

Palisades lost to El Camino Real 1-0 in overtime in the semifinals before advancing to the Southern California Regional Division III playoffs, where it edged Bakersfield Liberty in a shootout in the opening round and lost to Bishop Amat 3-1 in the semifinals to finish the season 18-6-2.

El Camino Real junior midfielder Diego Apolinar was named City Player of the Year and ECR’s Ian Kogan earned Coach of the Year honors after guiding the Royals to the Open Division championship with a shootout win in the finals against West Valley rival Birmingham.

For the girls, senior forward Mechal Green and senior defender Ava Loos made the All-City Open Division squad after leading the Dolphins into the semifinals, where they fell to eventual-champion Cleveland 4-0.

Palisades was seeded eighth in the Southern California Regional Division III bracket and lost to San Diego Del Norte 4-3 in the first round, finishing the season 14-5-4.

Green tallied a team-high 84 points (30 goals, 24 assists) in 19 games while Loos anchored a defense that shut out 10 opponents.

Cleveland’s Brielle Dunn, a sophomore defender, was picked Player of the Year in the Open Division and Cavaliers pilot Greg Ibach was chosen Coach of the Year.

Posted in Sports | Leave a comment

Book Donations Once Again Sought by Palisades Friends

The Friends of the Library parking lot book sales will return. They are seeking books to sell.

The temporary Palisades library has reopened, and the Friends of the Palisades Library are excited to announce that once again they will begin again accepting donations of gently used books.

Friends of the Library are asking for donations of gently-read books starting on Wednesday, March 25, and every Saturday and Wednesday through May 16.

Volunteers will be accepting books from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. INSIDE the community building (the building to the right of the temporary library), at 861 Alma Real.

Books may be donated on Wednesdays and Saturdays on the following days. Wednesday, March 25, April 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 and May 6, and 13. Saturday’s book collection will take place March 28, April 4, 11, 18, 25 and May 2, 9 and 16.

Only books that are good to excellent condition can be accepted. We cannot take any books that have been in homes directly adjacent to burn areas because we cannot resell smoke-damaged books.

Books should not be written-in or highlighted. We also cannot accept books with torn pages, loose binding, mildew, mold or foxing (age-related brownish or reddish spots and specks that appear on paper).

No magazines, textbooks, CDs, DVDs, encyclopedias or library books will be accepted.

As a reminder, please do NOT leave book donations at the library at times other than when Friends’ volunteers are present.

The all-volunteer organization looks forward to building the stacks back up after all books was lost in the fire. “We cannot wait to bring the beloved book sales back to the community,” members said. “Our work in the community would not be possible without members and volunteers.”

To join or for more information on how to volunteer, please email [email protected].

Posted in Books | 1 Comment

Obit: Mike Lanning, Attorney, 223 Scoutmaster for more than Seven Decades

 

Mike Lanning

This understated, intelligent man shaped and guided youthful lives in Pacific Palisades with simple wisdom for more than 73 years. Mike Lanning was born May 1, 1932, and passed away on March 16. He was 93.

As Troop 223 Scoutmaster, who helped more than 1,000 young men and women achieve Eagle status, passed away on March 16.

It was not only the teenagers who felt his influence; the troop had more than 123 assistant scoutmasters because “There is intense parental involvement,” Mike said. “Probably about 50 of those scoutmasters are parents whose kids have already gone through the program.”

One of those parents, who became executive assistant Scoutmaster and will now become Scoutmaster of Troop 223 was Greg Frost, who worked with Mike more than 25 years.

“Mike was truly a larger than life individual,” Frost said. “He had a profound effect on the adult leaders. I can say this because I learned so much from him. I am honored to continue his legacy and will continue the program that he put into place, although they are huge shoes to fill.

“He had an incredible effect on thousands of youth in our community, not only those that got Eagle but just about everyone who went through only part of the program,” Frost said.

In 2020, for the first time, girls were allowed to earn that prestigious status. Lanning was at the forefront of welcoming them to the ranks. That troop, 223G, run by Larry Kirven, quickly grew to one of the largest girls’ troops in the nation and now has the most girl Eagles in the United States.

Mike Lanning had the audience in stitches with his remarks, when he accepted the Citizen of the Year Award in 2022 at the Pacific Palisades Woman’s Club.

In a 2014 speech to Eagle Scouts, he said: “First remember to be thankful, it will empower you and help you set aside the small stuff. Second, be opportunistic—the works is full of opportunities, and it is fun to be a leader. And third, remember, when the going gets tough, there is an indefatigable force within you that will take you anywhere you want to go.”

Born in Indio in 1932, Mike became a Boy Scout in 1941 and an Eagle Scout in 1947.

When he was accepted at UCLA in 1952, he and several friends started looking for a place to live near campus. One apartment was $85, “which was exorbitant,” Mike said.

One of his friends knew about a choir camp at the Presbyterian Synod grounds in Temescal Canyon that had cabins. A man in charge told them that if they fixed up a couple of cabins they could live there–for $15 a month.

He got involved as a Scoutmaster a year later and stayed in the Palisades while completing his undergraduate and law degrees at UCLA.

After graduating, Mike went into the Army for six months and then took his first job as an attorney in 1958 in Beverly Hills.

He became Scoutmaster of Troop 223 in 1953

He eventually met his wife Carol through Scouting, when her two boys signed up. They started dating in 1962 and were married in 1973.

From 1961 through 1976, Lanning worked in real estate development before setting up his own law practice. He specialized in advanced estate planning and wealth preservation for high and ultra-high-net-worth clients as well as business succession planning.

Mike was active at St. Matthew’s Church, where he served as the Senior Warden. He and Carol were named 2017 Honorary Canons of the Cathedral Center, for long outstanding service to the diocese, its bishops and the Parish.

He was also a member of Ronald Reagan American Legion Post 283.

Lanning was named Pacific Palisades Citizen of the Year in 2022 for helping to raise generations of ethical young people.

Mike received numerous Scouting awards including Distinguished Eagle, and regional, council and district awards of merit, Scoutmaster of the Year, the James E. West Society Award and the Americanism Award Honoree (past awardees included Gerald Ford and Bob Hope).

He told CTN one of his wishes was to “figure out a way to get more parents to come and take a look at the Scouting program.” He said there was no way to quantify the leadership skills and self-confidence that youth in the program acquire.

For example, on an adventure trip, “Scouts average 50 miles a week backpacking. They carry everything then need to wear and to eat,” Mike said, noting that Scouts soon realize they can’t just go down to the store and buy something. They learn self-reliance.

And Scouting “is the oldest conservation organization in America. We’re trying to get kids to take care of nature.”

In a 2019 story, CTN asked him if he had plans for retirement. Then Mike said that he remembered when he was camping as a Scout. An older Scoutmaster went to take a nap under a tree and died.

“Might not be a bad way to go,” he said, and added, “I have no plans of retiring.”

He was predeceased by his wife Carol, and leaves behind her three children, Phil, Chris, and Dawn, their spouses, six grandchildren, and several great-grandchildren.

A memorial service will be scheduled in the near future.

Mike Lanning helped numerous young men and women achieve Eagle Scout status.                                            Photo: MOLLY COLEMAN

Posted in Obituaries | 9 Comments

Viewpoint: This Can’t Go On . . .LAHSA Misses Federal Audit Deadline

Gita O’Neill is the interim head of LAHSA.
Photo: LAHSA

By HANK WRIGHT

This is a city that has learned to look past certain things.

The tents. The riverbeds. The on-ramps at dusk. You drive past them on the 101 and you think: someone is handling this. Someone, somewhere in the apparatus of city government, is watching the money, tracking the numbers, asking the hard questions. This is Los Angeles. There are committees. There are chairs of committees. There is, presumably, a plan.

There is not a plan.

Policy analyst John Wickham said it plainly: “There are no dedicated policy staff on homelessness in the city government.”

The city spends nearly $1 billion a year on homelessness. In 2023-24, it allocated $1.28 billion. The City Controller later determined that $513 million of that went unspent. A federal task force is now examining more than $2 billion in unaccounted funds across Southern California. These are not allegations. These are the numbers.

Tim Campbell has been watching the numbers for some time. “Ten percent of the City’s budget is spent on homelessness,” he said, “and there are no staff people to advise the Council on homelessness? Each Councilperson has employees appointed to handle homelessness issues in their districts. Can’t they talk to each other?”

They cannot, apparently. Or they do not. The distinction hardly matters.

The city pays LAHSA $300 million a year. Campbell’s assessment is precise: “Nobody knows what taxpayers are getting for the money.”

Nithya Raman chairs the Council’s Homelessness Committee. There is no comprehensive policy. There are no milestones. There is no finish line.

At some point the question stops being about homelessness and starts being about something else entirely — about what a city believes it owes its people, and whether anyone in the building intends to find out.

Stop the payments. Audit the contracts. Build the budget from zero.

We have been here before. We know how this ends.

LAHSA MISSED AUDIT DEADLINE

Tim Cambell wrote today, March 19, that the LAHSA missed the filing deadline for its federally-required single annual audit, after the outside auditor contacted LAHSA’s Board Chair and CEO multiple times with no results.

Campbell, a longtime Westchester resident and veteran public servant who spent his career managing a municipal performance audit program, wrote in an email to CTN.

“I’ve never heard of a public agency missing its filing deadline, so I did a quick google search of the consequences.  They include:

“Missing a single annual audit deadline (usually 9 months after fiscal year-end or 30 days after receipt) can lead to severe consequences, including suspended federal funding, debarment from future awards, and costly penalties. Immediate action is required: notify your agency, file as soon as possible, and document the cause.

  • Consequences of Non-Compliance
  • Funding Suspension: Federal agencies may withhold funds, or suspend/terminate existing awards.
  • Debarment: Future federal award opportunities may be restricted.
  • Audit Findings: The late submission will be noted as a finding in the current and potentially future audits.
  • Penalties: Late 401(k) audits can result in Department of Labor (DOL) penalties of up to $1,100 per day.

“This is the agency entrusted with almost $1 billion in federal, state, and local funds, and it can’t even meet a deadline for a routine ministerial audit,” Campbell said. “I’ll leave it to you to decide how effective it would be as the region’s lead homelessness agency.”

 

 

 

Posted in Homelessness, Viewpoint | 8 Comments

3rd Flea Market Will Be Held on April 12 at PaliHi

A Pali Flea Market and Music Festival will be held from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on April 12, at Palisades High School at the Faculty Parking Lower Lot.

Booths are open to the Palisades Community, 10′ X 10′ space. For Pali High School Students/families the cost for a booth is $50, for non-Pali families the cost is $100. Vendors will need to provide their own canopy. The rules are simple. Vendors can sell anything except water, weapons and expletive items. Only approved vendors can sell food (there will be food trucks on site.) All vendors are welcome. To secure a space, email  [email protected]

A group of passionate moms are chairing this event to support our thrift entrepreneur students and local fire vendors victims. The event will include a newly added music festival.  The Music Festival will have a line up of local and student bands.

This event is a dedicated effort to promote sustainability, resilience, and strengthen community bonds post fires. Discover a vibrant array of offerings, from gently used items and luxury clothing and jewelry vendors to unique arts and crafts. Explore costume and handcrafted jewelry, and find passionate, one-of-a-kind keepsake memorabilia.

This flea market is not just about shopping, but is also a wonderful opportunity for us to reconnect with our vibrant community at large.

There is free parking, no entrance fee, a casual dress code and a terrific lineup of live musicians . . ..and a comedian.

Parents Johanna Minassian and Julie Ragson said, “We are calling on everyone to spread the word: Pali High is back and stronger than ever. Join us on campus for the exciting events we have planned for our guests, students, and community—wherever you are— we invite everyone to inject love, laughter, and fortify Pali pride!”

 

 

Posted in General | 1 Comment

78th Annual Santa Barbara Orchid Show this Weekend

For Palisades residents who may be displaced in the Santa Barbara area or for orchid enthusiasts, the 78th Annual Santa Barbara International Orchid Show will take place from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. March 20-22 at the Earl Warren Showgrounds, 3400 Calle Real. A one-day pass is $22.23 and a three-day pass is  $31.62. Parking is $10 per vehicle.

This year’s theme is “Orchid Escape.” This show is one of the oldest, largest and most prestigious orchid shows in the United States, reflecting the rich agricultural and orchid-growing history of Santa Barbara County.

Visitors from all over the world view grand orchid displays installed by local, national and international artisans and orchid enthusiasts. Exhibits of orchid art, photography and floral arrangements, in addition to a comprehensive workshop and demonstration schedule, provide visitors with a rich and unique orchid experience.

Unsure of how to view the vast exhibit? Sign up for a VIP tour, which includes express entry to the show. There are workshops on how to pot orchids and on floral artistry: designing with orchids.

There will be free demos every 30 minutes in the demonstration tent. There will bea  plant sale of rare, exotic and collector-worthy orchids.

A Orchid Serenity Yoga & Sound Bath will take place at 6:15 p.m. on Thursday, March 19 and includes all-levels 45-minute yoga flow surrounded by rare orchids. One will experience music and voice instruction simultaneously through signature yoga headsets, at the volume level of your choice so you never miss a beat. Afterwards, people will remove the headsets for the sound bath.

At 6 p.m. on Friday, March 20, the event Is “Orchids After Dark, for three hours one can explore the massive exhibit, take pictures of favorite orchids, enjoy drinks and music.

Orchid Escape Dinner, featuring Chef Amy Baer of Epicurean Santa Barbara will take place from 6 to 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, March 21. For more information: click here.

 

(Editor’s note: For years, the Malibu Orchid Society always displayed at the Santa Barbara Show, but as President Birute Anne Vileisis wrote, “Sadly, I must report that our Society will not be exhibiting at the Santa Barbara Show this year. Attribute it to ‘burn out’ among those who have faithfully gone up to Santa Barbara for many years to set up our exhibits. Hopefully by next year there will be a renewal of interest to participate once again.” She didn’t mention that she lost her greenhouse and her orchid collection during the Palisades Fire as did many of the society members.)

Posted in General | Leave a comment

McKenna and Gornick Dispute CTN Investor Story

(Editor’s note: the lawsuit above was filed in November 2025.)

Patrick McKenna and Leslie Gronick have both disputed that they were involved in real estate deals that lost investors millions. The story (“Investors Allege Losing Millions through Patrick McKenna’s Companies”) was printed March 15.

The editor was first made aware of the story in 2018, when two different people approached me and told me I should look into McKenna’s Pacific Palisades companies. This editor replied that unless there was a court case with a verdict, it would be simply “he said, she said.”

As recently as this past January, this editor was approached by a person in a local store and told that people had lost money and please do a story. In February, I received information about court case that had been settled in an investor’s favor and also received two more court cases that had been filed and will be heard.  Below Brittany Perrineau was granted a judgment of $858,781.

In addition to the four people mentioned in the earlier story, I reached out to or received the names of six other people who had purportedly lost money.

After the story printed, I received calls from people who told me that in addition to the 1362 Bella Oceana Vista (Pratt House) and , I should check on properties at 1635 Casalle Road (that the  owners had lost everything), to check on a second home on Alcima (beside 15975 in which there is a lawsuit), a house on Gunston in Brentwood and one at 533 Swarthmore Ave.

Leslie Gornick’s comments are posted on the website, they are also below.

I am writing to address this article and subsequent discussion in which my name appears. I worked for Patrick McKenna from 2015 until the fires occurred in January 2026.

I performed administrative duties for his companies. He was a Real Estate Developer that built high end multi-million-dollar homes. The impact of Covid resulted in the costs of the build exceeding what the homes eventually sold for or in some instance the bank foreclosed. While I respect the platform’s role in reporting, I want to address errors that I am aware of and can document and where my name is stated.
Error 1: there were active projects and businesses being run by Patrick McKenna at the time of the fire.

Error 2: Eric Knight partnered with Patrick McKenna and was the Realtor and Developer on the failed projects. He was involved in all aspects of these projects from the Design, Management, Build and Sale. Eric Knight brought his own group of investors that invested in their projects. It was not just an introduction. He was a party to all decisions made concerning any of the investors on the projects he was involved in.

Error 3: 1362 Bella Oceana Vista contracts never stated that an investor who invested $200,000 would receive a 1.8M return on their investment. I have seen the contracts as part of my administrative duties.

Error 4: Brittany Perrineau did not “win” her case, her legal team used tactics to obtain a Default Judgment in a case that she named me in. After two years of defending her false allegations against me I now have to fight her legal teams’ tactics to create more expense and hardship to defend against this Default Judgment and have this case heard in court. Thousands of documents have been produced to her legal team and there is nothing left to provide. I am working with legal counsel to correct this. Perrineau repeatedly said she would not stop her legal action unless she recouped what was lost in a failed project, she was not doing this for others and has made that very clear.

Error 5: Taro “Karl” Greenfeld mentions my name in a statement that is defamatory with no basis. I was an employee of Patrick McKenna, I had no ownership in his companies. I have never been involved in any fraudulent activities or criminal enterprise. I was a business owner in Pacific Palisades in an unrelated business that served the Palisades community and was well respected and enjoyed and successfully operating until the fire. I am not involved in any legal action with Greenfeld.

The home at Bella Oceana Vista was purchased by Palisades Funding for $6,050,000. The home sold for $15,601,500 in 2018. Investors said they didn’t receive promised monies.

Patrick McKenna sent the following letter to CTN: While I respect your platform’s role in reporting, your article contains multiple significant factual errors as well as erroneous and false statements. Specifically, some of them include but are not limited to the following –

  1. You fail to mention that Eric Knight was the realtor, developer, project manager and/or partner on a all of these projects you mention in the article.  His duties included but were not limited to managing the projects, creating the budgets for the projects, working with the general contractors to make sure the projects were on schedule, tracking the scope of completion throughout the projects, etc.
  2.  In the article you mention the project on Bella Oceana and state what we purchased the home for and the price that the home sold.  You failed to add any of the costs it took to construct a 12,900 square foot home as well as the carrying costs and costs of sale.  If you had done simple math you would have realized that the profit was nowhere near what your named quote claimed in regards to what he was expecting for profit.  Lee Helper, Eric’s friend, signed agreements and they never reflected that there would be $1.8M in profit. Doing a simple equation based on what he is quoting would require a $24,000,000 profit which is mathematically impossible based on the sale price being $15,601,500 less purchase price, construction costs, carrying costs and sales costs.  The home would have had to sell for almost $40,000,000.  Eric Knight could have answered these questions, he was the project manager and realtor on the project and had intimate knowledge of the budget, design, construction etc.
  3. The article fails to mention any of the issues that we had with Eric Knight including threats of physical violence against myself and my office staff, having to send him a cease and desist letter on 4/20/21 for his actions including trying to disrupt a sale of one of our properties when he was the listing agent a direct violation of his duties as agent.
  4. You have a quote in here stating that I “stole millions?”  This is absolutely inaccurate and complete slander to my reputation. [ The actual quote was “It is remarkable to me how a person can steal millions of dollars, yet most members of our community will not seek legal redress,” Palisades resident Karl Taro Greenfeld told Circling the News.] As I stated to you, we had some projects that due to circumstances beyond our control, caused projects to be unprofitable, that had losses.  The accounting has been provided to the investors. For anyone to say that I stole millions and for you to print this without fact checking is defamation and slander.
  5. You mention that I did not have any projects at the time of the fire, which is completely untrue.  One of my newly completed projects was in escrow to sell burned to the ground.
  6. You mention that “After a deposition, which Knight says is not truthful (and has the documents to support his assertation) he will undergo mediation with McKenna later this month.”  Did you see any court documents or paperwork that he is claiming?  Knight does not have a case filed against me nor is there any mediation with me, this is completely untrue and you have no justification in writing this.
  7. You fail to mention that Eric Knight at the time was employed by Berkshire Hathaway and is no longer there.  Did you bother to ask him why he switched agencies?  He is no longer there because of his unethical behavior when acting as an agent and I do have all the documents to support this.

McKenna concluded, I am formally requesting you to remove this article from your website immediately and am seeking counsel for actions against you and your website. I look forward to your immediate response and action.

(Below is another suit, filed in court in November 2022 and still active.)

Posted in General | 4 Comments