Agents in condominium controversy are long gone
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Dave Brooks
Real estate and title insurance agents at the center of the city’s
investigation into condominium conversions are no longer working in
Surf City. One is living in another state and the other no longer
holds the job.
Former Stewart Title employee Harvey Dubois was the insurance
agent for many of the properties, and Realtor Phil Benson, who
negotiated many of the deals, have reportedly left Orange County.
Representatives at Stewart said that Dubois no longer works for
the title company, but would not give any information about his
whereabouts. Several condo owners, such as Renee Tarnow, said Dubois
was the title officer appointed to many of the conversions.
Benson now lives in Idaho and said he is receiving medical
treatment for cancer and diabetes.
Reached by phone Tuesday, Benson said he was surprised that the
city was now requiring condo owners to pay as much as $30,000 apiece
to get the condos to conform to city codes.
“The city seems to have taken the position that it doesn’t know
what’s going on,” he said. “My best guess is that this whole thing is
political.”
Benson made a career for himself converting apartments to condos
and never met any opposition from the city’s Planning Department, he
said.
In June 2003, the Planning Department sent out notices to
approximately 120 condo owners, warning that their units may have
been illegally converted from apartments to condos. Converting an
apartment in Huntington Beach entails adherence to strict zoning
rules, including parking and landscaping requirements, as well as 10s
of thousands of dollars in application fees, Planning Director Howard
Zelefsky said.
The Planning Department is now recommending that condo owners who
bought the converted units pay a portion of the costs to clear up
their titles, as well a special in-lieu fee to make up for the loss
of affordable housing created by the conversions.
The exact amount of that fee will be available in the upcoming
weeks, but warns it could be as high as $20,000, said senior city
planner Jane James.
The money will be used to boost the city’s affordable housing
stock.
“Once we get the exact figure, it will go back to the City Council
and they will be asked to adopt a resolution to establish a fee,” she
said.
Police Chief Ken Small said his department will continue to work
on the case with members of the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s office.
“After the investigation is complete, Federal prosecutors will
decide where the case is going,” Small said. “It won’t be handled by
the District Attorney’s office.”
Small has pulled one of the two full-time detectives off the case.
Det. Sam Lopez was recently promoted to the position of Sergeant
and reassigned to uniform patrol.
Small said the transfer was necessary to meet the demands brought
on by the influx of visitors during the summer. Det. Jeff Nelson will
now be leading the investigation.
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