Part 81: Izek Shomof and the LA Alliance for Human Rights – Developer Chutzpah and the Salvation of Los Angeles
Published February 23, 2024. Last Updated February 25, 2024.
Photo of the Alexandria Hotel redeveloped by Izek Shomof and mixed-use buildings on Spring Street in downtown Los Angeles by author (GoPro Hero 11 Black).
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By Zachary Ellison, Independent Journalist
The Los Angeles Times featured a story on February 9 by respected journalist Doug Smith describing a meeting sometime in January regarding a proposed $6.4 million dollar fine requested by the LA Alliance for Human Rights. The meeting with Judge David O. Carter and lawyers for the group was interrupted by Councilwoman Monica Rodriguez and the Chief of Staff to Councilman Kevin de León according to the report. “Frustration rose to a point,” he writes that they “walked in uninvited to a negotiating session in a judge’s chambers to see what was being discussed” in an act of defiance.
The fine is being requested because the LA Alliance previously sued the City of Los Angeles to force them to “shelter at least 60% of people living on the streets in each council district,” but also because “the city repeatedly missed deadlines and negotiated in bad faith.” Mayor Karen Bass “blasted it” in a statement saying that: “The City of Los Angeles brought thousands more unhoused Angelenos inside last year than the year before and we will continue that urgent work to save lives no matter what…I do not have patience for anyone who stands in the way, and certainly not for those seeking to profit with baseless motions in court.”
Clearly, Mayor Bass is not happy with the idea of paying taxpayer money on top of the more than $1.3 billion the city plans to spend on “housing and homelessness programs” this year. According to Smith’s report, the “city attorney’s office” said that the sanctions were “unprecedented,” “unbecoming” and “incorrect” in “an opposition filed this week.” Score one finally for City Attorney Hydee Feldstein-Soto? Little known though is the background of the LA Alliance, which is discussed in the new book by developer Izek Shomof Dreams Don’t Die distributed by Simon & Schuster and published by Forefront Books.
Until now though, it hasn’t been widely reported that developer Izek Shomof was the principal founder of the LA Alliance. Shomof writes about his conversation with former Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti that: “As a result of that conversation, I decided to go forward with the lawsuit.” He continues describing how he “interviewed several attorneys who had the right experience” with gusto, before stating that he “ended up hiring Elizabeth Mitchell and her firm.” Shomof doesn’t name the firm, but a simple search reveals that Mitchell who filed the papers to create the LA Alliance is a partner at Umhofer, Mitchell & King LLP.
A former employee in the City Attorney’s Office with the Police Litigation Unit, Mitchell specialized in “violent and sexual crimes” according to the LA Alliance’s webpage noting that she “led the Alliance in developing a first-of-its-kind lawsuit against the City and County of Los Angeles.” Shomof writes that “With the help of a few other property owners, we raised hundreds of thousands of dollars to back the lawsuit.” He continues stating that “Rather than making it a personal issue,” Shomof says that the LA Alliance lawsuit underwriting the proposed $6.4 million fine asked “the city and county to take responsibility for the homeless and to return the sidewalks to their intended use.”
The LA Alliance on behalf of Shomof and the others filed their lawsuit in March 2020 right before “the COVID-19 pandemic shut down every-thing, including the courthouse, and we received word that the hearing was going to be postponed.” This didn’t stop Shomof though, and he says that “Since it was an emergency situation…Judge Carter agreed to continue with the lawsuit” and that he then “offered to host the hearing at the huge ballroom in the Alexandria Hotel at 501 South Spring Street.” Mitchell did not respond to a request for comment on the 501(c)(3) group’s Tax ID number, Board Members and whether they had anything to say about the $6.4 million fine they are seeking from the City and County of Los Angeles.
The group’s webpage features quotations from two employees of the Shomof Group, named Diony Rebuta and Ericson Alviz. The former’s quote says “I am glad there is an Organization that is trying to stop Homelessness! Homelessness is a Major Concern on [sic] our Neighborhood.” It continues by saying “It is time to create a solution to this long time problem” before he pledges his “full support to your campaign.” Alviz’s quote is that “Homelessness is a Major Problem in Los Angeles” declaring “I am very happy that there is an organization trying to solve it” before quipping: “Keep it up!” These are featured alongside quotes from Don Steier, the group’s Chair, former Mayor Antonia Villaraigosa, and LA County Supervisors Kathryn Barger and Janice Hahn. Groups like this in Los Angeles are where the private interest meets the public sector.
Izek Shomof then recounts how he secured a meeting and tour with businessman Bill Taormina to tour a model facility for the unhoused in Anaheim. Shomof writes that “When I walked through the facility with Bill and my sons Jonathan and Jimmy, the homeless people who were there getting help continuously thanked Bill for what he had done for them.” No one begrudges Izek Shomof his proposed Life Rebuilding Center in the now empty Sears, Roebuck & Company Mail Order Building in Boyle Heights, but wouldn’t that $6.4 million be better spent on actually helping the unhoused rather than being paid to a business interest group? Shomof says that “the homeless situation in LA was at least ten times bigger than the one in Anaheim.”
The monumental Sears Building has 1.8 million square feet. It’s unclear if the City and County of Los Angeles are even capable of operating a facility for the unhoused that large and the proposed number of served has fluctuated. Shomof even told Los Angeles Times columnist Gustavo Arellano in February 2022 that “the parking lot would become the site of more than 1,000 permanent affordable housing units for people who graduate from the facility’s six-month rehabilitation program.” Arellano writes that “all of this, frankly, sounds delusional” telling Shomof “his proposal was too good to be true” with Shomof simply insisting that “It’s true.” More than two years have passed since that interview at the project site.
An attorney for Izek Shomof, Scott Leipzig from the firm Allen Matkins LLP declined to make Mr. Shomof available for interview in response to prior request insisting that Shomof is nothing but a reputable businessman and upstanding citizen via telephone. As first reported in this column, his book omits a criminal conviction in 1989 for receiving stolen property despite the book repeatedly claiming that Shomof is someone who “had every opportunity to take unethical and often-illegal shortcuts but who instead chose the lesser-trod path of honesty and integrity” in the book’s jacket. The distributor and publisher is now being sued by his brother-in-law and former business partner Patrick Wizmann over the publication with the goal of having it retracted.
Doing business with Izek Shomof can be a risky proposition as Shomof describes in Dreams Don’t Die recounting a legal dispute with a fellow businessman believed to be Naty Saidoff, the founder of Capital Foresight Management. Shomof recounts his business dispute with him in his book without naming Saidoff. Shomof writes, “In my business ventures, I almost always worked alone, but there was one partner I trusted enough to work with” describing the “purchase of three notable hotels in 2012.” He continues describing the deal which was the result of the prior owner being “in distress” and fearing losing “the property to the bank.”
Shomof didn’t have enough “money available at that moment” because of a townhome project in Beverly Hills, writing: “I needed $20 million immediately.” He then goes to his partner and offers him a 50% stake in the Spring Street project, writing that the deal offered “a potential quick $20 million to be made as profit.” He tells Saidoff, “I’m willing to share the profit with you, but on the condition that you will front the $20 million for a period of three months.” His partner agrees because as Shomof writes: “This was too good a deal to turn down, so he immediately agreed.” Shomof doesn’t get it in writing though, and the partner reportedly comes back to him saying: “Izek, I’m not going to invest $20 million for three months with a 50 percent partnership. I’m only willing to give you 20 percent.”
This doesn’t go well with Shomof who refuses to bargain, and Saidoff similarly rejects the 50% instead of 20% telling Shomof: “Take it or not. It is what it is. Either you get 20 percent or nothing.” Shomof tells him that “What you are doing is wrong…and I’m not going to tolerate it” writing, that he had “never sued anyone in more than thirty years in business” warning him: “please don’t let yourself be the first.” The partner ignores Shomof and moves ahead with the purchase by himself having sufficient capital, so Shomof writes with finality: “I had no option but to sue him.” To Shomof this isn’t imaginable with him writing that he didn’t expect the partner to “turn around and try to screw me.” Shomof attempts to resolve the dispute by offering to donate the proceeds “to a charity.”
The case goes to court with Izek Shomof alleging that he had been “defrauded” with a trial lasting over a month and Shomof prevailing. Whether the LA Alliance prevails in seeking the $6.4 million dollar fine remains to be seen, but if Dreams Don’t Die is the story of one man’s chutzpah as a businessman and a developer, you have to wonder why more people at LA City Hall aren’t reading this book by one of the city’s most powerful developers. This is kind of a mysterious realm in the City of Los Angeles, and that’s an understatement! Former Councilmember José Huizar can be seen in a 2015 photo alongside Shomof at a benefit event for the LAMP Community nonprofit, originally the Los Angeles Men’s Place. Huizar was recently sentenced to 13 years in Federal prison for accepting $1.5 million dollars in bribes from real estate project developers. Huizar smiles next to Shomof with a slight smirk on his face.
No one is saying that Izek Shomof is the same as José Huizar, but you’ve got to wonder. Did Shomof and Huizar ever meet behind closed doors to discuss projects or go gambling in Las Vegas? Shomof, according to his brother-in-law Patrick Wizmann was known to favor the Wynn Las Vegas where Huizar took Chinese businessman Wei Huang, one of the individuals behind the now virtually abandoned, graffitied Oceanwide Plaza in the South Park district of Downtown Los Angeles. Little is known about Huizar and Shomof’s interactions, and I can only hope a new Freedom of Information Act request will strike gold and bring forward the kinds of documents we saw in the Mark Ridley-Thomas corruption trial, including interview notes with the FBI and privileged emails.
Shomof writes about his former partner Saidoff: “My former partner’s behavior is not all that unusual in the business world.” He writes that, “I’ve seen it a lot, when bad people try to cover up their shameless acts with a good public relations team.” Almost ironically, he writes that “It’s like the individual has a split personality, where they make sure they’re seen giving lots of money to charities and supporting high-profile civic causes, but at the same time they are cheating and swindling in private.” This can’t help but make you wonder if Monica Rodriguez, and KDL’s Chief of Staff Jennifer Barraza with whom Shomof has an open feud in Dream’s Don’t Die with didn’t also feel exactly the same way about the LA Alliance when they stormed the “judge’s chamber.” Rodriguez and Barraza did not respond to requests for comment.
About his business dispute with Naty Saidoff, the power hungry Izek Shomof describes how “About five years after I won my case, I got a call from another real estate developer asking about his successful lawsuit. He writes: “The settlement was supposed to be confidential, but apparently word had gotten around.” Shomof seems surprised, and tells his colleague that he “couldn’t talk about it” before the unnamed man tells him: “What happened to you is the exact same thing he’s doing to me right now.” What goes around comes around in Los Angeles? We can only hope that the LA Alliance doesn’t really think they deserve a $6.4 million dollar penalty against the taxpayers.
In Dreams Don’t Die he later writes: “It’s about being thankful for what I’ve got and giving back to the city and country I love.” No one disputes that Izek Shomof likely has some good intentions, but the question of what happens next on a deal so large as the proposed Life Rebuilding Center would give anyone slight discomfort just like Gustavo Arellano told him straight up. The worst thing would be to start the project and then be unable to finish it just like has happened in Downtown Los Angeles. With rumors swirling that Rick Caruso has taken interest in converting Oceanwide Plaza into something useful, you have to wonder if Shomof and Caruso couldn’t tag-team and get one of the two projects actually done.
One letter writer to the Los Angeles Times recently wrote about the debacle, “Now is the time for him [Caruso] to step up and put his money where his mouth is” before suggesting “And of course, he could name them Caruso Towers.” Perhaps the Caruso-Shomof towers might be more appropriate provided either of them wants to actually put up the money without full funding and taxpayer dollars. The $6.4 million is a pittance in this scheme of things, the world of multi-millionaires and billionaires. Caruso has said that the Oceanwide Plaza project won’t be “profitable” and has instead suggested tearing down the existing towers to allow for new construction.
It’s not quite known how much either Rick Caruso or Izek Shomof is exactly worth, nor has the latter sought elected public office like the former. The message of Dreams Don’t Die is clear, in addition to a re-telling of his life-story first brought to a cinema near you with the 2012 self-made film For the Love of Money: “fewer homeless people, a more productive population, and happier constituents.” What happens next is anyone’s question. As Doug Smith of the Los Angeles Times writes, the most recent episode with the LA Alliance has created consternation with even the likes of Kevin de León who issued a statement saying it’s “deeply concerning” and “would attempt to renegotiate a settled agreement void of the council’s approval.”
Karen Bass’s “Inside Safe” program might not be the “Life Rebuilding Center” that Shomof seeks, but he should show her some respect and restrain the LA Alliance from punishing the City and County unduly by calling off the attorney’s and doing business with the public in the open, and not simply through a memoir that represents in the end only a self-serving business agenda with some glossy pictures tucked in before the conclusion. Los Angeles needs salvation, not chutzpah! Shomof’s attorney Scott Leipzig shamelessly accused me after Part 78 the first story on Shomof of having “an agenda here other than to report facts” to write this, nothing could be further from the truth. I’ll let you dear reader be the judge.
Link: L.A. should pay $6.4 million for slow action on cleaning homeless camps, judge is told
Link: Mayor Bass seeks $250-million expansion of homelessness program in first State of the City speech
Link: LA Alliance for Human Rights
Link: Elizabeth Mitchell
Link: Dreams Don't Die
Link: Column: Can a giant, empty Sears building help solve homelessness in Los Angeles?
Link: How Jose Huizar’s lavish Las Vegas jaunts tripped alarms for FBI in L.A. bribe case
Link: Letters to the Editor: Rick Caruso, the Oceanwide Plaza towers could use your help
Link: Why Rick Caruso didn't buy the 'graffiti towers'
Please support my work with your subscription or for direct aid use Venmo
Zachary Ellison is an Independent Journalist and Whistleblower in the Los Angeles area. Zach was most recently employed by the University of Southern California, Office of the Provost from October 2015 to August 2022 as an Executive Secretary and Administrative Assistant supporting the Vice Provost for Academic Operations and the Vice Provost and Senior Advisor to the Provost among others. Zach holds a Master’s in Public Administration and a Graduate Certificate in Sustainable Policy and Planning from the USC Sol Price School of Public Policy. While a student at USC, he worked for the USC Good Neighbors Campaign including on their newsletter distributed university-wide. Zach completed his B.A. in History at Reed College, in Portland, Oregon and was a writer, editor, and photographer for the Pasadena High School Chronicle. He was Barack Obama’s one-millionth online campaign contributor in 2008. Zach is a former AmeriCorps intern for Hawaii State Parks and worked for the City of Manhattan Beach Parks and Recreation. He is a trained civil process server, and enjoys weekends in the great outdoors.
He asked if he could wait in my car, to warm up. I had nothing I needed to do, and motioned him to get in. (At this point, I had a rental car, supplied as part of my insurance policy.) I wasn’t reporting for any news outlet, so I didn’t press him for details; but as often happens, that’s the best way to actually get a story. He had just recently arrived in Austin from California. He had been the manager of a grocery store, there. His wife had died, and the men who stole his car had taken everything, including $2 bills, which had been his wife’s...he cried at this point.... He was driving for Uber, trying to save up enough money to afford an apartment, and sleeping in his car at night.
Very early that morning, he was awakened by someone pounding on his car door. Thinking it was the police--who had awakened him in this way before--he opened the door, to see guys in ski masks.
He tried to fight them, but then saw there were four men. They overpowered him, took his wallet and cell phone, and drove off with his car.
He had been able to buy a temporary cell phone, and called his mom. (She was in a nursing home in Canada.) After reassuring her he was all right, he talked to someone else--a woman--possibly a sister or aunt.
She had arranged three nights in an Austin motel for him.
“At least you can get cleaned up, and get some rest,” she said.
Finally, the detectives arrived, with his car. It was a late-model hybrid, but one tire was the mini spare. The detectives left. He looked in his trunk--where he had stored everything he owned--it was all gone. Then he opened the driver’s door, and cried out in anguish. It had been torn apart!
“Ahhh! It’s completely trashed!” he said.
I was wordless--shocked at how in such a short time his fortunes had gone from bad to disastrous! There was no way he could drive for Uber with a wrecked car. I sat in my rental car, and watched him drive away.
Just when I thought my luck was rotten, I saw how fortunate, comparatively, I am. It’s impossible to generalize why people are homeless, but here was one homeless man--whose whole story I didn’t know--who had been working hard to turn his fortunes around. And instead, he’d been beaten down again.
My Kia has been an Albatross, during the recent past; in the shop more often than not: I was on my way to northern Minnesota, from Austin last September, with my camper and three dogs. Just as we reached a small town in southern Iowa, and only a mile from our campsite for the night, all the warning lights came on, and the engine stopped. I coasted to the side of the street. I called 911. A police woman showed up in less than a minute. She immediately saw what had happened: the oil plug had dropped out, which destroyed the engine. She had already called the county camp director and a tow truck.
The tow driver took one look, then set about attaching chains to the front end of the car.
The camp director had arrived in his truck. He offered to tow my camper the remaining half- mile, to my campsite. We unhooked the camper from my Kia.
We had just finished when the tow truck driver started lifting up the Kia, which backed into the trailer tongue, punching a hole in my back fender!
I spent five days at the campsite, while my car was being checked out; Covert Cadillac, where I’d taken my Kia for a tune-up and an oil change, just before I’d left, agreed to pay the cost to replace the engine.
I rented a truck with a hitch from Enterprise, in Des Moines. What was available was a brand new 250 King Ranch model, tricked out with leather everything! Knowing the truck was probably worth twice what my Kia cost, I immediately signed up for the $29/day insurance. I reached Jerry’s place, north of Virginia, MN, and south of Ely. We camped there. Jerry is my husband, and has a house on seven wooded acres in the Superior National Forest.
I drove 850 miles round-trip a month later, when my Kia was fixed, turned in the King Ranch, & picked up my Kia, still with a hole punched in the fender, but with a brand-new engine, and returned to Jerry’s place. About six weeks later, temperatures were dropping into the 30’s; it was too cold to camp, and I headed south.
On the I-35 Highway, going through Kansas City, I was alarmed by how much more traffic there was, since I’d last traveled that stretch. It was dark, and I was surrounded by 18 Wheelers.
Then, the radiator warning light came on, followed by all the other lights. Deja Vu! I pulled as far off the interstate as was possible, called 911. My sister, in Austin, located an Econolodge only a few miles away. The tow truck dropped my camper in the parking lot, along with my three dogs, and hauled my Kia to the Olathe, Kansas dealership.
The Kia service manager, the next day, let me know they would “get to my Kia when they could.”
He said they had dozens of cars in for repairs and “ only one mechanic.”
I had some food in my camper; I was able to feed the dogs, and find something for myself--fortunate, because the Econolodge was not close to any where to eat, whether fast food, or a grocery.
Five days later, the Kia manager called. Something had hit the front of my car, pushed back the radiator support, the radiator sliced through a line which emptied the contents. I needed work to the front end, headlights, a new radiator and a new engine!
I called USAA. They authorized repairs, less my $500 deductible, but wouldn’t pay for hauling my camper home. Enterprise requires all rentals to be returned to the same location. I rented a UHaul truck, to haul the camper home. About six weeks later, I got a frantic call from the service representative that my Kia was ready.
As it turns out, it had been ready for two weeks, but she had neglected to call!
I had to pay $950 to have my Kia trucked home, pay the $500 deductible and two weeks extra car rental.
Six weeks later, it was stolen. I had left Austin without any debt, which changed dramatically due to “The Year of The Kia Troubles!”
From the time my Kia was stolen until it was returned, repaired, with a new dashboard, steering column and all- new upholstery, it had been in the shop an additional six weeks. My insurance rate doubled.
But after hearing the story of the homeless man, who had been assaulted, had his car trashed, and everything he owned stolen, I’m sitting in my front yard, writing while I watch which birds come to my feeder.
I’m waiting for the plumber, because I probably need to get the disposal replaced.
Friday, I had clogged plumbing in the kitchen fixed--probably $300, for that, & Saturday, paid another $300 to have my Live Oak tree trimmed--it was that, or let it keep hitting the roof, when the wind blows!
The debt is piling up! I could be depressed about the high cost of all of these unexpected expenses.
But a mockingbird is competing with a Bewick wren and a Northern cardinal in the ligustrum shrubs. It’s a warm day with a breeze sufficient to keep mosquitoes away. I have a house, a limited income--but at least sufficient to cover my bills.
The Orange Menace & the threat to democracy worries me, and so does the rapidly increasing news of climate disasters, but for now,
I’m OK.
IT COULD be worse!
Years have gone by in Austin, with tent cities popping up in every conceivable non-occupied area, including an attractive tent smack in front of City Hall. (Attractive as tents go....) I’ve not followed the debacle of housing those on the streets closely enough to explain why buying an empty multimillion dollar hotel was bought, and how it has since fared. I do know that tent clusters continue to pop up, get rousted by police, only to reappear in other areas. Because last year, Austin was hit by an unremitting heat wave for most of the summer, libraries and other such public areas were advertised as “shelters” for those otherwise without means to avoid dying of heat stroke.
We do have a group which is building “3D homes,” made of some kind of concrete, which can, using the 3D machinery, go up in a day, although plumbing and electricity still requires doing, presumably with some construction for windows and doors.
Overall, the displaced people--it is recognized--need more than housing. Some have disabilities, some need mental health services, others are addicts who may--or may not--benefit from “rehabilitation.” Then, we also have the working poor; they may work one or two or multiple part time jobs, yet don’t make enough money to afford Austin’s rising housing costs.
Last year, I encountered one of the working poor, while trying to check on my 2020 Kia Sportage, which had been stolen from in front of my house, then recovered by police & towed to an outrageously expensive private impound lot. I had seen the SUV the day before, and it was clearly not drivable. The front dashboard had been dismantled, along with the steering wheel. The front seat was covered with broken glass, from the shattered driver’s window, which gave the thieves access. Dirty clothes--not mine, were scattered about, the upholstery had been damaged & to top off the grim reality of what had happened, it was a cold day, gray clouds had rolled in, after the summer drought, soaking the inside of my car.
I arranged with my insurance company, USAA, to tow the vehicle to a Kia dealership. I chose one in Round Rock, having had a poor experience with two Kia dealerships in Austin...but that’s another story.
When I arrived, I eventually talked to the clerk, and found out my Kia had already been retrieved by the towing company. As I was leaving, it was late afternoon. A lone clean-cut well-dressed man, about 30ish, was sitting alone outside. My reporter’s instincts kicked in, and I stopped to ask what he was doing. Well, he told me that his car had been stolen, he had been assaulted. He was waiting for detectives to go over his car, which they believed had been used in a murder