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In The Public Interest
Wednesday, October 31, 2007
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Jeffrey Anderson
Staff Writer, L.A. City Beat
October 4, 2007
Mario’s Tow Truck Troubles
A state senator comes to the aid of a pal facing legal and political problems in Bell
Gardens. But at what cost?

With a tough election seven weeks away in Bell Gardens, State Senator Gil
Cedillo ventured into the working-class city to help out a protégé who could be in
deep trouble: Councilman Mario Beltran.

Cedillo stood side-by-side at a press conference with Beltran, a young, trouble-prone
politico with a criminal record and called for an end to a widespread police policy of
impounding the cars of unlicensed drivers for 30 days. It made good local political
theater and armed Beltran to fight for a just cause. Within a matter of days, he
persuaded his colleagues on the City Council to end the practice. In Bell Gardens,
stuck in the rough-and-tumble belt of heavily immigrant cities that lie southeast of
downtown Los Angeles, the high cost of towing penalties often meant the owner lost
the car.

But more was on Cedillo’s mind that September day than notching up one more city in
his statewide crusade to renounce the draconian 30-day impound. The state senator
also wanted to help his former field advisor and close friend of his son, Gil Jr., beat a
possible rap. Months ago, investigators from various law enforcement agencies began
examining whether Beltran helped cut a special deal that gave the tow truck operator,
United Motor Club, a five-year monopoly worth millions of dollars in Bell Gardens.
District Attorney spokeswoman Sandi Gibbons said Beltran and the tow truck
operator are under investigation by the LAPD, the D.A.’s Office and the FBI.
Warrants served in June at Beltran’s home and office suggest that authorities are
looking for possible criminal conflicts of interest related to Beltran’s political consulting
firm, Americas Consulting Group, and the towing firm.

Cedillo himself underscored the strong message sent that day when Beltran joined him
at the press conference to denounce the 30-day impound policy that enriches the city’
s tow truck operator. Says Cedillo: “He has my full, unwavering support. I think that
the fact that he led the charge to rescind the towing ordinance rebuts completely any
charge of conflict of interest.”

Now that Beltran’s problems may not be limited to winning reelection in November,
Cedillo makes a point of saying that he will not turn his back on the man he nurtured in
the political process. For Cedillo, it simply doesn’t matter that Beltran was convicted
in March of filing a false police report, after an embarrassing incident in which he
woke up drunk in a downtown L.A. prostitute hotel.

But Cedillo’s own political fortunes could be intertwined in the outcome of the Beltran
matter in ways that raise questions about the powerful role that tow truck companies
play in local and statewide politics. Thousands of dollars in contributions to elected
officials statewide were made, including some to Cedillo, the vice chair of the state
legislature’s Latino Caucus, by United Motor Club and a second firm, Maywood
Club Towing.

Together, the two companies control contracts worth millions of dollars in four cities:
Maywood, Bell Gardens, South Gate, and Cudahy. And since 2000, the two
companies and various family members, employees and associates have contributed
more than $120,000 to L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, Assembly Speaker Fabian
Nunez, Assemblyman Kevin DeLeon, Cedillo, and a number of other progressive
Democrats, including Congresswoman Lucille Roybal-Allard, according to a CityBeat
review of campaign finance reports.

To further complicate political peace in Bell Gardens and beyond, the D.A.’s Office
last week charged United Motor Club’s former point man in Bell Gardens. A three-
time felon, accused drug trafficker named Shahram Shayesteh faces charges of
obstructing a government official and making a criminal threat during a three-way
phone conversation that Beltran set up with his political rival, Bell Gardens
Councilman Daniel Crespo. According to LAPD Lieutenant Paul Vernon, police are
investigating Beltran’s role in Shayesteh’s alleged threats to Councilman Crespo, and
are sharing the fruits of their investigation with the FBI.

Cedillo, whose presence in the troubled waters of Bell Gardens worries some of his
political colleagues, told CityBeat he’s not sure if he’s met the man behind United
Motor Club. “I don’t think I’ve ever spoken to him. I don’t think I have any
recollection of him, but I don’t know.”

Yet, through the avenue of political contributions, the towing companies can remain
nameless and faceless, yet insinuate themselves into the fabric of the state’s political
culture every day.

The dark history of Shayestah
Days after the May Day melee in MacArthur Park in which the LAPD roughed up
immigrant protestors and members of the media, a number of L.A. officials gathered
on a stage in the park to ease tensions in the Latino community. Three of the officials
present – although the event did not specifically address driver’s license or impound
issues – Villaraigosa, Nunez, and DeLeon – received generous campaign donations
from Maywood Club Towing.

Maywood Club Towing is a company that is owned by Tooradj Khosroabadi, an
Iranian who also is known as “Tony Bravo.” He is the brother-in-law of United Motor
Club’s Shahram Shayesteh, according to Bell Gardens city officials and law
enforcement sources.

Last November, less than a month after Shayesteh met with Beltran and his ally on the
council, Mayor Jennifer Rodriguez, at an Applebees Restaurant in Bell Gardens, he
attended a City Council meeting, represented himself as a “manager and spokesman”
for United Motor Club, and walked out with an exclusive five-year franchise
agreement to tow cars for the police in Bell Gardens. At the time, he was under
indictment in two federal drug trafficking cases, one involving an international opium
smuggling ring that allegedly extends from Iran to Germany to Los Angeles. He has
since been dismissed from that case, and pleaded guilty of lying to federal investigators
in another drug case and is expected to get probation and no time.

United Motor Club told Bell Gardens officials that Shayesteh was merely a contractor
who helped them sell unclaimed cars. He has since been fired by the company.

In one of the drug trafficking cases, Tony Bravo liquidated real estate to post a bond
on Shayesteh’s behalf, according to court records. At the same time, Tony Bravo was
being accused of giving kickbacks to police and local officials in Maywood, and about
to come under investigation by the FBI, according to elected officials and police
sources in Maywood. That probe is ongoing, law enforcement sources say.

Shayesteh is described in government affidavits sworn by agents with Homeland
Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement as an opium addict with a gambling
problem. He has been convicted of fraud in New Jersey, Wisconsin, and Arizona, and
was indicted in two drug trafficking cases in federal court in Los Angeles in 2005.

Shayesteh, according to his own sworn declaration filed in U.S. District Court in Los
Angeles, and sworn declarations by his handlers with the Department of Homeland
Security, is a government snitch associated with alleged drug traffickers. Before 2005,
he provided federal agents with information about opium trafficking from Mexico to El
Paso and El Paso to Los Angeles, and about illegal activities within the Iranian-
American community in Los Angeles. He has served time in federal prison for credit
card fraud.

One of the cases involves an alleged international drug trafficking and money-
laundering ring involving a jewelry design store in downtown Los Angeles owned by a
man named Mehrdad Lari, a wealthy Santa Monica businessman.

According to a federal indictment, in 2003, German authorities and the Drug
Enforcement Administration seized close to 600 pounds of opium – valued at $5.4
million once processed into heroin – from an international drug organization that
extends to Los Angeles, where Lari is known as the “boss of the bosses.” According
to the indictment, Lari would sell opium from Germany and Iran – smuggled into the U.
S. in false bottomed suitcases – wire the money to international locations, buy
property and vehicles, set up limited liability companies, and refinance homes and
property in a complex scheme to launder the drug proceeds. Lari pleaded guilty to
using a phone to commit a felony drug offense; on March 27, he was sentenced to
four years in federal prison.

According to court documents, the transactions that led to Shayesteh’s arrest involved
$64,000 in checks deposited to Lari’s jewelry company account, Mallery Design,
which federal authorities allege is a front for purifying and selling opium and laundering
money. The checks came from a company owned by Shayesteh called KBR
Coachworks, also known as Regal Auto Sales, according to court documents.

Several months ago, the U.S. Attorney’s Office dismissed Shayesteh from the case
against Lari and a dozen others, however, for lack of evidence that he acted in a
conspiracy to deal drugs and launder money. He claimed checks from KBR
Coachworks to Mallery Design were loans.

Then, a month or so later, a second drug trafficking case involving the seizure of eight
pounds of opium from Shayesteh’s Reseda apartment fell apart and ended in his
conviction for lying to investigators.

A review of court documents shows that Homeland Security’s immigration and
customs enforcement agents botched the second case with an illegal search of
Shayesteh’s residence that the court later invalidated – despite Shayesteh’s admission,
according to documents, that he “got involved” with an associate who “smuggled two
kilos in.” Meanwhile, Shayesteh cooperated with authorities by telling them about
international drug smuggling from Mexico and criminal activity in the Iranian
community in L.A., according to a sworn declaration he signed on May 31, 2007.

But it was an entirely different kind of legal matter that spurred Cedillo’s interest in
righting the wrongs of the 30-day impound policy.

Taking on the law
Ricardo Castillo was driving to a yard sale with his wife and kids in the family’s 2004
Chevy Malibu one September day in 2005, when a Maywood police officer pulled
him over for having some fabric attached to his front passenger window.

Castillo had an Arizona driver’s license but no California driver’s license. So the
officer seized his car – worth $12,000 but invaluable in terms of his ability to get to
work – and had Maywood Club Towing, under an exclusive contract with the city,
tow it to an impound lot.

The next day, Castillo called Maywood Police Department and said that a licensed
driver was available to come pick up the car. An officer told him that his car would
remain impounded for 30 days.

By the time the 30 days was up, Castillo was required to pay $1,500 in fees for the
towing, impound, and the release of the car. It was a price he could not afford.
Instead, Castillo forfeited his car, and with it his means of travel to and from work.

Castillo’s plight is hardly unique. Tens of thousands of immigrants in California have
their cars seized each year, as cities aggressively enforce a state law that punishes
unlicensed drivers – in particular those who are not entitled to a license because of
their immigrant status.

The same month, Juan Salazar, also from Maywood, had his 1990 Oldsmobile
impounded because the driver lacked a valid license. Salazar was four blocks away
and ready to retrieve his car, but Maywood police refused to release it. Eventually
Salazar got his car back, after paying $400 to Maywood Club Towing and $200 to
Maywood police.

The problem is not just in Maywood, which, according to police sources there, towed
more than 17,000 cars in the last five years, before a public outcry led to a change in
city policy.

From Escondido to Santa Rosa, immigrants forfeit their cars for driving without
licenses because the price of another used car is less than the cost to get a seized car
out of an impound. Advocacy groups say predatory towing companies and greedy
cities are targeting Latino immigrants, forcing them to buy used cars that are destined
for a tax lien sale.

Perhaps more troubling is that self-declared champions of working class immigrants
have ascended to power at the local and state level, yet have been slow to rectify the
vicious cycle of vehicle forfeiture that torments those very same working-class
immigrants.

“It amounts to a municipal tax on immigrants,” says Nativo Lopez, national director of
Hermandad Mexicana Latinoamerica, who spoke one day last summer on the South
Steps of Los Angeles City Hall. “The economic devastation in the immigrant
community is incalculable.”

Lopez spoke to a handful of Spanish-language journalists that day, yet there wasn’t an
L.A. city official or politician in sight. But then, the tow truck issue – inseparable from
a decade-long debate over driver’s licenses for illegal immigrants – puts government
officials in a quandary.

A federal class-action lawsuit in U.S. District Court names the city and county of Los
Angeles as defendants, and seeks to overturn a state law that allows for such 30-day
impounds. The lawsuit, in which Salazar and Castillo are plaintiffs, charges that local
governments and police agencies throughout California have violated the constitutional
rights of its undocumented residents.

In addition, law enforcers believe that aggressive towing and impound policies are
necessary to keep unlicensed drivers off the roads, for public safety reasons. But there
might be another reason why many city and state politicians shy from the topic of city
towing and impound policies.

Each year, tiny cities such as Maywood, South Gate, Cudahy, and Bell Gardens rake
in hundreds of thousands of dollars in impound fees. Los Angeles takes in more than a
half dozen smaller cities combined. That money can be budgeted for police purposes,
or any purpose the city chooses.

Los Angeles City Councilwoman Janice Hahn recalls the first time she became irked
by L.A.’s towing policy. It was just before Christmas in 2005. Hahn wanted to see an
LAPD sobriety checkpoint in action.

But sobriety was not the real reason LAPD officers were stopping cars that
December day in Wilmington, in the middle of Hahn’s council district.

She recalls a troubling scene: “Police had pulled people over and forced them out of
their cars with their belongings, including Christmas presents. Entire families were
sitting on the curb by the side of the road. One family had been to a dinner party, they
had dishes of tamales sitting on their laps.”

Hahn inquired if the motorists were being arrested for drunk driving, but was alarmed
to find the reason entire families were having their cars towed was because the driver
had no license. “It dawned on me what we were doing,” she recalls. “I thought, what
happens now?” Police told her that the cars would be impounded for 30 days. “I was
told most of them would simply go to an auction and buy another car. These were
hardworking families that use their car to go to church on Sunday and work on
Monday. There must have been 20 cars there. It just seemed wrong.”

Moved by what she witnessed, the councilwoman told LAPD Chief Bill Bratton she
did not want these types of checkpoints in her district. She says the police stopped
doing them.

Then, in June, she seconded a motion by Councilman Jose Huizar to review the
mandatory 30-day hold on impounded cars, in light of a federal court of appeals ruling
that, according to Cedillo, says it is unconstitutional for police to impound a car solely
because the driver is driving without a license.

However, Bratton recently lifted a self-imposed moratorium on 30-day impounds and
so far has faced little opposition from the City Council.

For police, the issue is a no-brainer: they point to statistics that a large number of car
accidents involve unlicensed drivers. “I can’t tell you how many times as a patrol
officer I came up on a brutal car accident, only to find that at least one of the
participants was driving without a license,” says Detective Ben Jones of the L.A.
Police Commission’s Investigation Division.

For L.A. city officials, the math could be even easier. A recent report in the L.A.
Times found that the city impounded 47,000 cars in 2006 because a driver had no
license. Current city law allows the city to impound those cars for 30 days. Despite
months of requests for public information, the LAPD failed to disclose how much
money it makes from these impounds – or how many cars are never re-claimed.

None of those in the political community who are troubled by Cedillo’s rushing to the
aid Beltran question the righteousness of his cause.

Risks of helping a pal
In fact, Cedillo is not the only one standing by Beltran. And that perplexes prominent
local and state politicians.

State Senator Ron Calderon employs Beltran as a field deputy. Calderon’s brother
and sister-in-law, Tom and Marcella Calderon, held a fundraiser June 21 at their
home for Beltran, according to an invitation to the event obtained by CityBeat.

Calderon has resisted calls to fire Beltran by angry constituents who fear that Beltran
is not fit to represent their interests. Calderon paid more than $28,000 to Beltran for
campaign workers salaries, office expenses, and reimbursement for campaign
expenses from February to June 2006, FPPC reports show. Beltran’s consulting firm
operated out of Calderon’s campaign headquarters in 2006.

Calderon refused to answer CityBeat’s questions about his field deputy. One former
employer of Beltran’s was more talkative. Former Assemblywoman Judy Chu, now
vice chair of the State Board of Equalization, hired Beltran to work as a field deputy
for her Assembly office in 2005. When Chu got wind of Beltran’s political consulting
activities she gave him a choice: cease outside campaign and political activities, or give
up his position as field deputy. Beltran walked, Chu said, and was hired by Calderon,
after helping Calderon in his 2006 campaign.

“Mario seemed like a young man with high ideals,” Chu said recently, when asked
about Beltran’s widely reported legal troubles and the ongoing investigations that
threaten his political future. “I am extremely shocked and disappointed that he went
for the trappings of an elected official. He seems to have let himself be taken by every
temptation there is.”

If Chu sounds as if she is harsh on Beltran, it might be because she is troubled on
other levels.

According to Chu, while Beltran was her field deputy, he also was working weekends
for a downtown Los Angeles nightclub that has drawn scrutiny from police and local
officials in recent months. Chu tells CityBeat that she urged Beltran to disclose his
night job to the Fair Political Practices Commission. However, the commission has no
record that he ever did. Nor does it have any record of Beltran’s financial disclosures
regarding his political consulting and campaign activities.

When Beltran was arrested earlier this year and charged with filing a false police
report, he had been drinking at the same establishment where he once worked, the
popular and trendy 740 Club. The nightclub and at least one of its representatives
have been at the center of a number of troubling reports.

Los Angeles City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo is considering a nuisance abatement
action against the club, according to L.A. Councilman Jose Huizar, based on
neighborhood disturbances and police reports of violence and gang activity.

One of the club’s key representatives, Steven Carmona, a former L.A. planning
commissioner who helped secure building permits, was indicted recently for allegedly
taking a bribe in an unrelated federal racketeering case. So far there is no indication
that Carmona’s connection to the club has anything to do with Beltran.

Yet Beltran – along with Huizar and Maywood and
Huntington Park City Attorney
Francisco Leal – have hosted political fundraisers at the 740 Club. And though
Beltran’s actual connection to the club is unclear, it was an aspect of his life that
bothered Chu. “I was increasingly concerned about his outside activities,” she said.
“He boasted of not reporting his earnings, and then we heard he was some sort of
manager at this nightclub. Then he confirmed his activities as a political consultant. I
didn’t have a good feeling. We wanted to separate ourselves from him. It was
intuition.”

Of Tom Calderon’s recent fundraiser for Beltran, Chu says, “People cannot believe
anyone would even attend that event, much less hold it in the first place.”

L.A. City Council President Eric Garcetti put it another way: “I can see Calderon
sticking by this guy, but I don’t understand Gil [Cedillo]. Obviously, Gil has strong ties
in Bell Gardens. I can’t believe Mario’s still in office. I’ve had problem employees
before. We deal with it quickly.”

Voters are left to wonder why an elected official like Beltran would go anywhere near
Shayesteh – and why Cedillo would stick his neck out for Beltran. Compared to
federal drug and money laundering investigations and credit card fraud schemes
Shayesteh has been involved with in the past, an arrest for alleged criminal threats
might be just a minor inconvenience. Or maybe it will lead to other more meaningful
revelations, given his self-described proclivity for cooperating with government
investigators.

For Cedillo, the time is right to stand by his man in Bell Gardens. “He’s not my first
friend or ally to be investigated by the FBI, and he won’t be the first to be completely
exonerated.”

10-04-07
Copyright Southland Publishing 2004
CONVICTED

Trash Talk
Jeffrey Anderson
Staff Writer, L.A. City Beat
October 4, 2007

A transcript of a wiretapped
conversation between Shahram
Shayesteh and Mehrdad Lari.
Shayesteh has been dropped
from the case, but Lari of Santa
Monica was sentenced in March
to four years in federal prison in
the international drug smuggling
case. We offer it as a
combination vocabulary
lesson/personality test.

Shayesteh: “I told him a few
days ago, I told him, ‘You
motherfucker, if I ever wanted to
supply [anyone] why would I
supply you? I would supply
Mehrdad’ … I said, ‘What has
Mehrdad done that you gave
him? I said to him, ‘You
motherfucker, had you known
there was something
somewhere, you pimp, you
would have given it by now.”

Lari: “Motherfucker … Junkie!
Swear to God that you’re not
going to go around with him
anymore, Shayesteh.”

Shayesteh: “No, dear … Are you
crazy?”

Lari: “You should have said to
him, ‘You motherfucker … The
stuff I gave you to consume
weighed as much as you do …
dick in your mother’s pussy!”

Then, as the two men discuss
the arrest of their other
associates and how to stay in
touch by telephone, Lari
continues: “I keep thinking that
the motherfuckers are going to
show up any minute … The
pimps raided that guy’s house,
were with him for 12 hours …
[one should ask them] you
pimps … all this for [10] grams?
Dick in your mother’s pussy.
They really messed up … they
shitted this time, right?”

Shayesteh: “Yeah.”

Lari: “The DEA will screw them.
He’ll tell them, you assholes,
you wasted your time one whole
day … 10 police … for this much?”

Shayesteh: “Yeah, dear.

Fuck them. Don’t even bother
thinking about it.”

Lari: “When will you come to
me?”

Shayesteh: “Tomorrow.”

Lari: “I have business with you.”

Shayesteh: “Sure.”

Lari: “I die for you. I love you,
Shayesteh.”

Shayesteh: “I die for you.”

10-04-07
Copyright Southland Publishing,
2004
Senator
Ron Calderon
got $5,000 from
Maywood Towing.
Mario Beltran is a
staffer in
Calderon's Senate
office. The FBI is
investigating if
Beltran steered a
$5 million
contract to
Maywood Towing
in Bell Gardens.
Mayor Antonio
Villaraigosa
received over
$20,000 from
Maywood
Towing and
South Gate's
United Motor
Club.
Assembly
Speaker
Fabian Nunez
received about
$6,000 from
Maywood
Towing. His
Assembly
District includes
Maywood and
Huntington
Park. Million
dollar Tow Truck
contracts are
not the only
gigs where the
Latino officials
have an interest
in. Maywood
and Huntington
Park also share
the same city
attorney,
Francisco Leal
who in both
cases was
selected in
closed door
without open
competing bids.
In both cases,
the city attorney
is billing three
times his
stipulated
maximum.
Francisco Leal is
best Friends
with Fabian
Nunez.
Leal is
great friends
with John
Noguez in
Huntington Park.
L.A. City
Councilman
Jose Huizar
Attorney
Francisco Leal,
City Attorney for
Huntington Park
and
Maywood
740 Club, Los Angeles, CA
Favorite hangout for gang members, thugs
and Latino politicians.
State
Assemblyman
Hector De La
Torre, former
South Gate City
Councilman;
Protege to
termed-out
Senator Martha
Escutia. De La
Torre received
$21,000 from
Maywood Club
Towing Owner
Tony Bravo who
has an interest in
South Gate's
United Motor
Club.                    
 
State
Assemblyman
Kevin De Leon,
received $13,000
from from tow
truck operators.
He is a childhood
friend of Speaker
Fabian Nunez
who represents
Huntington Park
and Maywood.;
to qualify as
candidate for
state-wide office,
he used a sofa in
an apartment
owned by a
staffer in State
Senator Gil
Cedillo's office as
his home address
in the Echo Park
area of Los
Angeles, while
his California
Drivers License
had an address in
San Jose,
California, 550
miles north.
Truckload of Riches
Jeffrey Anderson
Staff Writer, L.A. City Beat
October 4, 2007

Politicians have reaped
benefits from the tow truck
companies operating in the
corridor of working-class cities
southeast of downtown L.A.
Among the contributions and
connections:

*
From 2000 to 2006,Maywood
Club Towing dumped around
$65,000 into statewide races won
largely by members of the Latino
Caucus, of which Gil Cedillo is
vice chair. More than $21,000 of
that went to Assemblyman
Hector De La Torre of South
Gate. About $6,000 went to
Nunez. A little more than $5,000
went to State Senator Ron
Calderon, of Montebello, for
whom Mario Beltran works as a
field deputy. And $3,200 went to
Cedillo.

*
During the same period,
United Motor Club contributed
about $4,000 to similar
candidates: half of that went to
De La Torre, and a quarter of it
went to the late Assemblyman
Marco Firebaugh, of Cudahy.

*
Tony Bravo and his family and
employees have given
generously to members of the
Latino Caucus. While some of
the contributions are related to
Bravo’s company, Maywood Club
Towing, others stem from a
general partnership owned by
Bravo and his wife, Elvia Franco.

*
In all, Bravo’s family and
employees gave more than
$21,000 to Latino Caucus
members since 2002. Their
favorite candidate has been
Assemblyman Kevin DeLeon,
who received $13,000 from
various members of the
Khosroabadi family, including
one family member, Khosro
Khosroabadi, who is listed as the
president of the National NAFT
Corporation – a Mobil gas station
operator in Ashland, Oregon.


*
One of Bravo’s top employees,
Saeid Davoudi, listed as a
manager of Maywood Club
Towing, the owner of SNT Body
Shop in Los Angeles, and the
proprietor of High Tech Market
management in Beverly Hills,
made two separate $1,000
donations to DeLeon in less than
two weeks in 2004.

*
Elvia Franco, identified as the
owner of Maywood Club Towing,
gave $2,000 to the Marco
Firebaugh Leadership
Committee, in 2003. Bravo, his
wife, and family are listed in the
top 100 contributors to
Congresswoman Lucille Roybal-
Allard, giving a total of $5,750
from 2003 to 2005. (Davoudi
also donated $1,000 to Roybal-
Allard.)


*
In 2003, Bravo and Franco
also made matching $2,000
donations on the same day to
former Huntington Park mayor
Rosario Marin, in her failed
campaign for a seat in the U.S.
Senate.

*
At the local level, Bravo and
his company have poured
thousands of dollars into city
elections in Maywood and its
surrounding cities. Bravo, his
wife, his employees, and the two
tow companies themselves also
have taken an unusual interest
in L.A. city politics, donating
more than $33,000 to various
candidates the last five years.


*
By far the largest beneficiary
has been Mayor Antonio
Villaraigosa, who received more
than $20,000 from Maywood
Club Towing, United Motor Club,
the Khosroabadi family, and
employees of the two towing
companies, from 2004 to 2005.
Davoudi alone gave the mayor
$4,500.

*
Bravo, Franco, Davoudi, and
members of the Khosroabadi
family also gave generously to L.
A. Councilmembers Jose Huizar,
Tony Cardenas, Richard Alarcon,
Herb Wesson, and former
Council President Alex Padilla,
now a state senator.

*
One family member, Laura
Khosroabadi, a student at
University of San Diego, made
two $500 donations to
Villaraigosa between May and
April 2005.

*
Another Tony Bravo family
member who contributed to
Villaraigosa is Iraj Khosroabadi,
listed as the manager of United
Motor Club.

*
Tony Bravo employee and
relative, Rameza Khosroabadi, in
2002 wrote a $1,000 check to
the Friends of Fabian Nunez --
while working as an assistant
manager of KBR Coachworks, the
company owned by Shahram
Shayesteh that was accused of
laundering drug money.

10-04-07

Copyright Southland Publishing,
2004
Tom Calderon,
brother to state
senator
Ron
Calderon. See
WatchOurCity.com
report on the
Calderon brothers
and their legacy
in the California
legislature
(Click
Here)
Politics Meets Street
Jeffrey Anderson
L.A. Weekly
April 11, 2007
Why are politicians and
civic leaders bellying up to the
eyebrow-raising 740 Club?
"How does the 740 Club figure
in? It is operated by Verdugo,
who has a checkered past as a
night-club owner and a history of
brushes with the law. Solis acts
as the club’s caretaker when
Verdugo isn’t around. Beltran
used to work for Verdugo at a
previous, failed nightclub
venture, according to public
documents on file in Whittier.
Beltran and Solis are not the
only local officials who appear to
be more than casual patrons of
the 740 Club, a multistory mega-
club that boasts go-go dancers,
Vegas-style laser light shows,
fog machines, private balcony
booths and “ultra VIP sky
boxes” — but which also has
been plagued by disturbing and
violent incidents in recent
months."
Mario Beltran's
Undertow
Jeffrey Anderson
L.A. Weekly
June 27, 2007
Police probe whether the
Bell Gardens pol helped a three-
time felon win a sensitive towing
contract.
"A SEARCH BY LOS ANGELES
POLICE and the FBI of Bell
Gardens Councilman Mario
Beltran’s home and City Hall
office last Wednesday, seeking
information regarding a lucrative
city towing contract, could be the
beginning of an uncomfortable
summer for Beltran — and his
political allies." "Police on June
20 also searched United Motor
Club, a tow service that Beltran,
a field deputy for Democratic
state Senator Ron Calderon of
Montebello, recommended for a
five-year, $5 million contract that
the Bell Gardens City Council
approved last November."
"Detectives are looking for
evidence that Beltran steered
the deal to a business associate,
according to an affidavit filed in
court by the Los Angeles Police
Department."
Rosario Marin,
received $4,000
from Maywood
Towing. She is a
former  
Huntington Park
council member,
former U.S.
Treasurer,
den mother to
Huntington Park
council members.
Her favorite
protege,
Edward
Escareno, was
convicted for
"Grand Theft" of
public funds , a
felony. According
to
WiKipedia.com,
the conviction
story was kept a
secret to protect
Rosario. She is
mentor to John
Noguez.
Rosario Marin,
politician,
mother, now,
author:

Simonsays.com

"Leading
Between Two
Worlds
Lessons from
the First
Mexican-Born
Treasurer of
the United
States
By Rosario
Marin
"

Trade Paperback
Publication Date:
June 5, 2007
Price: $14.00
Bell Gardens councilman Mario Beltran was convicted
in June 2007. He's still a councilman and still a staffer
for state Senator Ron Calderon. As campaign manager
for John Noguez for the March 2007 elections, he and
Noguez claimed in slanderous propaganda mailers that
political opponents were convicted felons. None were,
all the time hiding Beltran's court case.
John Noguez surrounded by criminals: See what Noguez's
campaign manager, Mario Beltran, has been up to since being
convicted in June 2007. Don't take WatchOurCity.com's word for it.
Read L.A. City Beat's October 4, 2007 reports by Jeffrey Anderson,
who also wrote about Noguez:
"Name Games"
Congresswoman
Lucille
Roybal-Allard,
received $5,750
from Mario
Beltran's tow
truck buddies.
She Represents
Southeast L.A.
Former
Assemblywoman
Judy Chu, who
hired and then
fired Mario Beltran,
said about "Tom
Calderon’s recent
fundraiser for
Beltran..... “People
cannot believe
anyone would even
attend that event,
much less hold it
in the first place.”
L.A. City Council
President Eric
Garcetti: "I can’t
believe Mario’s
still in office. I’ve
had problem
employees before.
We deal with it
quickly.”
Cultural Nuances &
P
impin' Politicos
Editor's note on Iranian tow truck operators and
nuanced vulgar language in FBI wire taps.
Caution:  
Do not read
"TRASH TALK" if
you are easily
insulted by foul
or vulgar use of
language, or do
not understand
that foul and
vulgar language
can be a nuanced
term of
endearment used
by low lifes who
are financial
backers to Latino
politicians in
high places.

See Editor's note
"Cultural
Nuance".
Senator Gil Cedillo
on Beltran:
"He's not my first
friend or ally to be
investigated by
the FBI, and he
won't be the first
to be completely
exonerated".
Cedillo received
$3,200 from
Maywood Towing.
Mario Beltran
L.A. Times, Wednesday, October 31, 2007, Posted 1:00 pm. by Hector Becerra.
Bell Gardens Official Faces New Charges
"Bell Gardens City Councilman Mario Beltran was charged today with three counts of failing
to file campaign contribution reports with the state. Beltran would be prohibited from
running for public office for four years if convicted of the misdemeanors. "That's the kicker,"
said David Demerjian, who heads the district attorney's public corruption unit. "He would not
be removed from office. But he would not be able to run."

"Beltran could face six months in jail and a $10,000 fine if convicted. The LAPD and the FBI
are investigating allegations that Beltran steered a $5-million automobile towing contract to
a company connected to an old friend and business associate, and that the owner of the
towing firm made threats against another council member."

"Demerjian said politicians and those seeking office are required to tell the state who gave
them money and how they spent it. "He never filed anything," Demerjian said. "We don't
know if he got campaign contributions from some source he doesn't want to disclose or
what."
WatchOurCity.com
Exclusive
Feature:
Monday, November 5, 2007
Caution:
Exclusive
Feature: