Developer with Major Projects in WeHo Arrested on Federal Bribery Charges

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The Melrose Triangle’s Boulevard building. (architect Studio One Eleven)

The co-founder of the Charles Company, the developer behind the Melrose Triangle project in West Hollywood, has been arrested on federal bribery charges.

According to a statement from the U.S. Department of Justice, Arman Gabaee, 57, known professionally as Arman Gabay, was arrested this morning at his home in Beverly Hills. Gabay has been charged with allegedly paying monthly bribes to a Los Angeles County employee for six years and offering to purchase the employee a Santa Rosa home for nearly $1.1 million in exchange for getting the county to enter into a $45 million lease with the Charles Company.

Arman Gabay of the Charles Company

Gabay’s Melrose Triangle is a major project consisting of three buildings with a total of 300,000 square feet on a plot of land bounded by Santa Monica Boulevard, Melrose Avenue and Almont Drive at the city’s border with Beverly Hills. It will house offices, restaurants and shops and 76 residential units.

In addition to the Melrose Triangle project, the Charles Company has proposed building a 19-story hotel topped with a helicopter landing pad at 9034 Sunset Blvd. next to the Marriott Edition. The Charles Company has submitted a plan for that project to the City of West Hollywood.  The Charles Company is a partnership between Armand Gabay and his brother Mark Gabay.

Gabay’s Excel Property Management has been a major donor in West Hollywood City Council election campaigns. For example, in 2015 Excel donated $10,000 to a so-called independent expenditure committee that backed the campaigns of councilmembers John D’Amico, John Heilman and Lindsey Horvath and challenger Joe Guadarrama.

hotel, charles company
Illustration of the proposed 19-story hotel at 9304 Sunset Blvd. (R&A Architecture & Design).

The county employee who Gabay alleged bribed has not been named and is said to be cooperating with the FBI. The Department of Justice said the employee negotiated leases for the county to rent office space from private parties and had “significant autonomy to contractually bind the county.”

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The complaint alleges that Gabay paid the employee cash bribes of $1,000 or more every month for six years “in exchange for county leases, non-public information, and other benefits.” According to the complaint, Gabay paid the employee thousands of dollars during covertly recorded meetings in late 2016 and early 2017.

In 2017, Gabay allegedly offered to purchase a Northern California residence for the county employee in exchange for the employee’s help in getting Los Angeles County to lease space in the Hawthorne Mall, which Gabay was redeveloping. According to the complaint, Gabay wanted the county to enter into a 10-year, $45 million lease to rent space in the Hawthorne Mall for the Department of Public Social Services and other county departments.

The FBI’s investigation and intercepted communications described the steps Gabay took last year to buy a house for the county employee as a bribe to commit the county to the Hawthorne Mall lease. Gabay ultimately settled on a home on eight acres of land in Santa Rosa wine country that was listed for $1,095,000, the Justice Department said. Without ever seeing the property, Gabay allegedly told an associate to “make the offer” on the home “ASAP” as a bribe for the employee.

Intercepted communications allegedly showed Gabay taking steps to try to disguise his ownership interest in the property, telling the associate that the offer on the property could not be in Gabay’s name and that he wanted to conceal his ownership interest in the property through some type of entity.

In April 2017, Gabay allegedly placed two offers on the Santa Rosa residence, first for $1,035,000 and later for $1,065,000. According to the complaint, immediately after FBI agents approached Gabay and told him they were aware of the bribe arrangement, Gabay’s offer on the property was withdrawn within hours.

“Business leaders who use their wealth and influence to corrupt our government are a scourge on our community,” United States Attorney Nicola T. Hanna said. “No one, no matter how prominent or wealthy, is above the law.”

If convicted of the bribery charge alleged in the complaint, Gabay would face a statutory maximum sentence of 10 years in federal prison.

This case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Ruth C. Pinkel and Lindsey Greer Dotson of the Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section.

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J SIMMONS
J SIMMONS
5 years ago

BTW – However “zoning” played an issue, let’s not forget I believe Sept 2011 John Heilman Smiled and expressed great pleasure and a relief at how long it took for the City to CHANGE ZONING FOR THESE BIG DEVELOPMENTS as a not so clearly stated part/purpose of drafting the now infamous NEXT 25 YEAR PLAN FOR THE CITY. The plan was thrown together, leaving out all the efforts local residents put in believing it was a true & honest plan for the City’s Future, including committees of residents who didn’t get to submit any work because Heilman was rushing to… Read more »

Tony Palrmo
Tony Palrmo
5 years ago

Clarifying our zoning laws in the City will go a long way in reducing the need to grease the wheels of the system. Tons of regulations, ordinances, at times confusing or contradicting legislations, are making developers go through a torturous trip. No wonder some developers attempt a shortcut.

Shawn Thompson
5 years ago
Reply to  Tony Palrmo

Our Zoning laws need reform. That is the core problem. Who wants mega projects everywhere? The developers at the cost of the quality of life of the residents. Why doesn’t zoning laws get reformed to stop the massive developments? Follow the money it takes to get elected and where it comes from. #deathoftheurbanvillage

Truth
Truth
5 years ago

Eyeballs VS. Truth

Which side are you on?

P S
P S
5 years ago

The old adage still holds true for the majority of our Councilmembers (but not all) — WeHo has the BEST City Council money can buy!

Joshua88
Joshua88
5 years ago

I swear, after Mr Duran’s mayoralty story was posted and our fearless editor posted his editorial, I was thinking about corruption in our small little town.

Interesting development. (sic)

Bill Skywatcher
Bill Skywatcher
5 years ago

If politics in this town is to be clean, we need to hire a special council to investigate the degree to which developers have corrupted our city.

While it defies all common and public sense for why so much of this city needs to be chewed up for the sake of developer profits, we need to ascertain whether city hall is in any involved.

And hold judgment until such a report is delivered. Our city could be clean. We need to know.

Mike
Mike
5 years ago

They, the developers own two properties right on the block where I live. They have been vacant for years in hopes of tying them into the proposed hotel that is pictured in this article. I rather enjoy the peace of not having neighbors close by but they, the vacant properties, are rather ugly to look at. I would hope that the city would force them to at least demolish them. There are two properties for sale on the south side of Harrat St that look right at these dumps. One has been on the market since last September or October,… Read more »

Steve Martin
Steve Martin
5 years ago

I suspect that a certain Mayor elect may be a bit sleepless given that the FBI has been monitoring Mr. Gabay’s telephonic communications. The last thing City Hall needs is the FBI focusing on WeHo’s cozy relationships with developers, “independent expenditure” and “charitable” donations and the other ethical issues that have plagued the City for years.

Rot
Rot
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Martin

Not the last, but the first thing the city needs…….to purge this rot so it can move on. The sooner, the better.

Monica Jefferson
Monica Jefferson
5 years ago
Reply to  Rot

How?

Todd Bianco
5 years ago

“Business leaders who use their wealth and influence to corrupt our government are a scourge on our community,” United States Attorney Nicola T. Hanna said. “No one, no matter how prominent or wealthy, is above the law.”

Hum…. Interesting quote. I’m trying to think if it would apply to anyone else, perhaps more prominent, on a national level?

J SIMMONS
J SIMMONS
5 years ago

It took long enough to find the obvious, BUT I’LL TAKE IT. There is always something corruption in all levels of government. All are unacceptable, BUT there are gross illegal injustices that some BIG developers engage in regularly. Of course, they are only HALF THE PROBLEM. The City/County Officials (Elected or Just employed by the City/County) didn’t choose to accept the Illegal Bribes with a gun pointed at their head. Both are equally criminally responsible for whatever projects that are found to be illegally Bribing for Project Approval. We don’t know many details, and I am strongly against which hunts.… Read more »

No surprise
No surprise
5 years ago

The tip of the jceberg!

Johnathan Lee
Johnathan Lee
5 years ago

The Gabay bothers gave $10,000 to two of our Alhambra councilmen,Jeff Maloney and David Mejia,during the elections, . The Gabay/Charles Company was developing a Lowes in Alhambra . The Alhambra city council voted unanimously to approve the project despite public testimony showing violations of CEQA environmental laws. A local environmental group sued the city and the Gabay brothers and stopped the development. Former mayor, Mark Paulson, was the consultant who worked with the city to push the development through without an Environmental Impact Report.

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