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Pirozzi is a licensed real estate broker, according to the California Department of Real Estate, and is the registered officer for AMPCore, Incorporated, which does business as Harborside Real Estate & Investments; Harbor View Homes; Harbor View Real Estate; Harbor View Real Estate & Investments, and Harbor View Realty.
The Santa Barbara Association of Realtors directory lists Pirozzi as a broker for Harbor View Real Estate and Investments, with an address of 219 W. Carrillo St., Suite C&D. The investigation stems from the suspect’s operation of a local property management company called AMP Core, Inc., which went by several fictitious business names including Santa Barbara Property Management and Harbor View Real Estate, the District Attorney s Office said in a statement this week. Pirozzi’s property management company had approximately 100 clients, and the complaint alleges that he embezzled nearly $700,000 from those clients
Q: We put an offer in on a home but I told the agent an hour later that we wanted to withdraw the offer and look around a bit more. Apparently, the offer was ultimately accepted. My agent now says I can lose my 3% deposit even if the sellers accept another offer. After a week, I told him I am ready
Attorney Mitchell Sussman Secures Ruling By California Judge That Wyndham Must Comply With California Law, The Case Immediately Settles
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PALM SPRINGS, Calif., April 15, 2021 /PRNewswire/ California Judge Rules, Wyndham Must Comply.
In one of the many lawsuits brought by the law office of Mitchell Reed Sussman & Associates against timeshare developer Wyndham and its affiliated companies,
Drake v. Wyndham, Orange County Superior Court, Case No. 30-2019-01082041-CU- FR-CJC, a California judge recently made a tentative ruling as a result of a motion brought by the Sussman law firm. The motion sought an order that Wyndham was bound by the regulations of the California Dept. of Real Estate.
Editor-at-Large
San Diego City Attorney Mara Elliott is misleading the public by refusing to release potentially damning parts of a forensic report that reviewed the 101 Ash Street building deal, even after the report was promised to be an independent and comprehensive analysis of what has now become one of the City’s worst financial debacles in its history.
The “forensic analysis” was touted as an in-depth investigation of all aspects of, and all departments and personnel involved in, the $128 million purchase and $30 million renovation of the building after the 19-story tower had to be evacuated in January 2020 over employees’ exposure to asbestos.
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Good morning. I’m Rachel Schnalzer, the L.A. Times Business section’s audience engagement editor. With the COVID-19 pandemic pushing people away from shared spaces for the last year, a minor home repair can feel urgent and an urgent home repair can feel like a catastrophe.
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Repair requests are common as many tenants spend the majority of their leisure time and, often, their workdays at home. “Everybody’s using the facilities at the same time, and things are going to pop up,” explains Fred Sutton, a senior vice president of public affairs with the