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Ex-L.A. Special Counsel Will Plead Guilty to Getting 2.2 Million Kickback for Arranging Collusive Lawsuit Against LADWP

Posted by Fay Arfa | Nov 29, 2021 | 0 Comments

          Paul O. Paradis, 58, a New York City lawyer, who represented both the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP) and a ratepayer suing it will plead guilty to a bribery charge for accepting an illegal payment of $2.2 million for getting another attorney to supposedly represent his ratepayer client in a collusive lawsuit against LADWP.     Paradis also admitted to more bribery schemes involving high-level LADWP officials. 

          IN 2013, the LADWP in 2013 installed a new billing system that it bought from PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC). After LADWP implemented the new system, hundreds of thousands of LADWP ratepayers received massively inflated and inaccurate utility bills. Afterwards, the city and LADWP faced multiple class-action lawsuits filed by ratepayers alleging harm resulting from the faulty billing system.

          In December 2014, the Los Angeles City Attorney's Office retained Paradis and Paul R. Kiesel, a Beverly Hills-based lawyer, as special counsel to represent the city in an affirmative lawsuit against PwC. Kiesel is cooperating with the investigation and is not charged with any wrongdoing. When Paradis began representing the city as special counsel in the PwC litigation, the Los Angeles City Attorney's Office knew he already represented Antwon Jones, a ratepayer who had a claim against LADWP arising from billing overcharges. Jones did not know that his lawyer, Paradis, also represented the other side, too. At a February 2015 meeting with a senior City Attorney's Office official, Paradis and Kiesel were authorized and directed to find counsel that would be friendly to the city to supposedly represent Jones in a class-action lawsuit against the city. The plan intended that Jones v. City of Los Angeles lawsuit would then be used to settle all existing LADWP-billing-related claims against the city on the city's desired terms.

         Paradis recruited  “Ohio Attorney” to supposedly represent Jones in a lawsuit against the city. Paradis told Ohio Attorney that the city wanted the lawsuit to be “pre-settled” on the city's desired terms, and that Paradis would do all or most of Ohio Attorney's substantive work on the case. In exchange, Paradis and Ohio Attorney agreed that Paradis would receive 20 percent of Ohio Attorney's fees in the Jones v. City case as a secret kickback. In March 2015, the city sued PwC in a lawsuit that generally alleged that PwC caused LADWP's billing debacle and caused the city hundreds of millions of dollars in damages. Paradis and Kiesel represented the city in that lawsuit until March 2019. The city in September 2019 dismissed its lawsuit against PwC. 

Also in March 2015, Paradis used nonpublic information he got from members of the City Attorney's Office and LADWP to draft a detailed complaint for a class-action lawsuit against the city with Jones as the named class representative. Later that month, Paradis provided the draft Jones v. City complaint to Ohio Attorney for filing. Ohio Attorney filed the Paradis-drafted lawsuit in April 2015.

          In June and July of 2015, Paradis and others working on the city's behalf in the Jones lawsuit participated in four confidential mediation sessions with Ohio Attorney, who purportedly represented Jones. At the close of the final mediation session, the mediator issued a proposal that would cap plaintiff attorneys' fees at $13 million – a figure that raised an objection from another lawyer representing the city, who complained in an internal email that the amount was unjustifiably high because, in part, Ohio Attorney had done “little demonstrative work to advance the interests of the class.”  But the city agreed to the fee proposal.

In July 2017, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge issued a final approval of the $67 million settlement agreed to by the parties in Jones v. City, including approximately $19 million in plaintiffs' attorney fees. Under the settlement agreement, the city paid Ohio Attorney about 9,241,003. Ohio Attorney dispersed the funds and kept about $10.3 million in attorney fees. Ohio Attorney then secretly paid $2,175,000 to Paradis, disguised as a real estate investment, and funneling it through shell companies that Paradis and Ohio Attorney had set up to transmit and conceal the illicit payment.

          As part of his plea agreement, Paradis also admitted to bribing LADWP officials, including an LADWP general manager and an LADWP Board member, in exchange for their help in securing a three-year, $30 million no-bid contract with LADWP in June 2017 for Paradis's downtown Los Angeles-based cyber-services company, Aventador Utility Solutions. When it approved the no-bid contract, the LADWP Board did not know that Paradis had ghostwritten a May 2017 independent monitor report on the Jones v. City settlement on which LADWP based its decision. The Paradis-written report claimed that LADWP could not meet its obligations under the Jones v. City settlement agreement unless it contracted with Aventador. The LADWP Board also did not know that the then-LADWP general manager advocating for the award of the $30 million no-bid contract to Paradis's company had secretly agreed to become its CEO with an annual salary of $1 million and a luxury company car.

About the Author

Fay Arfa

Fay Arfa has the distinction of being Certified as a Specialist in two separate areas of law – Criminal Law as well as Appellate Law – by the California State Bar, Board of Specialization. The National Board of Trial Advocacy has also awarded her a board Certification in Criminal Trial Advocacy. ...

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