Mohamed Hadid
American real estate developer
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2019 | Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Craig D. Karlan ordered the demolition of his controversial Bel Air property. The property was subsequently sold at auction for $5 million. |
2018 | Faced a civil lawsuit by multiple neighbors, resulting in being ordered to pay a $3 million reward. |
July 2017 | Sentenced to 200 hours of community service, fined $3,000, ordered to return $14,191 to the City of Los Angeles, and placed on three-year probation for mansion construction violations. |
May 2017 | Pleaded no contest to misdemeanor charges related to unauthorized mansion construction. |
December 2015 | Los Angeles city council voted to pursue criminal charges against Hadid for violating local zoning laws in his mansion construction, alleging he built the house twice the permitted size. |
January 2015 | Faced a lawsuit from Nancy Walton Laurie, a Walmart heiress, who accused him of damaging a eucalyptus tree's roots with a retaining wall near her Bel Air property. |
2012 | Developed The Crescent Palace, a 48,000-square-foot home in Bel Air, which was listed for sale at $58 million. |
2010 | Developed and sold Le Belvedere, a mansion in Bel Air, Los Angeles, for $50 million. |
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