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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