Ex-DWP GM to Make First Federal Court Appearance in Corruption Case

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LOS ANGELES (CNS) - A former general manager of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power is expected to make his first court appearance on charges of accepting bribes from a lawyer in exchange for supporting a $30-million, no-bid DWP contract.

David H. Wright, 62, of Riverside -- who will appear in Los Angeles federal court via Zoom -- admitted participating in ``corrupt schemes'' while leading the municipal utility, according to his plea agreement. He is expected to plead guilty to one count of bribery on a date to be determined.

The lawyer in the case, Paul Paradis, has also agreed to plead guilty to a federal bribery count as part of a wide-ranging probe of the city's handling of the botched launch of a DWP billing system.

The cases against Wright and Paradis are believed to be the first criminal charges arising out of the investigation into the billing system rollout and subsequent litigation. The failed system led to many customers receiving wildly inflated bills.

A DWP representative did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Wright was the DWP general manager from September 2016 until July 2019, when prosecutors say he resigned ``at the direction'' of Mayor Eric Garcetti.

According to prosecutors, Wright developed a relationship with Paradis, an Arizona attorney hired by the City Attorney's Office to represent the city in litigation against the contractor involved in the introduction of the 2013 billing system.

Paradis and his New York-based law firm also had a $6 million DWP contract to provide project management services in efforts to repair the faulty billing system. At the same time, however, Paradis was representing a DWP customer who planned to sue the city over the system.

Paradis admitted in his plea agreement that he accepted a nearly $2.2 million kickback for getting another attorney to represent his ratepayer client in the lawsuit against DWP -- a suit that ultimately resulted in a universal, class-action settlement that critics contended was overly favorable to the city.

Paradis, 58, is expected to make his first federal court appearance before a magistrate judge on Thursday.

According to prosecutors, Wright and Paradis struck a deal in early 2017, with Wright supporting a ``no-bid'' $30 million DWP contract for Paradis' downtown Los Angeles-based company Aventador Utility Services LLC, while Paradis agreed to give Wright a million-dollar-per-year job as Aventador's CEO once he left the DWP. The deal also included a luxury company car for Wright, officials said.

Wright also lobbied members of the DWP board of directors to support the contact for Aventador, whose company name was taken from a model of Lamborghini sports car, according to his plea deal.

In his plea deal, Wright admits that he lied to federal investigators in June 2019 when he told them he did not have any financial or business interest tied to Paradis. He also admitted destroying evidence to thwart to the federal probe.

After the faulty billing system was unveiled, the city and utility faced multiple class-action lawsuits filed by ratepayers alleging harm resulting from the program.

In December 2014, the City Attorney's Office retained Paradis and Beverly Hills lawyer Paul R. Kiesel as special counsel to represent the city in a lawsuit meant to be used to settle all related claims on the city's desired terms, according to federal prosecutors.

Kiesel is cooperating with the investigation and is not charged with any wrongdoing.

Prosecutors contend that when Paradis began representing the city as special counsel in the litigation against PricewaterhouseCoopers over the company's handling of the DWP billing system rollout, city prosecutors were aware that he was already representing Antwon Jones, a ratepayer who had a claim against the utility arising from billing overcharges.

But Jones was unaware that his lawyer, Paradis, also represented his intended adversary, according to court filings.

At a February 2015 meeting with at least one unnamed senior member of the City Attorney's Office, Paradis and Kiesel were authorized and directed to find an attorney that would be friendly to the city to supposedly represent Jones, federal prosecutors allege.

City Attorney Mike Feuer said when Paradis was charged last month that he was angry at what the attorney admitted to doing.

``I am beyond outraged that anyone would breach their duties to the public we serve, as this plea agreement reflects,'' he said in a statement.

``As public servants, integrity must be our watchword, our guiding principle. At the end of the day, that's all we have. We can have no tolerance for betraying the public trust.''


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