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Soon after the tagging of Oceanwide Plaza, the Los Angeles City Council announced a cleanup campaign for the graffiti. [25] On February 9, the Los Angeles City Council voted to bill Oceanwide approximately $4 million for expenses including graffiti removal and barrier reinforcement. The graffiti has yet to be removed.
Multiple people have been arrested on suspicion of trespassing at an unfinished skyscraper covered in graffiti. Los Angeles City Councilmember Kevin de León wants to order property owners to ...
After several arrests related to a vandalized L.A. skyscraper project, the City Council voted to spend $3.8 million to clean up and secure the site.
In an attempt to get control of the situation, the city earmarked $3.8 million for graffiti removal and fences in February, and the LAPD started round-the-clock patrols. Thirty people have been ...
It’s far from first project in Los Angeles to become a target for attention-grabbing graffiti. The brand-new 6th Street Viaduct in downtown, which cost $588 million, was spray-painted by vandals ...
On June 20, 2012, the civil case against 11 alleged members of the MTA crew named in the suit was settled [8] with the 11 defendants no longer required to pay the city of Los Angeles millions of dollars for graffiti cleanup. The city agreed not to enforce the injunction against 8 of the defendants (Gheorghiu being one of those 8 defendants) as ...
In June 2010, the L.A. city attorney filed a civil lawsuit against 11 alleged members or alleged former members of the MTA crew. [7] The suit had asked for $5,000,000 in restitution from the 11 defendants and was seeking a first-of-its-kind injunction against a graffiti crew, an injunction modeled on those made for violent street gangs.
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