LA County Assessor John Noguez Pleads Not Guilty in Corruption Case

Noguez was arrested on Wednesday in connection with what investigators described as an "elaborate and complex conspiracy" that involved favorable tax assessments to wealthy campaign contributors.

Los Angeles County Assessor John Noguez and a campaign contributor have pleaded not guilty on Thursday to felony charges of misappropriation of public funds and other counts. The charges stem from an investigation into allegations that the assessor's office reduced property tax assessments in exchange for campaign contributions.

Superior Court Judge Shelly Torrealba ordered Noguez, 47, and Ramin Salari, 49, to remain jailed on nearly $1.4 million bail pending a Monday bail review hearing.

Citing a clean record, a wife and Noguez’s cooperation with investigators, Noguez lawyer Michael Proctor unsuccessfully argued to reduce his bail amount to "something in the range of $100,000."

The judge said she was "not prepared" to change bail, but she is open to considering lowering the bail at next week’s hearing.

A third defendant, Mark McNeil, 54, was released Wednesday afternoon on $1.1 million bail and is due in court for arraignment Nov. 7.

The three were arrested Wednesday morning.

Proctor told the judge that his client "didn't hide" or "go into denial" and stayed at his Huntington Park home, where District Attorney's Office investigators took Noguez into custody.

Salari's attorney, Mark Werksman, also vowed to "rebut and refute and exonerate him of the charges," asking the judge to reduce Salari's bail to $575,000.

"He's been trying to surrender since Monday," Werksman told the judge, noting that his client's daughter had noticed unmarked vehicles outside the family's Phoenix home and that his client was taken into custody at his mother's Encino home.

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Deputy District Attorney Susan Schwartz said the allegation that Noguez -- also charged under the name Juan Renaldo Rodriguez -- accepted bribes from Salari “cut to the heart of the fairness of our processes.”

She noted that the misappropriation charges involve an estimated $1.16 million, and maintained that the bail requested by the prosecution was "warranted by the charges."

Noguez -- who was elected in November 2010 and is on leave from the assessor's office -- is charged with 24 felony counts, including 13 counts of misappropriation by a public officer, five counts of perjury, four counts of accepting bribes and two counts of conspiracy.

Salari is charged with 23 felonies -- 13 counts of misappropriation, eight counts of bribing an executive officer and two counts of conspiracy.

McNeil is charged with 13 felony counts of misappropriation by a public officer and one felony count of conspiracy.

The criminal complaint alleges that Noguez accepted $185,000 in bribes from Salari between February 2010 and September 2010. Salari also is accused of paying $100,000 in bribes to a former appraiser, Scott Schenter, who was arrested in May in connection with corruption allegations and was the first to be charged.

Soon after receiving the checks and a list of properties represented by Salari, McNeil or his representatives appeared at Assessment Appeals Board hearings that resulted in the reduction of the assessed value on numerous properties, including the Old Spaghetti Factory and properties in Los Angeles, Santa Monica, Hermosa Beach and Torrance, according to the criminal complaint.

The complaint also alleges that Noguez approached Schenter between October 2010 and November 2010 and told him to "take care of our buddy Ramin" and "we have to take care of our donors."

Schenter was arrested May 21 in connection with allegations that he falsified documents and reduced property values by $172 million in exchange for campaign contributions to Noguez.

Schenter is awaiting a hearing to determine if there is enough evidence to require him to stand trial on 30 felony counts each of falsifying accounts and falsifying records.

"Criminal charges filed against the assessor allege that instead of acting in the best interests of the citizens of Los Angeles County he turned his back on them to engineer assessment reductions for those who paid for favored treatment," District Attorney Steve Cooley said at a news conference Wednesday shortly after Noguez, Salari and McNeil were arrested.

The district attorney said the arrests were part of an "ongoing, multi- faceted investigation" into allegations of public corruption in the assessor's office.

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