On Instagram last month, reality television personality Tarek El Moussa posted a video of himself strolling a street in North Hollywood to tell his 1.3 million followers about his new big plans.
El Moussa co-hosts a real estate show on HGTV called "The Flipping El Moussas" with his wife, Heather, who is also a cast member on Netflix’s "Selling Sunset." El Moussa shared that he had just finished walking the nearby property where the couple is developing a “super cool, super modern” 138-unit apartment complex with a rooftop pool.
“We got so lucky to find this land,” El Moussa said. “Because finding land like this in North Hollywood, it's literally impossible.”
El Moussa left out of the video why a lot like this was available in the first place. Just a week before, the current property owner was convicted in federal court of hiring someone to set fire to vacant units on the site, an arson that tenants say was part of a years-long illegal harassment campaign to force them to leave.
Now the El Moussas are evicting the five remaining tenants, who all are in rent-controlled units. The residents worry about their future in L.A.'s sky-high rental market and believe they should be compensated for the turmoil they've gone through.
"It's been my home for 40 years," said Cathy Livas, 77, who pays $824 a month to live in a dingbat unit with her 56-year-old son with special needs. "Why would I want to live anywhere else? Do you know the price of rents?"
Livas and other tenants said they'd be willing to negotiate a buyout but believe it should be far in excess of the up to $25,000 required under the law given that their outgoing landlord, Arthur Aslanian, tried to burn them out of their homes and otherwise illegally force them to go.
In a presentation to investors, the El Moussas project that after five years they'll be able to sell the apartment complex for $26 million more than what it costs to acquire the property and build the development.
"Pay us to leave," said Clare Letmon, 32, who lives in a bungalow with her husband, Jonpaul Rodriguez, 35. "But pay us an amount of money that’s dignified and recognizes the profit they’re set to make off of everything that was done to us."
Neither Tarek nor Heather El Moussa could be reached for comment. In an emailed statement, Eda Kalkay, the El Moussas' public relations representative, said that the El Moussas recognize the property owner is involved in "several serious legal matters" but that the couple and other development partners will have no affiliation with them once the sale of the property is finished.
"The goal is to work closely and respectfully with the current tenants by providing proper move-out compensation and constructing a safe and pristine new apartment complex that will also include 14 low-income units," the statement said.
The property, made up of multiple lots, currently houses 10 bungalows, five dingbat apartments, a single-family home and 6-foot-tall weeds growing next to the burned-out structures.
The horrors of living there began years ago when tenants said Aslanian started ripping out the walls of their units, exposing them to asbestos, mold and vermin and retaliated against them when they complained or pushed for repairs.
In February 2022, Aslanian promised to pay someone $2,000 to set fire to the property, federal prosecutors said. Using a borrowed gas canister and a hotplate, only the outside of a building was scorched. The next month, a second fire, prosecutors said, was started by another co-conspirator, burning two of the vacant bungalow units.
Prosecutors said Aslanian's arson campaign was designed to force the tenants out, and most of the residents have left the property. Aslanian secured approval for the new 138-unit project within months of the fires.
"Those permits exist because of everything Arthur did," Letmon said. "The building was almost vacant because of everything Arthur did."