The Officers waiting for the managment. They did not arrive to the meeting after accept it.
The Officers waiting for the managment. They did not arrive to the meeting after accept it.
A Community Under Siege: Our building is facing a security emergency.
We have endured gang-related graffiti, broken entry doors, smashed car windows, and vehicle thefts within our own parking garage. The lack of proper lighting in the hallways and the children’s play area has turned our home into a playground for criminal activity.
The LAPD Reached Out and requested a meeting. At first, management accepted the meeting and provided the date and time.
In an effort to protect our families, the Tenants’ Association sought support from the LAPD Olympic Station. We have been working closely with Officer Oropeza, the Lead Officer assigned to our area, who has provided invaluable safety education to our community.
On February 9, 2026, a formal meeting was scheduled among the LAPD, tenants, and Building Management to address these critical security failures and develop a mutual plan to improve safety conditions.
The Result? Management failed to show up.
They left both the police and the residents waiting, showing a complete lack of regard for the safety of the families living here and a total disrespect for the law enforcement officers trying to help us.
Negligence in Real-Time: The pattern of neglect continues.
On Tuesday, February 17, 2026, the main parking garage door broke again. As of today, Friday, February 20, the door remains wide open and unrepaired. This is an open invitation for crime, yet management remains silent.
The Question We Must Ask: If Management is willing to disrespect and ignore the Los Angeles Police Department, what hope do we, the tenants, have of being heard and developing a serious plan to resolve the community situation?
This is not just "bad maintenance"—this is a willful disregard for human safety. When a landlord fails to secure a building despite documented criminal activity and police intervention, they are failing their most basic legal obligation to provide a safe environment. We know that security is a collective commitment; for this reason, as a tenant, we are organizing to seek solutions.
We demand security. We demand functional doors. We demand a management that shows up.