Because the Milwaukee Brewers start their playoff run, the staff’s proprietor, Mark Attanasio, is embroiled in a authorized battle again in California revolving round one of many state’s most treasured assets: sand.
In August, Attanasio’s neighbor filed a lawsuit accusing the businessman of stealing sand from Malibu’s Broad Seashore and carrying it again to his property as a part of a development venture to restore a broken seawall.
Now, the California Coastal Fee is getting in on the motion.
The fee despatched Attanasio’s lawyer Kenneth Ehrlich a discover of violation in September, claiming that contractors engaged on Attanasio’s seaside home illegally excavated sand and operated heavy equipment inside state tidelands.
The fee additionally mentioned the development venture impaired public entry to the seaside, depleted the seaside’s sand and threatened hurt to marine assets.
The discover, which demanded a response by Oct. 7, requested Attanasio to cease any unpermitted improvement and in addition resolve the violations, which may embrace a financial settlement.
It’s not the primary time Attanasio has been cited by the Coastal Fee for stealing sand.
Together with the discover, the fee hooked up an extra discover from 2008 accusing the Brewers proprietor of scooping sand from the seaside for a special home he owned half a mile away.
The 2008 discover claimed that Attanasio constructed an unlawful seawall fabricated from sandbags and steel poles alongside a stretch of public seaside, planted invasive plant species on a sand dune and impeded public entry to the seaside.
Attanasio offered that seaside home to “Mates” co-creator Marta Kauffman final yr for $23.6 million, data present.
“We’re comfortable that the Coastal Fee is echoing what we’re additionally making an attempt to do, and we’re inspired with the actions that they’ve taken so far,” mentioned lawyer Tim McGinity, who’s representing Attanasio’s neighbor James Kohlberg within the lawsuit. “This quotation of the neighboring property proprietor validates what we now have been saying from the beginning: The seaside can’t and shouldn’t be handled as a private sandbox.”
The sand battle has ignited a bigger dialogue concerning the non-public and public use of California’s seashores, as neighbors and cities battle over their share of a seemingly infinite useful resource that’s drastically shrinking in some areas.