Tenants Facing Eviction in South L.A. Agree to Mediation With Landlord and City

Jasmyne Cannick
KNOCK
Published in
7 min readMar 17, 2018
Tenants Shalana Little, Darrell Wilson and former comedian Vincent Cook with Eviction Defense Network attorney Sean Chandra outside of Los Angeles Superior Court Fri. Mar. 16, 2018.

The nearly one dozen tenants facing eviction in South Los Angeles after a transitional housing manager failed to pay rent and abandoned the property will have to return to court after attorneys on both sides agreed to a continuance on Friday.

Friday’s hearing was an effort to stop the eviction on the grounds that the tenants had had no notice of the unlawful detainer filed against the transitional housing manager who left and didn’t tell them she was being evicted.

After neither side could come to an agreement in the hallway outside of Los Angeles Superior Court’s Department 94 also known as Eviction Court, Judge Lisa K. Sepe-Wiesenfeld ordered the two parties back to court on Mar. 29. A mediation between the tenants, landlord and the City of Los Angeles’ Housing + Community Investment Department (HCIDLA) is scheduled for Mar. 27. If no agreement is made, the parties will return to court on Mar. 29.

At issue is relocation money and time for the nearly one dozen tenants who were unaware that the woman they were renting rooms from in a dilapidated ramshackle house in Los Angeles on the border of Inglewood was being evicted.

Prior to Friday’s court appearance an offer of $50,000–to be split evenly between the tenants–was at one time under consideration. That offer was followed up with $2,000 and 90 days to vacate. Both offers from the landlord Izydor Wilchfort came with the stipulation that the tenants must waive their right to sue him in the future–something the tenants say they shouldn’t be made to do.

A letter sent to the tenants from the HCIDLA said that the tenants could be eligible for as much as $8,050 to $20,050 in relocation assistance.

“Ms. Wilkerson did not pay the rent in response to the three-day-notice and was served a Summons and Complaint,” explains Elena Popp with the Eviction Defense Network. “Attached to the summons and complaint was a Prejudgment Claim of Right to Possession. No prejudgment claimants came forward because Ms. Wilkerson withheld the information. She agreed to give up possession in a Stipulation for Judgment. Because a prejudgment claim was served with the Summons and Complaint, even though Ms. Wilkerson never told any of the tenants about the service, there is no way for any of them to bring themselves into this litigation.”

Popp sheds light on an old law that says landlords can evict everyone living in a home just by serving notice to one person–even if that one person doesn’t tell the others, as is the case with Wilkerson and her subtenants.

“This is a defect in the law,” Popp continues. “It is a complete violation of due process. The history of it is complicated but yes, our State Legislature has seen it fit to pass a law that allows a landlord to collude with a master tenant to evict all of the tenants and subtenants without due process. The owner knew or should have known that there were 12 tenancies here but was allowed to only serve Ms. Wilkerson. The court is taking the position that as subtenants, their claims are against Ms. Wilkerson, not against the owner. The owner has offered 60 days to move out if the tenants waive all their claims against the owner including any claims for relocation assistance.”

A 19-page city inspection report dated Feb. 20, from the HCIDLA shows dozens of violations were found at the house on Crenshaw. Among the citations were the use of an enclosed porch as a bedroom, broken windows, plumbing blockage, termites and dry rot, broken or missing electrical switches, loose guardrails, hazardous, unapproved, defected or improperly installed receptacle outlets, missing smoke detectors, defective or missing room heating appliances, unapproved plumbing, and dampness in rooms. In addition, there are visible signs of mold, roaches and bed bugs throughout the house.

The tenants of the house on Crenshaw–which include Social Security (SSI) and General Relief recipients, developmentally disabled, mentally ill, autistic, stroke victims, and working adults who just can’t afford the high cost of rent in Los Angeles–say that they rented beds shared rooms for between $175 to as much as $1,000 a month from Giovanna Wilkerson. Several tenants claim they were brought to or referred to Wilkerson by a hospital. One hospital’s name that is repeatedly mentioned is Silver Lake Medical Center, an acute psychiatric hospital and mental health center in Rosemead.

According to the Department of Health Care Services (DCHS), there are some residential facilities that do not require licensure by DHCS, including cooperative living arrangements with a commitment or requirement to be free from alcohol and other drugs. These cooperative living arrangements may be referred to as sober living environments, sober living homes, transitional housing, or alcohol and drug-free housing.

Current and previous tenants say that in exchange for renting a bed, Wilkerson demanded access to their debit card numbers, pin codes–including for their Electronic Benefit Transfer or EBT which is used in California is to issue food stamp and cash benefits to recipients. Tenants say she solicited them online, in front of the Department of Public Social Services and on Skid Row at homeless shelters including the Downtown Women’s Center.

Wilkerson says her tenants are required to disclose their private financial information because “people become dishonest.”

“We don’t ask to [hold] onto cards as most program [sic] do. They will say their funds didn’t hit the card, and attempt to live for free, smoke or drink their money up. Poor choices rather than housing being a priority.”

An investigation into Wilkerson has produced several other homes in South L.A. where she is currently running what she calls a ‘transitional housing’ or ‘sober living’ program where she targets indigent and low-income people. In one home she’s currently housing as many as 40 adults between two five-bedroom apartments on the same property. In another home in Watts where she keeps her office in the garage, Wilkerson is housing adults and families.

During a texting conversation in 2017 where Wilkerson was trying to convince a family to rent their South L.A. property to her, she bragged, “I’ve opened up 9 others homes while waiting on u [sic].”

The family says she was “super aggressive” with them, reaching out regularly unsolicited for approximately the past five years trying to rent their properties but that they weren’t interested in her “hustle.”

Wilkerson’s tenants say she promised them transitional housing that included a clean living environment, meals, and even job assistance.

For her part, Wilkerson contends that the residents are not tenants and therefore the landlord-tenant law does not apply to them.

“I’m the Housing Director, they are participants,” she said via text message.

About the programs the tenants say they were promised, Wilkerson responded, “What services? We provide month to month housing. Guaranteed refrigerator and stove.”

Current and past tenants have detailed how at times the electricity and or gas would be turned off for nonpayment in Wilkerson’s various homes.

Since the story first broke, numerous previous landlords and tenants, have come forward about Wilkerson. A search of court documents shows that beginning in 2009, Wilkerson has had seven unlawful detainers filed against her — almost one every year. Several landlords have come forward and detailed how Wilkerson ran her business in their homes and then skipped out on paying the rent.

“Not really concerned what the public thinks,” Wilkerson said in an email on Tue. Feb. 27. “The house on Crenshaw is in horrible condition, but it helped a lot of people. Some people loved the idea of being in a mansion, some grateful to [sic] being off the street, various situations [sic].”

“Ms. Wilkerson’s scam is made possible by the failure of city and county governments to address the lack of truly affordable housing,” commented civil and human rights attorney Nana Gyamfi. “Because they have made no effort to control rents and regulate landlords and allowed the displacement of thousands of people by developers and gentrifiers, vultures like Ms. Wilkerson are continuously swooping in and taking advantage of desperate people who are trying to keep from sleeping outside. All of the cities where Ms. Wilkerson has properties should be considered the proud sponsors of her exploitive enterprise.”

Still facing eviction, the tenants of the Crenshaw house have established a Go Fund Me campaign to assist in paying their legal fees and to split what’s left over among themselves to aid in their relocation.

Do you know Giovanna Wilkerson? If you rented to Ms. Wilkerson or rented from Ms. Wilkerson and you’d like to share your experience please click here to contact me. If Ms. Wilkerson solicited you to rent from her or to rent to her, please click here to contact me.

Read the Series

Previous: Intimidation Tactics Used by Landlord At Center of Room-For-Rent Scam in South Los Angeles
Previous: Tenants Facing Eviction in South L.A. Receive Lowball Offer from Owner
Previous: Woman at Center of Room-for-Rent Scam in South L.A. Bragged About Opening Nine Other Locations
Previous: Tenants Facing Eviction in South L.A. Room-for-Rent Scam Not the Only Victims
Previous: Tenants Say Room-For-Rent Scam Left Them Facing Eviction After Predatory Slumlord Disappears
Previous: Comedian Vincent Cook on Verge of Homelessness, Living in Abandoned South L.A. Home

Jasmyne Cannick is a nationally known writer and commentator on political, race and social issues. She was selected as one of ESSENCE Magazine’s 25 Women Shaping the World, one of the Most Influential African-Americans in Los Angeles Under 40, one of Los Angeles’ Most Fascinating Angelenos by the L.A. Weekly and one of 40 People Under 40 by the Advocate. She’s worked in the U.S. House of Representatives and at all levels of government helping to shape public opinion and encourage civic engagement while advocating for underrepresented and marginalized communities in the political arena. Learn more here.

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Jasmyne Cannick
KNOCK
Writer for

Gen X award-winning journalist, on-air contributor. I write and talk about politics, race, and today's social issues.