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10th Annual Fourth of July Photo Contest

2023 submission
Photo by Joyce Carlson

By SARAH SHMERLING | Editor-in-Chief

The Palisadian-Post is hosting its 10th annual Fourth of July photo contest, with a chance to be featured in an upcoming edition of the paper.

To participate, submit any sort of festive or patriotic photo—whether it is of the race, parade, fireworks, barbecues, home decorations and beyond—to mypost@palipost.com by Sunday, July 7, at 8 p.m.

Photos should be high resolution to maintain print quality. If sending from a phone, the picture should be sent “actual size.”

A selection of photos—including this year’s winning shot—is slated to run in the July 11 newspaper.

Questions can also be directed to mypost@palipost.com.

‘Bacchus Uncorked’ to Take Place at Getty Villa

Photo courtesy of Getty

By LILY TINOCO | Assistant Editor

The Getty Villa will present “Bacchus Uncorked: The Ancient Greek Drinking Party,” on Saturday, Sunday, July 13, and July 14, from 5:15 to 8:30 p.m.

Guests are invited to join Archaeologist Kathleen Lynch as she explores the cultural role of the symposium—or drinking party—in ancient Greece, and to “celebrate” the ancient origins of wine with a curated selection from wine educator Diego Meravigila.

“The inebriating effects of wine created bonds among drinkers and stimulated conversation, while the setting, etiquette and specially crafted vessels emphasized the importance of the social gathering to guests,” the event description read. “Enjoy a summer evening of wine, food and conversation while taking in the flora and architecture of the Villa’s gardens.”

The museum galleries will be open from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m.; the lecture and wine presentation will take place in the auditorium at 5:15 p.m., followed by wine at the Outer Peristyle Garden from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.

Tickets for the event are $90. Advance tickets are required, as there is limited capacity. Attendees must be 21 and over.

Admission includes a “thematic” selection of wine, appetizers, “beautiful surroundings [and] friendly conversation,” according to Getty Villa.

Palisades Branch Library Presents Two Evenings of ‘Pajama Storytime’

Photo by Sarah Shmerling

By LILY TINOCO | Assistant Editor

Palisades Branch Library will host Pajama Storytime on Monday, July 8, and Monday, July 22, at 7 p.m.

The evening events invite babies and toddlers to Palisades Branch Library for storytimes and read alouds.

“Wear your jammies to the library,” the event description read. “For children of all ages—parents and teddy bears welcome.”

Reservations are not required. For ADA accommodations, call 213-228-7430 at least 72 hours prior to the event.

Bureau of Engineering Provides Potrero Pedestrian Trail Updates at PPCC Meeting

George Wolfberg Park at Potrero Canyon
Photo by Chuck Larsen Photography

By SARAH SHMERLING | Editor-in-Chief

During its most recent board meeting on Thursday, June 13, Pacific Palisades Community Council hosted a presentation by City of Los Angeles Bureau of Engineering regarding the Pacific Palisades Pedestrian Trail—formerly known as the Lateral Trail.

When complete, the trail will extend from the bottom of George Wolfberg Park at Potrero Canyon along Pacific Coast Highway to the Temescal Canyon Road crosswalk light, “in order to provide safe passage from the park to the beach,” according to PPCC.

Project Manager Kristen Ly spoke during the June 13 meeting, answering a series of questions posed by PPCC—including regarding the timeline Bureau of Engineering has in mind, the projected cost and expected outreach process—as well as from meeting attendees.

“This trail … is currently required as part of the Coastal Commission permit for the park and is expected to be constructed in order to provide parkgoers with beach access,” Ly explained.

The trail was given $1.15 million in federal funding, Ly reported, thanks to the efforts of the office of Council District 11 and then-Congressmember for Pacific Palisades Ted Lieu.

“A couple of notes about this federal funding: I do want to make it clear that it requires quite a bit of paperwork,” Ly said. “We have to go through the state in order to access that, and even then, it’s not like they just deposit that money into an account that we are free to use. There are a lot of requirements that go with it.”

A previous “rough layout” of the trail created in 2016 is “no longer feasible,” Ly explained, as it was based on information from 2012. Later in the meeting, a question was posed to Ly about what changed in the area from 2012 to present day that makes the previous design unusable.

Ly explained it was a combination of erosion and construction activities in the area, including the construction of the park itself. The consultants will take into account creating a design that is “usable” and “relatively maintenance free” that will not “erode away,” according to Ly.

At the time of the June 13 meeting, Bureau of Engineering had secured funding to hire Geosyntec—“the consultant company that will undertake the predesign and community outreach phase of the project.”

“They will be getting a new survey and they will be establishing a preliminary layout,” Ly said. The report is “not necessarily the final decision,” that will come during the design phase, which will be “through a different consultant later down the road.”

According to Ly, the community can expect a meeting, as well as the start of the outreach process, in late summer or early fall. The overall project will take a “significant amount of time,” Ly explained, “as in years kind of time.”

“The project still requires an agreement between LA City and Caltrans, which owns the land where the path will be laid,” PPCC wrote. “This process has been long unfolding, and once a preliminary layout is established, the city will begin talks with Caltrans in earnest.”

Ly said she wanted to make it clear it is “really hard” for Bureau of Engineering to “come up with a definite timeline and the cost estimate until” the report is done.

George Wolfberg Park at Potrero Canyon is a 46-acre passive park that spans from Palisades Recreation Center to Pacific Coast Highway. It opened, after decades of planning and construction, on December 10, 2022.

The Pacific Palisades Pedestrian Trail project is separate from the Potrero Canyon Pedestrian/Bicycle Bridge project, which is currently in its public outreach phase and would develop a bridge that connects Will Rogers State Beach to the park.

“We are aware of each other, we’re all sharing the same space,” Ly described. “So the [project manager] for the bridge project and myself are working pretty closely to make sure that we’re working together on this.”

For more information, including a link to a video of Ly’s presentation, visit pacpalicc.org.

Fourth of July Patriotic Home Contest Accepts Entries

The 2023 judges
Photo by Steve Galluzzo

By SARAH SHMERLING | Editor-in-Chief

Palisadians across all neighborhoods are invited to show off their red, white and blue decor for a chance to win a prize in this year’s Patriotic Home Contest, which is accepting entries through July 2 at 5 p.m.

“Showcase your patriotic spirit and creativity by decorating your home for a chance to win exciting prizes,” read a postcard at the start of the contest.

The 2024 contest is sponsored by “local real estate legends” Susan Montgomery and Violetta Hargitay, who work at Sotheby’s International Realty, as part of Palisades Americanism Parade Association’s Fourth of July festivities.

Montgomery explained to the Palisadian-Post that her and Hargitay have worked together for “many, many years.” In addition to real estate, Hargitay also does photography (and she was the most recent winner of 90272 Magazine’s Travel Tales contest).

“I’m honored that she wanted me to partner with her,” Hargitay, a Highlands resident for 25-plus years, said. “We are friends and colleagues, and I think we’re pretty like-minded in how we approach our business, and what we think about the community and how long we’ve been in the community.”

Awards will be given to the “Most Patriotic Home,” “Runner-Up Most Patriotic Home” and the “Joan Sather Memorial Sponsor’s Award,” which will be given in honor of the late contest sponsor to the home that has the “most outstanding use” of homemade elements.

Montgomery and Joan Sather—longtime friends and both Realtors with Sotheby’s International Realty—co-sponsored the event together for years until Sather died in 2022, which is when the contest introduced the award in her honor.

“She spearheaded this whole thing and it’s turned into a very popular part of the celebration of the Fourth of July,” Montgomery said of Joan. “I want to continue to do it to honor Joan. I think it’s such a great tradition in the Palisades.”

Montgomery and Hargitay encouraged residents in all neighborhoods of the Palisades to enter the contest, from Castellammare and the Highlands to the Riviera and Alphabet Streets—even if the homeowners plan to be out of town for the holiday.

Winners will be notified on July 3 around 4 p.m. and available on the Palisades 4th website, as well as on Facebook and Instagram.

Those who wish to enter the contest can fill out a form at palisades4th.com/parade/home-contest. They may also be sent directly to homecontest@palisades4th.com or uploaded to Instagram with #Palisades4thHomeContest.

Last year’s first-place prize went to the Mass family, followed by runners up the Grigsby family in second place and the Gold family, which won the Joan Sather Memorial Sponsor’s Award. Two additional runners up were also selected: Mary Dekernion and Nina Almaraz.

Winners will receive prizes and gift cards from local businesses.

For more information, contact Montgomery at susan.montgomery@sothebyshomes.com or Hargitay at violetta.hargitay@sothebys.realty.

Pacific Palisades Community Council Elects 2024-25 Slate of Officers

By LILY TINOCO | Assistant Editor 

Pacific Palisades Community Council elected its slate of officers for the upcoming 2024-25 term, which will begin on July 1.

Elected by board acclamation on Thursday, June 13, Sue Kohl will lead PPCC as president, Quentin Fleming will be vice-president, Jenny Li will continue as treasurer and Beth Holden-Garland will continue as secretary. Current President Maryam Zar will become PPCC chair emeritus, taking over for David Card.

Kohl has lived in the Alphabet Streets since 1994, raising five kids in the area and being an active member in the community. She served as the Area 5 representative—covering the Alphabet Streets and Village, north of Sunset—for PPCC for several years, before serving as vice-president.

“I am excited and a little intimidated, if I am totally honest,” Kohl said to the Palisadian-Post about taking on the role. “It’s a tremendous honor to lead our PPCC board, the most dedicated, hardworking and smart group of community volunteers anyone could imagine, and Maryam Zar’s shoes will be hard to fill. I hope and pray that we will successfully carry on our tradition of advocacy for the Palisades community.”

Kohl said her hope for the future of PPCC is that “many more” community members will become “interested and engaged” in the council’s work.

Fleming has lived in the Palisades since 2001, currently in the Via Bluffs. Fleming told the Post he joined PPCC in 2008 when the late George Wolfberg asked him to be his alternate for the “at-large” position, a role Fleming held for 12 years before stepping down in 2020. Fleming then rejoined PPCC in 2022 as the alternate for Area 6.

“Becoming vice-president is a big honor and big responsibility,” Fleming said to the Post. “I know Sue Kohl is going to do a great job as president, and I want to support her.”

Li has lived in the Palisades since 1999 and first joined PPCC in 2020. She previously served as Area 7 representative, vice-president and treasurer. She said she looks forward to continuing to serve the community.

Holden-Garland has served as PPCC secretary from 2022 to 2024, and said she has enjoyed her time being involved with the council, advocating for issues concerning the Palisades.

“In this new term, I look forward to [continuing] to advocate and protect quality-of-life issues for the Palisades,” Holden-Garland said. “I love our community and the beautiful place in which we live, and I’m excited to help do more great work. The best is yet to come.”

Zar told the Post she is “so proud” to have been able to serve alongside Kohl as vice-president, Li as treasurer and Holden-Garland as secretary over the course of her most recent term, and she congratulated all three of them, along with newly elected vice-president Fleming as they take the helm at PPCC.

She said she has known Kohl and Fleming since she first came on to PPCC as the education representative in 2014, and is confident they will be “excellent, informed and thoughtful PPCC leaders.”

“As I transition away from PPCC leadership for the second time in a decade, I am reminded of the great work we do on this council, on a volunteer basis, and all the ways that we continue to serve as a model for LA City as to how micro-government rooted in community should work,” Zar said. “I am immeasurably proud of this council and its members for their commitment to community, and I thank everyone for lending me their trust as PPCC president. I leave this council in its 51st year of activity … never more sure that your next 50 years will be even more impressive and impactful.”

PPCC’s meeting on Wednesday, June 26, was the last one of the current officers’ term. The new slate of officers will lead their first board meeting in July.

Fresno Hairstylist Receives 15-Year Sentence Related to Pacific Palisades Ophthalmologist

By SARAH SHMERLING | Editor-in-Chief

A Fresno-based hairstylist was sentenced on June 17 to 188 months—over 15 years—in federal prison for “defrauding a vulnerable physician out of more than $2.7 million before his death and then attempting to defraud his estate out of an additional amount exceeding $20 million,” according to a statement from The United States Department of Justice.

Anthony David Flores, also known as “Anton David,” was sentenced by United States District Judge Percy Anderson. He also ordered Flores to pay $1 million in restitution, the statement continued.

Dr. Mark Sawusch, who lived in Malibu, retired without warning in 2017 while working from an office on Via De La Paz—leaving former patients without access to their medical records. The ophthalmologist had a career of more than 30 years, following a medical degree from University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine, a residency at Johns Hopkins University and certification from the American Board of Ophthalmology.

“This defendant heartlessly lined his own pockets while his victim mentally and physically declined, and ultimately died,” said United States Attorney Martin Estrada. “Financial fraudsters can prey on anyone, even the most financially successful among us. We hope that our efforts to convict and now sentence this defendant bring some solace to the victim’s family.”

In October 2023, Flores pleaded guilty to nine felony charges: “one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud, two counts of wire fraud, two counts of mail fraud, one count of conspiracy to engage in money laundering, two counts of money laundering, and one count of engaging in monetary transactions in property derived from specified unlawful activity,” according to the Department of Justice.

“Mr. Flores and his co-defendant lived large on the victim’s massive wealth while they relentlessly robbed and exploited his vulnerabilities until he succumbed to an early death,” said Krysti Hawkins, the assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles field office. “The defendant deprived the victim’s family access to their loved one and then dragged them through years of litigation.”

Anna Rene Moore, Flores’ co-defendant and former girlfriend, was living in Monterrey, Mexico, when she was arrested in January 2023 at a Houston airport, the Department of Justice reported. She pleaded guilty in August 2023 to seven felonies, with a sentencing hearing scheduled for October 28. Flores and Moore have both been in federal custody since January 2023.

“Beginning in June 2017, Flores used false promises and representations to befriend the victim—a physician and successful investor worth more than $60 million, but who suffered from a mental illness and lost the ability to care for himself after multiple hospitalizations,” according to the DOJ statement. “Within days of meeting the victim, Flores and Moore moved into the victim’s beachfront Malibu home—rent free—and slowly took control of his life by pretending to be his new ‘best friends’ and caregivers.”

After Sawusch suffered what was described as a “severe mental breakdown,” which resulted in his arrest and detention in LA County jail, Flores fraudulently induced him to sign powers of attorney, granting Flores control over his finances in September 2017, according to the Justice Department, in order to post bail.

“From September 2017 to May 2018, Flores and Moore lived with the victim, diverted the victim’s funds to their own bank accounts, isolated the victim from his family and longtime friends, and provided the victim with drugs, including marijuana and LSD,” the statement continued.

After Sawusch died in his home in May 2018 at the age of 57, Flores and Moore moved back in and withdrew “large sums of money” from his accounts, according to the Justice Department. They also concealed information about Sawusch’s finances from his mother and sister, who resided in Florida.

“This prompted the victim’s family to file a lawsuit, which resulted in the fraud being uncovered,” according to the statement. “In the ensuing lawsuit in Los Angeles Superior Court, Flores and Moore violated multiple court orders ordering them to return the funds stolen from the victim. They attempted to launder the fraudulent proceeds by funneling the money through multiple different accounts to thwart the victim’s estate and court-appointed receiver from recouping the money.”

“After extensive litigation with the victim’s estate,” according to the statement, a lawsuit was settled with Flores and Moore withdrawing false creditor’s claims and agreeing to repay the victim’s estate $1 million. They have so far failed to do it.

“The FBI and IRS Criminal Investigation investigated this matter,” the DOJ statement concluded. “Assistant United States Attorney Andrew M. Roach of the Cyber and Intellectual Property Crimes Section is prosecuting this case. Assistant United States Attorney James E. Dochterman of the Asset Forfeiture and Recovery Section is handling asset forfeiture matters in this matter.”

Green Tip: Best Veg Fest Yet

Photos courtesy of Lisa Kaas Boyle

The Palisadian-Post has partnered with locally founded environmental organization Resilient Palisades to deliver a “green tip” to our readers in each newspaper. This edition’s tip was written by Aleksandar Pavlović, president of Resilient Palisades and a member of the Vegan Solutions Team.


The Resilient Palisades Vegan Solutions Team hosted our largest and most attended Pali Veg Fest yet on Sunday, June 9. Held in the heart of our community, and serving a variety of plant-based foods and products, our event aimed to inform and support both practicing vegans and those interested in a vegan lifestyle for the betterment of the planet, animals and their personal health.

Adopting a vegan diet is a powerful step toward sustainability. Vegan food is made from 100% plants and excludes animal ingredients such as meat, poultry, fish, milk, cheese, dairy, eggs and other animal-derived products.

The animal agriculture industry is a leading cause of environmental degradation due to deforestation, wetland drainage, overgrazing and habitat loss in exchange for the development of carbon/methane-intensive livestock farms.

A 2022 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report concluded that shifting diets from meat, dairy, fish and eggs to plant-based vegan foods would lead to a substantial reduction of greenhouse gas emissions.

Factory farming also causes immense animal suffering and raises ethical concerns. Choosing veganism allows individuals to stand against animal cruelty and promote a more compassionate world.

If you feel unsure of where to begin with a vegan diet, it’s OK to start small:

  • Start with Meatless Mondays and gradually include more meatless meals into your routine. Be creative with your meal-prepping—there are countless recipes online that use a variety of plants in many different ways.
  • Try non-dairy milk, spreads, cheeses and more. These products are sold at grocery stores like Ralphs, Vons, Gelson’s and Erewhon.
  • Try eating vegan meals before dinner time. Incorporating mostly plant-based meals into your day is a significant way to cut down on our carbon footprint and makes it easier to gradually cut out animal products.

We are happy to say that the community’s enthusiastic response to Pali Veg Fest reflects growing awareness and acceptance of veganism in Pacific Palisades. Let’s carry the momentum from Pali Veg Fest forward, and make informed choices that benefit ourselves and our planet.

Find out about our next Veg Fest by joining Resilient Palisades on our website (resilientpalisades.org) and following us on Instagram and Facebook.

Molly Steinsapir Foundation Collects Items, Donations in Support of Camp Harmony 

Photo courtesy of Kaye Steinsapir

By LILY TINOCO and SARAH SHMERLING

The Molly Steinsapir Foundation partnered with Camp Harmony for the month of June, with two events in Marquez Knolls, to raise funds and collect items to support the camp.

The foundation was launched to honor the life and legacy of its namesake, Palisadian Molly Steinsapir, who died at the age of 12 in February 2021. It aims to “advance charitable causes that Molly cared deeply about.”

“I sprang into action and started raising funds and collecting items to stock the camp ‘store,’” said Molly’s mom, Kaye Steinsapir, when she heard from her daughter’s best friend and former camp companion’s mom that the camp needed items for its attendees.

Camp Harmony is an overnight camp program, organized by United in Harmony, a nonprofit, non-sectarian organization that was established in 1989 in response to homelessness and poverty facing the youth in the community. Each session hosts approximately 300 campers from underserved areas in and around Los Angeles County.

The camp is “designed to help children experiencing poverty develop positive self-esteem … and empower them in their future endeavors,” according to the camp website.

“Campers arrive by bus to meet their new specially chosen counselors and the fun begins,” according to the website. “Over 30 different activities a day keep children engaged, excited, enriched and athletic.”

The Molly Steinsapir Foundation arranged two lemonade stands in the community in support of Camp Harmony, where funds and items were collected.

The first was held in front of Marquez Charter Elementary School on Monday, June 10, and featured a visit by Los Angeles Unified School District Board Member Nick Melvoin and Palisadian District Director and Senior Advisor for District 4 Allison Holdorff Polhill. Melvoin is a former Camp Harmony counselor and currently serves as a director.

“His commitment to solving educational inequity was first sparked as a volunteer at Camp Harmony more than 16 years ago,” according to Melvoin’s website.

The second lemonade stand was held at the Steinsapir residence in Marquez Knolls on Saturday, June 15.

Community members were encouraged to donate a new bathing suit, or contribute a donation or item from wishlists that contained items and sizes requested by Camp Harmony.

“We had an incredible turnout,” Kaye said to the Palisadian-Post. “The Molly Steinsapir Foundation has fully stocked Camp Harmony’s ‘camp store’ with bathing suits, shorts, pants, T-shirts, sweatshirts, new sneakers and sandals, socks, underwear, shampoo and conditioner, body wash, deodorant, towels, and more for all 300 campers for their week of camp.”

Truckloads of the donated items will be delivered to the camp on July 9.

Kaye said she will be volunteering with Camp Harmony in August to meet the campers and provide them with #TEAMMOLLY shirts.

“I come from a background that is similar to many of them,” Kaye said. “I graduated from high school because of my English/history teacher who helped me turn my life around. We are still close today, over 30 years later.”

‘Jimmy Dunne Says’

Photo by Jimmy Dunne

The Palisadian-Post presents an homage to Will Rogers’ column, “Will Rogers Says,” with a column by Palisadian Jimmy Dunne—on life in the “greatest town in America.”


The Art of Listening

My 10-inch dog and I took a too-early morning stroll up Temescal Canyon in town.

It’s just stunning as the sun sneaks up over the mountains, whispering the possibilities of a spectacular summer day.

You can hear everything.

You can just imagine the conversations the birds are having with each other. Talking about what they snacked on the night before, how the kids are doing—stuff like that.

It sounded like an old crusty owl had something snotty to say to some critter who was winding him up.

Sounds in the bushes as we walked by let my dog Louis know he was a guest in their home—and he could be somebody’s delightful breakfast if he didn’t mind his Ps and Qs, and stay nice and close.

I found myself doing something I rarely treat myself to. One of the great delicacies of life.

Listening.

So wonderful. I thought about how I have to do this way more often.

Easy-peasy. All I had to do was shove the earphones in my pocket and put the phone down.

And stand still.

And there it was.

The most magnificent, fascinating, complex, enlightening symphony in the world.

Nature.

Well, that didn’t last long.

Phone started buzzing, and beeping, and burping at me. The coward that I am, I gave in.

Next thing you know, I’m sitting on a boulder on the side of the trail, shoved the earplugs back in my ears, with Louis under my legs—rifling through the morning feed of mindless thinking-I-need-to-know news videos.

What a hypocrite I am. I’m doing the opposite of what I was just preaching, yacking like I’m John Muir or something a second ago.

They say the deadliest animal in the world is the mosquito, not sharks, hippos, lions, tigers or bears.

Mosquitoes. They sneak up quietly, suck the blood right out of you. God only knows what they leave in you.

Mosquitoes are a lot like the videos flying by and landing on my screen while I was plopped there on that boulder.

One video was a congressional hearing. A bunch of blowhards were sitting on the edge of their seats, propped up above someone they were just grilling with questions.

They were bullying a well-educated, very accomplished senior judge. These half-his-age punk, far-right or far-left politicians with big, pre-formed opinions were cutting him off before he’d get half a sentence out of his mouth.

It was disgusting. So disrespectful.

I flashed back to Carl Sagan, back in the ’80s, sitting in that same hot seat, trying to warn a swarm of the same kind of lemming dopes that global warming was coming—and how they ought to get ahead of this problem now.

I remembered how they kept cutting him off—with these “Bluto is my favorite actor” kind-of looks.

Pulled off the earplugs.

Took a big breath. My pulse went down.

I looked up at a happy grove of a handful of trees.

Wondered if they were having a little “tree trunk smelling party.”

Maybe one of them was sharing a little “VOC,” some lovely volatile organic compound. Sending over a scent to give a heads-up to its neighboring tree pals about an uninvited nasty bug guest that just crawled up its trunk without even knocking.

Trees.

One of nature’s Rembrandts. Communicates with their neighbors by smelling. I suppose it’s kinda their way of listening.

Louis and I just sat there just looking up at ’em.

Thinking about how they care about their neighbors. How they’re so selfless. How they know their neighbors have their backs, too. How they’re all in it together. How they depend on each other.

Kinda like what a town does.

Maybe that’s the trick.

Maybe for all of us to be a little bit more like our trees.

If we find a hurting neighbor, maybe taking a little more time to listen.

With our kids, maybe spending a little less focus on being a coach—and a little more on being a fan.

Maybe with our spouses, telling them with our eyes—that we hear them. That we respect them.

That we need them.

If you stop by Temescal Canyon, who knows—you may spot that same happy grove of a handful of trees.

Tell ’em what you did.

I’ll bet you they’ll hear every word.


Jimmy Dunne is a modern-day Renaissance Man; a hit songwriter (28 million hit records), screenwriter/producer of hit television series, award-winning author, an entrepreneur—and a Palisadian “Citizen of the Year.” You can reach him at j@jimmydunne.com or jimmydunne.substack.com.