Sterling to pay $2.73 million in housing discrimination case

LOS ANGELES (AP)— Los Angeles Clippers owner and real estate mogul Donald Sterling
has agreed to pay a record $2.73 million to settle allegations by the government that he
refused to rent apartments to Hispanics, blacks and to families with children, the Justice
Department announced Tuesday.
The Justice Department sued Sterling in August 2006 for allegations of housing
discrimination in the Koreatown area of Los Angeles. Other defendants were Sterling’s wife,
Rochelle, and the Sterling Family Trust.
The defendants allegedly made statements to employees indicating that African-Americans and
Hispanics were not desirable tenants.
Court filings indicated that Sterling rented to fewer blacks and Hispanics in Koreatown
than would be expected based on demographics, according to the Justice Department.
In settling the lawsuit, however, the defendants denied any liability.
Robert Platt, an attorney for Sterling and the trust, issued a statement saying his clients
denied any acts of discrimination.
“The fair housing attorneys could not identify a single individual who was wrongfully
denied the right to rent an apartment,” he said. The trust has a zero-tolerance policy
regarding housing discrimination, he said.
However, insurers for the trust decided it was cheaper to settle the case than to keep
fighting, Platt said. Those insurers will cover the settlement.
Sterling owns the NBA’s Clippers and manages 119 apartment buildings with more than 5,000
apartment units in Los Angeles County.
“Housing is a basic human need, and yet decades after passage of the Fair Housing Act, far
too many still encounter barriers like discrimination,” said Thomas Perez, assistant
attorney general for the civil rights division.
“The magnitude of this settlement should send a message to all landlords that we will
vigorously pursue violations of the Fair Housing Act,” he said.
The settlement, which will be considered by a Los Angeles federal judge, also covers two
related lawsuits by former tenants at one of the Sterling properties. In those cases, a
black family and an interracial family with children contended that private yards that had
been part of their apartment were demolished because of their race, the Justice Department
said.
Under the settlement, Sterling and the other defendants would pay a $100,000 civil penalty
to the government and would pay $2.63 million into a fund to pay monetary damages to
tenants who were harmed.
The Justice Department’s previous record settlement for discrimination in the area of
rental housing was $2.2 million in a 1996 case.
Four years ago, Sterling agreed to pay an undisclosed sum and nearly $5 million in attorney
fees to settle an unrelated 2003 lawsuit that claimed he tried to drive non-Korean tenants
out of apartments he bought in Koreatown. The lawsuit was brought by the nonprofit Housing
Rights Center and 18 other plaintiffs.
That ruling came two weeks after a jury found in Sterling’s favor in a lawsuit filed by a
former property manager, Sumner Davenport, who claimed he sexually harassed her. Davenport
also alleged that Sterling’s companies had racially prejudiced employment and housing
practices.