Abraham M. Lurie

Summary

Abraham M. Lurie (1923 – June 29, 2010) was an American real estate developer who was behind the development of much of Marina del Rey.[1][2]

Abraham M. Lurie
Born1923
Died2010 (aged 86–87)
NationalityAmerican
EducationB.A. Ohio State University
J.D. UCLA School of Law
Occupationreal estate developer
Known fordevelopment of Marina del Rey
SpouseKatherine Lurie
Children4

Biography edit

Lurie was born to a Jewish family in Iowa in 1923.[1] He had two siblings: Dr. William Lurie and Bertha Lurie Friedman.[1] He graduated with a B.A. in accounting from Ohio State University.[1] In 1948 he moved to California, with his wife Devera (Feldman) Lurie, where he worked as a certified public accountant and attended the UCLA School of Law.[1] In 1957, he passed the bar exam.[1]

Career edit

He founded Real Property Management which was the single largest developer of the city of Marina del Rey.[2] In 1953, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors authorized a $2 million loan to fund the construction of the marina and on April 10, 1965 the Marina was completed.[3] Soon after, the County solicited bids for its development. In 1968, Lurie purchased a 60-year lease from Los Angeles County which gave him the right to build on 20 percent of the land.[2] He went on to build three hotels, two apartment complexes, 1,000 boat slips, and several shopping centers, offices, restaurants; his holdings also included the last undeveloped piece of waterfront land in Marina del Rey.[2]

After having cash flow problems[4] Lurie sold a 49.9% interest in 1989 in his Marina holdings to Saudi billionaire Abdul Aziz Al-Ibrahim (brother of Waleed bin Ibrahim Al Ibrahim and brother-in-law of King Fahd of Saudi Arabia) and several other unnamed foreign investors, forming Marina International Properties Ltd.[2] The transaction was approved by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors despite not disclosing the identity of the investors[2] and included the Marina Beach, Marina International and Marina del Rey hotels, the Admiralty and Islander apartments, Fisherman's Village, Pier 44, Marina Beach Shopping Center and Marina West office complex.[2] The partnership required additional funds and in late 1990, an agreement was reached for Al-Ibrahim to buy out Lurie's interest but the deal soon fell apart and Al-Ibrahim sued to dissolve the partnership.[2] This caused $50 million in loans from four separate banks to default.[2] Al-Ibrahim accused Lurie of fraud, diversion of funds, and the failure of providing adequate financial reporting; and asked the judge to give him control of the Marina holdings.[2] Lurie counter-sued accusing Al-Ibrahim of withholding funds that were required to be transferred under the partnership putting the solvency of Marina International Properties Ltd. at risk.[2] Lurie was unsuccessful in finding outside investors who did not want to wade into the middle of a lawsuit with a deep-pocketed and connected Saudi[5] and petitioned the court to allow him to sell some of the leases without Al-Ibrahim's approval to pay off his bankers.[2] The court refused and Marina International Properties Ltd filed for bankruptcy.[2] The lawsuit was ultimately won by Al-Ibrahim who took over control of the partnership[6] and settled the then $140 million in debt outstanding.

Personal life edit

In 1947,[citation needed] he married Claire Devera (later Waldman);[7] they divorced in 1981.[citation needed] In 1983, he married Katherine Lurie.[8] He had two children: Leslie Beck, Scott Lurie, and two step children, Donald Schneider and Thomas Carlyle. He has 5 grandchildren and 9 great grandchildren.[1] He died on June 29, 2010; services were held at Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery in Hollywood Hills, Los Angeles.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h The Argonaut: "Former Prominent Marina Del Rey Developer Abraham Lurie Dies at 86" July 8, 2010
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Los Angeles Times: "Biggest Marina Developer Files for Bankruptcy : Finances: Abraham M. Lurie seeks court protection as he battles his Saudi partners for control of his extensive holdings" by Jeffrey L. Rabin June 13, 1991
  3. ^ Los Angeles Times: "Marina del Rey Development Rose Out of Mud (First Of Two Parts) November 12, 1989
  4. ^ In re MARINA INTERNATIONAL PROPERTIES, LTD., Debtor, Abraham M. LURIE, Appellant, v. Richard A. HALDERMAN, Jr., Trustee; Bank of Montreal; Marina Group of Companies, Appellees"
  5. ^ Los Angeles Times: "A New Twist in Marina Bankruptcy Case : Real estate: Builder Jona Goldrich says he made no deal to aid Abraham M. Lurie, who is fighting his Saudi partner for control of properties" by Jeffrey L. Rabin August 01, 1992
  6. ^ Los Angeles Times: "Saudi Wins Court Fight Over Marina : Real estate: Billionaire gains control of nearly 20% of county-owned Marina del Rey. Ruling ends Abraham Lurie's involvement" by Jeffrey L. Rabin and Ron Russell May 01, 1993
  7. ^ California. Court of Appeal (2nd Appellate District). Records and Briefs. State of California. April 19, 1991.
  8. ^ Los Angeles Times: "Abraham Lurie" July 6, 2010