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Land Sales In Remote California Desert Are Questioned

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  • Land Sales In Remote California Desert Are Questioned

    LAND SALES IN REMOTE CALIFORNIA DESERT ARE QUESTIONED

    Associated Press
    San Luis Obispo Tribune, CA
    Oct 4 2005

    CALIFORNIA CITY, Calif. - Seda Shadkamyan paid $39,500 for a patch
    of vacant land in the remote Kern County desert, hoping to pass on
    something of value to her three children.

    The county assessor determined the land was worth just $2,040.

    "I feel used," said Shadkamyan, an Armenian immigrant who lives
    in Glendale. "My husband didn't want it, but I forced him. It was
    my mistake."

    Shadkamyan bought the land from Silver Saddle Ranch and Club, which
    buys tax-defaulted land in California City at auctions and sells it
    for up to 50 times what the Kern County Assessor's Office considers
    fair market value, according to a report in the Bakersfield Californian
    that cited public records.

    Another company, National Recreational Properties Inc., which uses
    actor Erik Estrada as its television pitch man, has had a similar
    operation since 2003 in the area about 100 miles north of Los Angeles,
    records show.

    Silver Saddle customers told the newspaper that the company marketed
    itself in Korean newspapers, on Armenian-language television and
    through Tagalog and Mandarin-speaking callers offering prizes. NRPI
    markets itself in English and Spanish language television commercials
    featuring Estrada.

    Properties' assessed values are publicly available, and representatives
    from both companies said their sales practices are legitimate and
    sales prices are fair.

    "That's the market," said Silver Saddle sales manager Robert Kvassay.

    But California City Mayor Larry Adams and other officials said
    Silver Saddle's sales tours, which show off new development in the
    9,400-resident city, do not reflect conditions where the properties
    are located. Adams said there's no plan to install water lines,
    electricity or paved roads into the area where Shadkamyan's quarter
    acre of desert and about 20,000 other parcels sit.

    Several other people told the Californian they believe the companies
    overcharged them for land purchases.

    After buying a property from NRPI for $18,000 in 2004, Anaheim resident
    Domingo Gomez said he was stunned to learn that he could acquire a
    bigger and better located lot from Coldwell Banker for $9,500.

    He said he reached a settlement with NRPI but was forbidden from
    disclosing the terms.

    "The company is bad to Spanish people," said Gomez. "We got a little
    money together and somebody took it."
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