Hồ Sơ Kiện Tụng Liên Quan Đến Việc HdH Làm Đại Diện ở Houston

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09-Sep-2023

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Bản Anh ngữ

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Nghị Viên AL HOÀNG đang sa lầy trong vụ NANNYGATE liên hệ đến vụ kiện giả mạo chữ ký để xin đổi tên đường nơi ông cư ngụ

[mời xem bản dịch Việt ở trang trước)

 

Article: Turtlewood Square: The Rough Road to Little Saigon on swamplot.com (20 Jun, 2011)

MAYOR PARKER has requested a separate city investigation into whether council member Al Hoang forged the signatures of 16 neighbors in a bid to change the name of his street from Turtlewood Dr. to Little Saigon Dr. A petition requesting the name change was circulated among the residents of Turtlewood Square — a development of 47 nine-or-so-year-old homes located behind a Bellaire Blvd. strip center just west of Arthur Storey Park. A lawsuit filed by several residents of the development alleges that the when the petition was given to Hoang it didn’t have the signatures of the required 75 percent of residents. The lawsuit claims that by the time Hoang submitted the petition to the city, it had gained an additional 16 names — all forged. Hoang appears to have told 11 News reporter Jeremy Rogalski that he believes his nanny — who no longer works for him — was responsible for the extra names. After the allegations of forgery, Hoang submitted a direct request for the name change to the city’s planning department. The mayor has put both name change requests on hold pending resolution of the investigation.

--- Comments ----

Dana-X; June 17, 2011 at 6:49 pm

So without the forged signatures the name change fails, then Councilmember Hoang, who’s accused of forging them, bypasses the petition process and the will of the residents and tries to change the name through the city council? Wow.

Wayne S; June 18, 2011 at 7:03 am

Why doesnt anyone think there is something terribly wrong with naming a street anywhere in the United States. “little saigon”. More to the point, how can we elect someone as a councilman in Houston, who wishes to try to turn some portion of this town into a facsimile of another country, one which we lost soldiers in, albeit they do not mind the riches from graft they can obtain here. Frankl I try to be open minded but this disgusts me.

kt2le; June 20, 2011 at 8:22 pm

There goes the neighborhood…

 

1. News khou.com - City council member accused of forging names to get his way

by Jeremy Rogalski/Investigative Reporter

Posted on June 14, 2011 at 9:52 PM

Updated today at 10:35 PM

HOUSTON — A Houston city council member is being sued by his neighbors for allegedly forging signatures on an official petition to change their street name.

In the heart of Asia Town in southwest Houston, some homeowners in the Turtlewood Square subdivision say they’ve been robbed. They were not robbed of their belongings, but rather their good names.

“Definitely homeowners [are] scared, shocked, angry,” said Jenny Lu.

Sue Tsai, another neighbor, agreed.

“This is really underhanded,” she said.

“When I looked at my name, somebody forged it,” said Jody Pay.

The forgery feud involves an effort to change their street name from Turtlewood Drive, to Little Saigon Drive. One of the homeowners pushing for the name change is City of Houston Council Member Al Hoang.

The I-Team learned Hoang and five other homeowners are being sued by neighbors for allegedly forging signatures on a petition to change the street name. One way to officially file the petition according to city policy is for 75 percent of adjoining homeowners to sign their approval. The lawsuit claims such a petition, without enough signatures, was given to Council member Hoang. But when the politician later turned it into the City Planning and Development Department, it now had an extra 16 names on it, giving the document that needed 75 percent.

But plaintiffs claim those signatures were bogus.

“It kind of looks like my name, but it’s not, and I was very angered,” said Pay.

“It’s a stealing of the vote–the stealing of someone’s identities,” said attorney David Tang, who represents the angry homeowners.

“Without a question, the evidence shows that there were forgeries committed while this petition was in Councilman Al Hoang’s custody, care and control,” Tang said.

So the I-Team caught up with Hoang at city hall.

I-Team: “Did you forge 16 names on that street name change petition?”

Hoang: “No.”

I-Team: “Then how did those names get there?”

Hoang: “They (inaudible) to my nanny.”

I-Team: “Your nanny?”

Hoang: “My nanny.”

I-Team: “Your nanny did it?”

Hoang: “I do not know for sure.”

I-Team: “Who’s your nanny?”

Hoang: “At this point she doesn’t work for me anymore.”

I-Team: “Can we talk to her?”

Hoang: “If we can find her, yes.”

I-Team: “So the nanny who may, or may not have forged these signatures is nowhere to be found?”

Hoang: “She’s (inaudible), but I don’t know, I haven’t found her yet.”

But after the allegations surfaced, Hoang went another way to get the street’s name changed–using his power as a City of Houston council member to push it through on his own. No signatures required.

The City’s Planning and Development Department confirmed that is allowed under city policy.

“Yes, council members can bypass the petition process and make a direct request,” said Division Manager Jennifer Ostlind.

And that leaves some of Hoang’s neighbors feeling slighted.

“I feel like I’ve been robbed,” said I-Le Lu.

“It’s like somebody jammed something down your throat without your own consent,” said Sue Tsai.

Meanwhile, Hoang told the I-Team that the reason he wants Turtlewood Drive to become Little Saigon Drive is to promote tourism and economic development. As for his co-defendants, five other homeowners also accused of faking signatures. Their attorney Vy Nguyen said her clients did not commit any forgery, nor have any knowledge of anyone who did.

 

2- City council member accused of forging names to get his way

HOUSTON — Houston Mayor Annise Parker is weighing in on allegations of forgery by a Houston City Council member. It all centers on a push to change the name of a southwest Houston street in a neighborhood which Council Member Al Hoang lives.

“This is obviously going to take some extra review,” said Mayor Parker after Wednesday’s regularly scheduled city council meeting.

Parker indicated she would temporarily put the brakes on a proposal to change Turtlewood Drive, in the heart of Asia town, into Little Saigon Drive.

Nothing is going to move until we can be assured that the community wishes have been fairly represented,” Parker said.

The I-Team first reported on Tuesday how a group of homeowners in the Turtlewood Square community is suing some neighbors, including Hoang, for allegedly forging their signatures on an official petition to change the street name.

This is really underhanded,” said homeowner Sue Tsai.

“It kind of looks like my name, but it’s not, and I was very angered,” added Jenny Lu.

Council Member Hoang was allegedly the last person to handle the petition before it was sent to the city with the forged names. But Tuesday he told the I-Team he didn’t do it.

Hoang: “They (inaudible) to my nanny.”

I-Team: “Your nanny?”

Hoang: “My nanny.”

I-Team: “Your nanny did it?”

Hoang: “I don’t know for sure.”

I-Team: “Who’s your nanny?”

Hoang: “At this point, she doesn’t work for me anymore.”

After the forgery allegations surfaced, Hoang took another route to push the street name change through–submitting a direct request without neighbor signatures–which he is allowed to do as a city council member.

Mayor Parker pledged a thorough review of all petitions before any vote is taken to change Turtlewood to Little Saigon Drive.

If there are any irregularities during that, we’ll investigate those, but we’ll have to get this sorted out,” Parker said.

The mayor also said, if she gets a formal complaint or formal request for investigation, she’ll have the City’s Office of Inspector General do just that.

The chair of the City Council’s Ethics and Council Governance Committee, Mike Sullivan, said he will not be launching an investigation at this point, and instead will take a wait-and-see approach.

Houston City Council member AL HOÀNG

 

3- Councilman Hoang Under Investigation

Updated: Friday, 17 Jun 2011, 1:56 PM CDT

Published : Friday, 17 Jun 2011, 12:39 PM CDT

HOUSTON – Houston Mayor Annise Parker is asking the Office of Inspector General to open an investigation into City Council member Al Hoang, who represents District F.

A group of citizens have filed a lawsuit against Councilman Hoang accusing him of allegedly forging signatures on a petition.

Councilman Hoang released the following statement Friday in response to the investigation:

I welcome the Office of Inspector General investigation and will fully cooperate with it. I have already volunteered information to their office for a full and thorough investigation. I am completely confident that when all the facts are reviewed, I will be cleared of any wrongdoing.

Let me also clarify that I have never placed blame on my personal assistant, as some stories have portrayed. I have clearly said that the petition was tendered to my assistant at home, not that she maliciously forged that petition.

It was out of respect and concern for her and her family’s privacy that I publicly hesitated releasing her name and whereabouts.

Even though the street name change request was made in complete accordance with city policy, I have already expressed my desire to put-off the request until the matter is resolved.

Read more: https://www.myfoxhouston.com/dpp/news/politics/110617-al-hoang-investigation#ixzz1Q34qr3oP

 

4- Hoang accused of forging petition signatures to rename street

By JESSICA PRIEST

Copyright 2011 Houston Chronicle

June 15, 2011, 9:07PM

Melissa Phillip Chronicle

City Councilman Al Hoang is facing a lawsuit from neighbors accusing him of forging their signatures on a petition to change the name of a street in west Houston.

Hoang said Wednesday that he does not know whether the document was forged or who may be the culprit but speculated that his former nanny, whose name he cannot remember, may be to blame.

“She was the last person to tender me the petition,” Hoang said. “I do not know if she collected the signatures.”

A petition to change the name of Turtlewood Drive to Little Saigon Drive initially surfaced in November 2010.

Hoang and four others are being sued over the petition signatures in a county court at law. The lawsuit accuses Hoang and the other defendants of stealing their neighbors’ right to vote “in order to rename a public street that invokes images of a communist country.”

County Court at Law Judge Jacqueline Smith has issued a temporary injunction in the case to block further action on the street renaming.

According to the plaintiffs, 13 petition signatures were forged. One neighbor, whose name initially was reported as forged, since has recanted her allegation, defense attorney Vy Nguyen said.

The petition

Nguyen said Hoang approached her clients about changing the street name in a bid to win votes for the upcoming city council election. She said they circulated the document around the street before one of her clients, Tam Pham, gave it to Hoang’s nanny to give to the councilman. She said the group did not authorize Hoang to submit it to the City’s Planning and Development Department.

“They stopped (getting signatures) at 24 when they got the first disapproval. They figured that they had gotten most of their people and that was all they could gather,” Nguyen said. “After that, they gave it to the nanny who would’ve gathered more signatures … I heard that it would be left at people’s homes. A lot of things could’ve happened to that petition.”

The defendants stand by Hoang’s nanny story, Nguyen said.

“My clients have not come to the conclusion that Al Hoang did it or that there was any foul play,” she said. “They want to give him the benefit of the doubt.”

A ‘convenient excuse’

Plaintiffs attorney David Tang disputed the nanny theory.

“There are forged signatures there, and this petition passed through these five individuals’ hands with the most grievous one going to the city councilman’s office,” he said. “What’s really grievous about it is that the councilman had custody and control of that document before it went to the city planning department. … He has just interjected the nanny in there as a distraction. It’s a very convenient excuse. It’s worse than saying the dog ate my homework.”

I-le Lu, an eight-year resident of the Turtlewood Square subdivision, said his signature was forged to vote in favor of the street name change. He said he never was approached by a nanny.

“I am a victim of identity theft,” Lu said. “(Al Hoang) must be involved … I don’t believe there ever was a nanny.”

Under city of Houston rules, 75 percent of the people who live on a street must sign a petition agreeing to a change in the street’s name. The petition then is sent to the city’s Planning and Development Department for consideration. The name change must be approved by City Council. A council member may supersede the petition process and submit a request on his own.

Donna Hawkins, a spokeswoman for the Harris County District Attorney’s office, declined to confirm or deny whether the office was investigating the alleged forgeries.

Mayor Annise Parker said in a press conference Wednesday the city would begin an investigation if asked by a member of the community.

Chronicle reporter Chris Moran contributed to this story.

jessica.priest@chron.com

5- Even a councilman turns to ‘nannygate’

By LISA FALKENBERG

Copyright 2011, HOUSTON CHRONICLE

June 21, 2011, 11:02PM

“The nanny did it!” seems to be a popular defense these days.

Last year, when a San Antonio man was found bound with a necktie and his throat slashed, he blamed the nanny for an apparent a game of bondage that went too far.

In the ongoing Florida trial of Casey Anthony, a mother charged with suffocating her 2-year-old daughter with duct tape in 2008, Anthony’s brother has testified that his sister told him the nanny ran off with the toddler when she disapproved of Anthony’s parenting.

In that case, “Zanny” the nanny fought back. After she began receiving threats, she sued for defamation of character.

Now comes Houston City Councilman Al Hoang, who wasn’t above invoking the nanny defense last week when he was accused of falsifying signatures to change a street name in a bid to get votes. When a reporter asked who the nanny was, Hoang said she didn’t work for him anymore, and he couldn’t remember her name.

After the uproar — well, mostly, uproarious laughter and head-shaking disbelief – that followed the comment, Hoang tried to backpedal, telling the Chronicle he didn’t know if any signatures were in fact forged and he never “placed blame on my former personal assistant.” He explained that he simply saying the nanny was the last person to handle the petition before it was turned into the city, “not that she maliciously forged that petition.”

But the councilman seemed perfectly willing to leave the nanny’s involvement open to suggestion a day earlier in his classic exchange with Channel 11 reporter Jeremy Rogalski’s I-Team. Hoang said someone else involved in gathering signatures gave the petition to his nanny, not him.

“Your nanny?” the reporter asked.

“My nanny,” Hoang replied.

“Your nanny did it?” the reporter asked.

“I don’t know for sure,” the councilman responded.

Anyone who has been following the short and unhappy political career of first-term Councilman Hoang is probably becoming less surprised, and less amused, by the shenanigans that have occupied his time in office.

A list of weird things

Problems began with early questions about whether he lived in District F, which he was running to represent. After his 2009 election, there were criticisms that comments posted to his City Hall Web site were anti-gay. In May of last year, he threatened not to run for re-election after he felt dishonored when he wasn’t allowed to speak at a public event. He got the mic only after claiming to speak for the mayor, which he was not authorized to do.

Last summer, he sued to evict a nonprofit that served the elderly because its name was too similar to the main organization housed in the building. Infighting within the Vietnamese Community and public squabbles with opponents never seem to cease.

Nannygate presents the most serious allegations yet. Mayor Annise Parker announced Friday that she determined “enough of a problem with the situation and enough potential that some of those signatures were forged” that she initiated an OIG investigation.

Hoang and several other members of his neighborhood Home Owners Association are being sued for allegedly forging signatures on a petition to change the name of Turtlewood Drive, on which he lives, to Little Saigon Drive.

Hoang submitted the petition to the city’s Planning and Development Department but suggests he was just doing a favor for constituents. Hoang also submitted a letter to the department’s director, Marlene Gafrick, requesting the change.

A curious defense

But David Tang, an attorney representing the homeowners who feel their votes and their identities were stolen via their signatures, says the petition wasn’t all that was fudged.

Hoang claimed in the March 28 letter to the planning director he was submitting it at the request of the HOA’s board of directors. But one of the board members, Hoat Nguyen, an alleged co-conspirator in the signature scandal, swore in a deposition earlier this month that “I did not authorize him to write this letter for me.”

It’s also curious why Hoang didn’t bring up the nanny defense sooner, say, in a lengthy personal email he sent in April responding to a resident questioning the authenticity of the signatures. Hoang doesn’t mention the nanny at all and instead refers the complainant to Hoat Nguyen and other HOA leaders later named in the lawsuit.

Showed the letter in a deposition, Hoat Nguyen claimed it too was false, that Hoang had lied about Nguyen’s role in obtaining the signatures, and that, as a result, he no longer trusted the councilman.

Nanny or no nanny, I’ll bet the people of District F are in the same spot now.

lisa.falkenberg@chron.com

Read more: https://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/falkenberg/7619188.html#ixzz1Pyoojc4P

 

6- V I E T N A M E S E A M E R I C A N V O T E R S

L E A G U E – T E X A S __________________________________________________________________

Houston, June 18, 2011

The Honorable Mayor Annise Parker

Houston, Texas

Dear Mayor:

As continuously reported by the KHOU11 with the I-Team and by the Houston Chronicle since June 14, 2011, the city council member Al Hoang has been accused and even being sued for allegedly forging signatures on an official petition to change a street name from Turtlewood Drive to Little Saigon Drive where Al Hoang is living.

Information based on facts has been surfaced with television and newspaper‘s interviews and broadcastings, with key witnesses as well. We are pleased with the mayor’s prompt decision to immediately stop any proposals to change the street name and to have the Office of Inspector General (OIG) to launch a thorough investigation to find out the truth, any irregularities, and all who were involved this forgery. Your decision matched our intention to submit a formal request for investigation.

We, the Vietnamese American Voters League – Texas, are deeply concerned about wrong-doings, about the act of identity theft if especially performed by an elected city official.

We are looking forward to receiving the OIG’s findings through our mayor. For further information on us and our request please do not hesitate to contact us at (832) 237-8906.

Your special consideration is highly appreciated.

Respectfully yours,

Quan P. Nguyen

Secretary-General

Vietnamese American Voters League – Texas

 

7- Comment on forgery, and false impersonation by Councilman Al Hoang

Attorneys David Tang and Michael P. Flemming have officially filed a petition in Harris County Court No. 2, Cause No. 991617, Judge Jacqueline Smith presiding, on behalf of five residents of Turtlewood Drive (David Ng, Wenyuan Ding, Kenneth K Gee, I-Le Lu, and Jody T Pay), who have accused Councilman Al Hoang and four others (Hoat Khoa Nguyen, Cuc Thi Do, Tam Pham, and Rang Hoang) of forging the signatures of 16 Turtlewood residents on a petition which was submitted in late March 2011 to the City of Houston’s Planning & Development Department, requesting that Turtlewood Drive be renamed Little Saigon Drive.

Forgery and submission of false documents are both felonies.

Councilman Hoang claims that he knew nothing about this, speculating that the actions were perpetrated by his family’s live-in nanny; since the discovery of this incident, he states that he does not know the nanny’s current whereabouts.

As a Vietnamese individual and resident in the city of Houston, we doubt the veracity of Councilman Hoang’s statement, because traditionally Vietnamese-Americans are very cautious in hiring live-in maids or nannies to care for their children. They require the identity and address of the maid or nanny before they are hired.

Moreover, four questions must be clarified:

1.Who explained Councilman Hoang’s wishes to the nanny regarding the petition?

2. Who delivered the petition explaining the need for the street name change, along with a list of “polls” on the change of street name?

3. Who is already canvassing the houses on Turtlewood drive to inform residents why they need to apply through a public vote request the City of Houston to rename the street?

4. Are the other signatures on the list really the other residents? Because of the forgery of the names of 16 residents, the Office of Inspector General (OIG) investigation should verify with all signatories whether their signatures are true.

The previous chairman was Mr. Duc Minh Do who was in office until January 5, 2008.

While Mr. Duc was still in office, Mr. Hoang made arrangements to purchase a building located at 7100 Clarewood Dr., Houston, TX 77036, for a total purchase price of $502,000.00. He signed the purchase contract as the Chairman, even though Mr. Do was still in office.

In 2009, Mr. Hoang’s younger sister, Attorney Teresa Ngoc Hoang, a VNCH’s Board of Director Member (Legal Advisor), in her capacity as lobbyist for the V.N.C.H., “quietly” applied for grants from the city of Houston to repair damages to this building; the city of Houston approved $400,000.00 in repair costs in its mid- 2010 budget, with an additional $98,000.00 in May, 2011, for a grand total of $498,000.00. The cost of damage repair equals the cost to purchase the building.

The 6,000 square feet building located at 7100 Clarewood Dr., Houston, TX 77036 on 23,500 SQF of land, costs the community and tax payers $1,000,000.00 now.

**** After buying the building, all repairs were not authorized through a public bidding procedure as prescribed by laws pertaining to nonprofit organizations.

**** Four members of the Board of Editors of the V.N.C.H. during the 2008-2011 term, Peter Dung Tran, Nam Van Nguyen, The Kim Hoang, and Tuyen Ngoc Bui, have accused Councilman Al Hoang, Attorney Teresa Hoang, Hoc Nhu Phan, Cavatina Khanh Truong, and Skybird Nguyen of misappropriation of nearly $1,000,000.00 in contributions donated by the Vietnamese people.

The lawsuit was filed in Harris County Court No. 334, cause No. 2010-95173, Judge Ken Wise, presiding.

For more information, please contact the Plaintif f Peter Dung Tran at the phone # 832-419-6788 or Email : Peter-Tran@comcast.net

**** The Election Campaign Committee of the V.N.C.H. has been sued for violating the principle of the secret ballot in its election procedures:

All ballot containers were not placed independently that will not influence a voter as to who or what they vote for at any time while the ballot is in possession of the voter.

That was violating an individual voter’s privacy defined in the rule “No election official, process, ballot, or voting equipment shall make it possible to determine or modify by any means, direct or indirect, how an individual votes in any race, on any issue, for any party, or any candidate”.

In addition, the election of members of the V.N.C.H. for the 2011 – 2014 term was also fraudulent because:

A/The Election Committee blocked examination of the election by community editors and another party.

B/ The Election Committee did not allow observation of vote counting by the public or the media

C/ and the names on the voting lists includes persons whose identities cannot be verified.

Those violated to the rules:

** An independent audit, or canvass of the election shall be conducted by representatives of at least two major parties and such candidates and citizens who wish to participate and the results of this process published.

** An audit, or canvass must certify that the number of ballots counted does not exceed the number of ballots cast in all races and on all issues in each precinct, and that the number of ballots cast does not exceed the number of registered voters in each precinct.

Phuc Linh

8- DEMOCRATIC ACTION COUNCIL

COMMUNITY AFFAIRS

Houston Texas, 6.19.2011

Submission to the Authorities and the Public for Review

Al Hoang, the Serial Official Abuser

Al Hoang, district F council member of the City of Houston, Texas proposes to change the name of the street, where he owns a house, from TURTLEWOOD DRIVE to LITTLE SAIGON DRIVE. The act appears to be name changing for his own political and financial benefit. It is time to stop, once and for all, a serial official abuser.

Al Hoang cites that the new name will attract tourism and business to Houston. In fact, the proposed street is less than 350 yards long, which is occupied by a few row of townhouses on one side and an elementary school on the other. It is far from being an attractive landmark regardless of what the street name is to be. His reasoning is a pretext given in an attempt to conceal his political ambitions. Al Hoang is known to abuse his position as city council member to impose his own influence on the Vietnamese-American Community; whereas the control of their financial and political orientation is his only mission. To change Turtlewood to Little Saigon would be imprinting his mark on the community. It will be a focal point in his upcoming re-election campaign. Al Hoang would boast how he had done well for the Vietnamese-American Community by giving them… a street name. The Electoral Authority of Harris County shall restrict Al Hoang from campaigning in any languages other than English, although interprertation/translation can be provided. His campaign must be in an open class of people throughout the electable precinct and not limit his activities to specific individuals. Al Hoang’s undemocratic practice of vote-getting in the Vietnamese-American Community can reversely disenfranchise the district F constituents with respect to their constitutional rights to elect and to be served. Case study #1.

Previously, Al Hoang had forged the signatures of 16 residents of the Turtlewood area to submit his petition to the City Council of Houston for changing the name to Little Saigon Drive. The victims of this forgery are currently suing him. Attorney Al Hoang’s defense strategy is “not me, my nanny done it but she’s not here”. When the illegal scheme failed, Al Hoang abused his official privilege of a council seat by proposing directly to the City Council his plan to change the street name without being required to have the signatures of neighbors. The Mayor of Houston, Ms. Annise Parker, has initiated the Office of Inspector General investigation on her own authority.

“So we want to make sure that once that official action was initiated, that there were no irregularities, and that whether or not he was involved in any potential irregularities“. Mayor Parker said. “If there are any irregularities during that, we’ll investigate those, but we’ll have to get this sorted out”. She also offered doubt about the incident.

With all due respect, the victims of the forgery have come forward with tangible evidence showing council member Al Hoang was stealing their identities. It appears to be more like a potential criminal activity rather than “potential irregularities”. A misconduct of a government official is being investigated by a government official of the same clan through an agency of her choice deems to be counterproductive. It has been known as “crisis management”. Regardless of the outcome of the investigation, it would be a semi-democratic-process. Since the forgery and identity thief are federal offenses, the Mayor of Houston, in the interest and on behalf of the City, should file a formal complaint to the office of the United States Attorney. The Special Independent Authority will impartially “sort out” whether or not Al Hoang and his “nanny” did commit any crime. Shall the Mayor consider it is not her solemn duty to protect and preserve the Law, and then the People shall take action to initiate the proper legal process under its jurisdiction and the applicable laws. The real issue is not whether Al Hoang’s proposal to change the street name should or should not be approved, but whether or not Al Hoang himself should be indicted and prosecuted.

“Nothing is going to move until we can be assured that the community wishes have been fairly represented,”. Parker said.

Contrary to the Mayor’s comment with regard to “community wishes”, Al Hoang has demonstrated this is his own agenda by using his official privilege to propose a change of street name without the signatures of neighbors. That would attest his self-serving intent. The Asia Town Community is populated by hundreds of thousands of Asian-Americans and their well-established businesses that do not wish to be interrupted in terms of having to change the name of their street addresses and directions with banks, DPS, utility companies, social security, IRS, advertisings, stationeries, to name a few that would cost substantial time and money. Not to mention the taxpayers’ money would be wasted to change the street sign, the remapping, the property records of the HCAD, the City Planning Department, 911, USPS, the Police and Fire Departments, and so on. All that involved just to change the name of a 350-yard street to satisfy a malefactor. WE THE PEOPLE shall no longer be deluded by the subliminal suggestive terms rhetorically used by politicians such as “community wishes”, and the “American people want”, etc… for their self-serving agendas.

Cordially,

Democratic Action Council / Community Affairs

John Paul, Founder

PS:

To the DFPS and the IRS:

Al Hoang’s defense strategy was: “not me, my nanny done it but she’s not here“. The nanny’s identity and her whereabouts are unknown to him. If his claims are true, Al Hoang has committed child endangerment and tax evasion. He had placed the welfare of his children in the hands of a stranger. Al Hoang did not file his employee on his income tax and the nanny did not report her income from employer Al Hoang. The Child Protection Service and the IRS should pay a visit to Al Hoang.

 

9- TRÍCH ĐƠN KIỆN TRƯỚC TOÀ # 2 HARRIS COUNTY

Excert first 3 pages from the Lawsuit: NO. 991617

DAVID NG, IN THE COUNTY COURTWENYUAN DING, KENNETH

K. GEE, I-LE LU, AND JODY T. PAY

Plaintiffs

vs. AT LAW NUMBER 2

HOAT KHOA NGUYEN, CUC T. DO, TAM PHAM, RANG HOANG, and HUY DUNG HOANG, a/k/a ALOYSIUS “AL” HOANG

Defendants HARRIS COUNTY, TEXAS

PLAINTIFFS’ FIRST SUPPLEMENTAL PETITION

TO THE HONORABLE JUDGE OF SAID COURT:

David Ng, Wenyuan Ding, Kenneth K. Gee, I-Le Lu, and Jody T. Pay, Plaintiffs herein, complain of Huy Dung Hoang, a/k/a Aloysius ―Al Hoang, Hoat Khoa Nguyen, Cuc T. Do, Tam Pham, and Rang Hoang, Defendants herein, and file this their first Supplemental Petition and for cause of action shows:

DISCOVERY LEVEL

Plaintiff requests that discovery be conducted under Level 2.

PARTIES

1.Plaintiffs David Ng (Ng), Wenyuan Ding (Ding), Kenneth K. Gee (Gee), I-Le Lu (Lu), and Jody T. Pay (Pay) are residents of Harris County, Houston, Texas. Specifically, they reside and own real property abutting Turtlewood Drive.

2. Defendant Huy Dung Hoang, a/k/a Aloysius – Al Hoang (Defendants or Al Hoang herein) is an individual residing in Harris County, Houston, Texas and may be served with process at: 6865 Turtlewood, Houston, Texas 77072 or wherever he may be found.

3. Defendants Hoat Khoa Nguyen (Defendants or Nguyen‖), Cuc T. Do (Defendants or Do), Tam Pham (Defendants‖ or Pham), and Rang Hoang (Defendants‖ or Hoang‖) have made appearances in this case and filed an answer.

JURISDICTION AND VENUE

1. This Court has jurisdiction over Defendants for the reason that it conducts business in the State of Texas, has sufficient minimum contacts with the State of Texas, or resides in the State of Texas. Additionally, Defendant has committed wrongful actions in the State of Texas as set forth in this petition.

2. Venue is proper pursuant to TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE, 15.002.

3. Plaintiff is seeking damages within the jurisdictional limits of this Court.

FACTS/CAUSES OF ACTION

Defendants Al Hoang, Hoat Khoa Nguyen, Cuc T. Do, Tam Pham, and Rang Hoang have forged signatures in a purported petition, submitted to the City of Houston Planning and Development Department to change their neighborhood street name from Turtlewood Drive to LITTLE SAIGON DRIVE.

Turtlewood Square Community consists of forty-nine (49) property owners in the heart of District F, in Harris County, Texas. Defendants Al Hoang, Hoat Khoa Nguyen, Cuc T. Do, Tam Pham, and Rang Hoang circulated a purported petition to change Turtlewood Dr. to LITTLE SAIGON DRIVE.

Per the City of Houston’s Planning & Development Department seventy-five percent (75%) of the abutting property owners on Turtlewood Drive must sign a petition authorizing the name change. Plaintiffs are property owners abutting Turtlewood Drive.

On or about March 28, 2011, Defendants submitted a petition to the City of Houston’s Planning & Development Department containing forged signatures purportedly showing that 75% of the property owners abutting Turtlewood Drive approve the street name change. Defendants Al Hoang, Hoat Khoa Nguyen, Cuc T. Do, Tam Pham, and Rang Hoang conspired with each other to forge and submit forged signatures to petition the City of Houston to change Turtlewood Dr. to LITTLE SAIGON DRIVE.

Specifically, Defendants Al Hoang, Hoat Khoa Nguyen, Cuc T. Do, Tam Pham, and Rang Hoang forged Plaintiffs Jody Pay and I-Le Lu’s signatures on the name change petition.

Homeowner Furthermore, Al Hoang’s involvement in the forgeries is confirmed by Co-Defendant, Defendant Hoat Nguyen. Co-Defendant Nguyen admits that Co-Defendant Al Hoang submitted an unauthorized letter, containing false statements, and forged homeowner signatures to change a Houston public street name from Turtlewood Drive to Little Saigon Drive. Co-Defendant Nguyen, individually, and on behalf of the other Defendants blame Al Hoang for any forged signatures contained in the petition after number 24.

Defendants claim that it was Al Hoang’s idea to change a Houston public street to Little Saigon Drive. Co-Defendant Al Hoang prepared all the paperwork and petition for the street name change. Defendants allege that they gave the petition to Al Hoang with only 23 signatures, well short of the 75% requirement to change a public street name. Thereafter, Al Hoang submitted the petition under his Houston City Council letterhead and seal containing the forged signatures. Co-Defendant Al Hoang claims that the petition was given to his nanny‖ to collect signatures. However, Co-Defendant Hoat Nguyen, has testified that he has never seen a nanny at Co-Defendant Al Hoang’s house. In fact, Co-Defendant Al Hoang claims that the nanny no longer works for him and he cannot remember the nanny’s name. “

………. (Page 3 of 13).

 

SH sưu tầm

Nguồn Báo Đẹp: Chungtoimuontudo.wordpress.com, ngày June 23, 2011

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