The 18 month long legal ordeal brought by M.A.K. Investments, LLC controlled by Mohammad Ali Kheirkhahi and his in-laws Saeed Kholghy and Nasrin Kholghy against the City of Glendale is finally over as chronicled on the front page of this newspaper. As in the case of many protracted wars it ended not with a bang, but with a whimper as M.A.K.’s lawyers have gotten the state court to dismiss with prejudice the last of its outrageous claims without even a single minor concession by the triumphant attorneys for the City of Glendale.

When President Ronald Reagan’s Secretary of Labor Ray Donovan was acquitted of all charges brought against him and six other defendants by a Bronx jury in 1987, he famously asked outside the courthouse, “Which office do I go to to get my reputation back?” The City of Glendale must wonder the same thing.

Glendale has spent close to a fifth of a century building an extraordinary city so that it could be known for more than simply the home of Shotgun Willie’s. The city acquired various parcels of land at no small cost for a series of extraordinary parks; it turned Cherry Creek Drive South from an eyesore into an amazing parkway with a wonderful circuitous pathway beside the creek; it built a first class boutique recreation center and made it available to its citizens at extremely low rates; it built a conference center that is one of the top venues in all of metropolitan Denver; it created Infinity Park a world class rugby venue such that internationally the city is known as Rugbytown USA; it made the city business-friendly and it attracted major investments such as CitySet greatly broadening the city’s tax base, etc., etc., etc.

The culmination of its efforts was to create a real downtown eating and entertainment district along East Virginia Avenue originally known as the Riverwalk and later the Glendale 180 Project. M.A.K acquired its 3.8 acres of land along E. Virginia to take advantage of the investment the city was going to make in the area but then decided it could make more money by building a massive apartment complex on its land to take advantage of the apartment boom in metropolitan Denver. M.A.K. did not care that the city height restrictions, the City Master Plan and zoning laws did not permit the same or that its massive apartment building would effectively destroy the Glendale 180 Project. M.A.K. and its principals only cared about what would make the most money for them and them alone.

In its greed and avarice M.A.K. decided it must threaten to, and then try to, destroy the reputation of the city and its elected officials and employees. It went after, to name just a few, Mayor Mike Dunafon, former Councilman Jeff Allen, Deputy City Manager Chuck Line and City Clerk Sherry Frame as outlined in the front page story.

Neither M.A.K. nor Mohammad Ali Kheirkhahi and his in-laws apparently appreciated the toughness of a community that as an unincorporated town and then a home rule city has had to fight to prevail overwhelming powerful forces for its mere existence since 1859. Mayor Mike Dunafon adopted as his creed regarding the matter a variation of the statement in John F. Kennedy’s inaugural address, to the effect: “Let everyone know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and the success of Glendale.” It is a sentiment that every leader of Glendale over the last 150 plus years could appreciate and support.

According to City Attorney Jeff Springer, Glendale will consider seeking from the courts reimbursement for its massive attorneys’ fees and costs involved in the M.A.K. litigation. Glendale might want to also consider bringing abuse of process claims against M.A.K., Mohammad Ali Kheirkhahi, Saeed Kholghy and Nasrin Kholghy to recover the loss associated with the harm done to the Glendale 180 project. In its war against the City of Glendale and its people, M.A.K. has laid many land mines and poisoned its share of wells, not all of which have been uncovered. Discovery in such a lawsuit would help expose those many hazards that are lying in wait for the unwary in the city. Glendale has been and must ever be vigilant if it and its people are to prosper.

— Editorial Board

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