Real-life drama on Keeaumoku takes new turn
A neighborhood retail complex with a concentration of Korean restaurants near Ala Moana Center has filed for bankruptcy in the midst of a feud over control of the property that has created turmoil for tenants and left the city with $600,000 in unpaid property taxes.
Cuzco Development U.S.A. LLC, owner of the center known as Keeaumoku International Village or Keeaumoku Shopping Center, filed for Chapter 11 reorganization in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Honolulu last week.
The filing includes a sordid account of the property’s management and ownership that includes alleged diversions of tenant rents, a fraudulent attempt to sell the property and the suspicious deaths of two principals.
One of the main aims of the bankruptcy is to prevent a bank from foreclosing on the property, though another aim appears to be recovering hundreds of thousands of dollars in allegedly diverted tenant rents and eliminating what Cuzco claims is a management entity that has fraudulently tried to control the property.
The management entity, however, claims that Cuzco is wrongly trying to break a contract and take back operation of the center.
Cuzco was formed by two investors from South Korea, Doo Sup Byun and Gunil Kim, who bought the retail complex containing about 40 tenants on 3.5 acres on Keeaumoku Street for $49 million in 2007.
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A childhood friend of Byun’s, Hyung Soo Jang, began managing Keeaumoku International Village as early as 2010, but a clash emerged after Byun died in 2013 under what Cuzco said were “suspicious circumstances” and his ownership stake passed to his wife, well-known Korean singer Soo Kyung Yang, according to the bankruptcy filing.
Cuzco, now led by Byun’s widow, claims that Jang and some of Byun’s relatives tried to sell the property for their own gain and also leased the property to another company to prevent Cuzco from operating the retail complex.
Cuzco alleges that in 2014 Jang replaced the center’s property management firm, TH Realty Inc., with a friend named Kris Kim, who with Jang siphoned off hundreds of thousands of dollars in rent revenue for their benefit and failed to pay property taxes over two years.
Kim could not be reached for comment.
Byun’s wife and other Cuzco shareholders claim that they removed Jang as manager of the company in late 2014 but that Jang continued to act in the role. Then in 2015 Jang appears to have signed a master lease and then died under suspicious circumstances a few months later in South Korea. The master lease conveyed rights to operate the center to JCCho Hawaii LLC, a company led by Jae Hyon Cho, which Cuzco claims is a fraudulent arrangement.
JCCho claimed in a filing in the bank foreclosure lawsuit that it has paid Cuzco $160,000 a month under terms of the master lease to operate the center and that Cuzco has attempted to terminate retail tenant leases arranged by JCCho, including one with PC World, and improperly instructed tenants to pay their rent to Cuzco instead of JCCho.
“(Cuzco has) interfered with the business operations of JCCho and the contractual relationship between JCCho and the tenants,” JCCho said in the filing.
Meanwhile, JCCho has told other tenants such as Eco Supermarket Inc. and restaurant/pub Chick &Meck to vacate their spaces in the center because leases with Cuzco were invalid, according to documents in the bankruptcy case.
“It has come to our attention that you are currently occupying a certain space in the Keeaumoku International Village without the consent of JCCho or having a lease agreement with JCCho,” the company told the two tenants in letters dated May 16. “Therefore, JCCho considers your presence at the Keeaumoku International Village unauthorized, trespass and interfering with JCCho’s property interest.”
Cuzco responded in a May 20 letter to JCCho that Eco Supermarket and Chick &Meck have leases with Cuzco and that JCCho has no right to interfere with the tenants.
The validity of the master lease has been a subject of contention in the pending foreclosure lawsuit and a pending civil lawsuit in state court. But through bankruptcy, Cuzco is seeking to reject the master lease as an unfavorable weight on the company’s finances.
David Suh, a local attorney representing JCCho in the civil case, said the company aims to contest the attempted rejection of the master lease in bankruptcy court.
“They are using the bankruptcy proceedings to eliminate what’s been legally entered into,” he said.
Cuzco aims to have a U.S. bankruptcy judge cancel the disputed master lease. “The purported existence of the JCCho lease has severely impeded (Cuzco’s) ability to operate the Keeaumoku property and confused certain tenants,” the company said in the filing.
If the lease is rejected, Cuzco suggested that it will be able to make good on its debts given that the estimated $45 million value of its property far outweighs debts that include a $25 million bank loan, the $600,000 owed to the city and less than $500,000 owned to other creditors.
“The estate is solvent,” the company said in its filing.
23 responses to “Real-life drama on Keeaumoku takes new turn”
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Somebody from Hawaii better hurry and make this into a K drama before Seoul gets wind of this…
People will eat that up. They all waiting for the series to start
Korean underworld bosses will ensure that nothing is done here. Behind all this Korean $$$ lies some real darkness.
for a person who feels being slighted because of your American Heritage, you can dish it out, lol. Tonto here
My Native American heritage you mean. And as for the Korean underworld, it is very real out here. You ened to open your eyes.
That’s too pocho!
That was my immediate reaction! So K-Dramas are based on real life events!
Funny but true, it would be a very complicated K drama
What were the “suspicious circumstances” under which two different people died? SA, please clarify what you wrote about.
Foreign Investors, who gives a cr_@p !
I was gone from Hawaii for about 30 years. Now I understand Korean Soap Operas !
Based on this article, I’m guessing that the principals in this drama have ties to the Korean underworld.
After is all said and done, the City loses, lawyers win, tenants stay.
Kind of been disruptive. For an Asian-style market, the Keeaumoku Market was a real gem, giving Palama Market some competition. But we no longer go there due to all the brouhaha.
Wish the Korean chaebol would keep their shenanigans at home. My run in with Korean-owned car rentals and auto insurance kind of is indicative of some form of Korean underworld involvement. Slow to respond and evasive. Had to chase them down to get satisfaction.
The real story must be like the chaebol daughter of Korean Air Lines’ CEO. Totally spoiled and given to tantrums. She must have gotten out of prison by now, having thrown objects at a stewardess, thrown the supervising flight attendant off the plane, and stopping a KAL airliner and turning it around to do so. Yeah, they should make a K-drama about that. But I think the parties involved are going to be found at the gangsta-end of the spectrum of Korean society.
SA should do a story on the Korean underworld out here. It is real and it is growing fast.
What about the Chinese Beijing based bullying mafia? Get them and their development officer daughters out too! And fire the UH administrators who hire that type!
yikes!
Korea town is a very valuable retail area. Somebody getting greedy?
How about a follow-up on this SA or do we need to get Matt Levi or Gena Mangieri on this because as we all know SA does not do any real investigative reporting.
Just write down press releases and stuff written on the mainland and put that in as news. For instance, as already stated by MillionMonkey, what were the suspicious circumstances in the death of the two principals?
I know my parrot would want to know. Gives him something to read, while he is doing his business on your paper.
Does this include the sordid restaurant joint Kirin? That place needs to be shut down! A place where Chinese mistresses, meet white male UH administrators who run up 400$ bills are n the name of accreditation agencies, on your tax payer dime! So much Asian-style corruption in Hawaii
Koreamoku St., with it’s dens of inequity.
Sounds like JCCHO is making a living off someone else’s investment.
This is why you don’t allow foreign people to buy anything in Hawaii!!!