Exhibit V – Citation and Enforcement History (2007–2025)

Subject:

Full historical record of code and building enforcement actions at Omega Villas, used to demonstrate selective enforcement, record suppression, and city-level liability for long-term neglect and regulatory failure.

🔍 Overview:

This exhibit consolidates citations issued by the City of Plantation from 2007 through 2025. Citations are categorized by phase and include violations related to:

  • Unpermitted construction
  • Expired permits
  • Building safety inspection noncompliance
  • Structural, electrical, and nuisance code violations

This data is sourced from:

  • 2009 City Citation PDF
  • Screenshot documentation (2006–2025)
  • Whistleblower’s digital archive
  • Official record spreadsheets downloaded fromCity of Plantation Accela Portal, saved as:
    • RecordList20250509 (Phase 1).xlsx
    • RecordList20250509 (Phase 2).csv
    • RecordList20250509 (Phase 3).xlsx
    • RecordList20250509 (Phase 4).xlsx

📋 Organized Citation Log (Sample Extract)

DateCase NumberTypeViolation SummaryAddressPhaseStatus
10/01/2008CE08-03180Building EnforcementElectrical work without permit – site lighting entire development1713 NW 72 AvePhase 3Closed
03/01/2013CE13-00431Code EnforcementAll buildings/residences not being maintained1713 NW 72 AvePhase 3Closed
09/26/2008CE08-03110Building EnforcementRoof work without permit1712 NW 71 AvePhase 1Closed
09/26/2008CE08-03109Building EnforcementStucco/foundation trench work without permit1720 NW 71 AvePhase 1Closed
08/27/2024CE24-02188Building EnforcementWork without permit – rear addition1725 NW 74 AvePhase 1Closed
08/27/2024CE24-02189Building EnforcementWork without permit – rear addition1729 NW 74 AvePhase 1Closed
08/27/2024CE24-02190Building EnforcementWork done without permit – rear addition1733 NW 74 AvePhase 1Closed
10/06/2022CE22-02324Building EnforcementConcrete slab installation without permit1705 NW 74 AvePhase 1Complied
01/17/2025CE25-00185Building EnforcementNew windows/doors installed without permit1700 NW 73 AvePhase 2Complied

Note: Full citation matrix includes 45+ confirmed entries with phase tagging, date, type, and outcome.

🔥 Strategic Implications:

  • Phase 1 now confirmed with 12+ citations, disproving prior assumptions of zero enforcement.
  • Phase 2 shows a recurring pattern of heavy enforcement, often during or following whistleblower activity.
  • Phase 3 had citations, but no fines were issued, even when structural violations were involved.
  • Phase 4 shows moderate citation frequency, with key records often resolved quietly.
  • The 2013 citation targeting all buildings/residences illustrates systemic neglect long before cosmetic renovations were initiated.

⚠️ 2008 Disparity in Fines:

  • In 2008, at least four citations for unpermitted structural work were issued to addresses now confirmed to be in Phase 4 (e.g., 1712, 1720, 1724 NW 71 Ave).
  • Despite this, only Phase 2 was fined and burdened with enforcement follow-up and record escalation.
  • Phase 1 citations were closed or resolved quietly, and Phase 3 received no fines at all despite being named in the site-wide electrical citation (CE08-03180).
  • This supports the theory of targeted enforcementwhere citations in Phases 1 and 4 were closed or quietly resolved, but Phase 2 owners were financially penalized, potentially to suppress dissent or protect city-aligned contractor interests.

Historical Oversight Failure (2008–2009)

  • In 2008–2009, City of Plantation Building Inspector Adam Attah issued citations to contractors Gould Roofing and Vincent Pagan for unlicensed or substandard work performed on Phase 2 of Omega Villas. These violations were documented by the whistleblower in direct emails to DBPR and the City. Notably, no enforcement action was documented against similar work conducted on Phases 1, 3, or 4, raising concerns of selective enforcement.
  • The Board’s legal counsel at the time — Frank Weinberg Black — allegedly informed residents that their law firm would “be addressing the City,” suggesting back-channel interference or containment efforts. No proof has emerged confirming that the remaining phases were inspected or cited.
  • These events reinforce a long-standing concern: that selective enforcement, contractor favoritism, and legal shielding were already embedded into Omega Villas’ structural management culture well before the current remodeling crisis began.

📎 Supporting Evidence for:

  • DBPR enforcement inaction
  • City of Plantation regulatory inconsistency
  • Collusion with HOA vendors or suppression of violations in protected phases
  • Potential elements of organized, retaliatory control via code enforcement

Prepared by: Shawn Martin, MBA
Omega Villas Unit Owner & Whistleblower
Exhibit V – Citation and Enforcement History (2007–2025)