Skip to main content

Los Angeles 'trash house' drawing attention as eyesore, public safety hazard

People living in a Los Angeles neighborhood are drawing attention to what they refer to as a "trash house" to get the eyesore and public safety hazard cleaned up.

A home in an affluent Los Angeles neighborhood known as the Fairfax District has drawn attention for not just being an eyesore, but what neighbors say is a public safety hazard due to trash gathering outside of it. 

Junk can be seen in the front and back yards of the home, with most of it being inside white trash bags. The clutter engulfs a car parked in the driveway, and even blocks the front door. Mounds of plastic buckets and empty plastic bottles surround the home, as caught on camera by FOX 11 Los Angeles.

"Fire hazard," one man said. "If anything ever lights up in there, it's like everybody's kind of a part of it. We're all affected."  

The home near Martel and Melrose Avenues is surrounded by multi-million dollar homes. Neighbors say the smell emanating from the "trash house" is unbearable, and they can hear rats running around the mess. They told FOX 11 they have seen the owners walk around with a shopping cart, stuff it with trash and take the trash back to the home.

BODYCAM CAPTURES SUSPECT CLINGING TO MOVING CAR TRYING TO EVADE ARREST

The homeowner, identified by the Los Angeles Times as Raymond Gaon, declined to speak. He has reportedly owned the two-bedroom home since the mid-1990s, public records obtained by the newspaper state. 

Neighbors say action was taken years ago to clean up the home and the homeowner was fined, but since then the situation has worsened. 

MAN EJECTED FROM SUNROOF DURING BIG SUR CLIFF FALL WAITS 2 DAYS FOR RESCUE

"It's been accumulating slowly," a resident told ABC7. "My take on it is it's kind of disgusting compared to everything else in the area."

"It’s a fire hazard. It’s filthy," Miriam Kosberg, whose family has owned the property directly behind the house since 1955, told the Los Angeles Times. "There’s garbage all the way up to the back fence."

City officials told FOX 11 they are aware of the situation and are weighing options. This could mean taking care of the cleanup themselves and charging the owner, they said.

Data & News supplied by www.cloudquote.io
Stock quotes supplied by Barchart
Quotes delayed at least 20 minutes.
By accessing this page, you agree to the following
Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions.