[StBernard] $12M debt dogs assistant district attorney
Westley Annis
westley at da-parish.com
Wed Sep 20 23:18:29 EDT 2006
Couldn't have happen to a nicer guy!
Rocky
----- Original Message -----
> CHALMETTE - Glenn Diaz was an assistant district attorney, a 30-year
lawyer
> with a private practice and the owner of a well-known metal home business
> pre-Katrina.
> But now he owes more than $12 million to banks and other investors.
"Nobody
> can find him," said John Taranto, who oversees serving of subpoenas for
the
> St. Bernard sheriff's office.
>
> Diaz says he's living openly in Jackson, Miss., in a one-bedroom deer camp
> made of two construction office trailers.
>
> But he's "on the verge of (financial) collapse."
>
> Everything he had in St. Bernard - a home in Meraux, his private law firm
> and his Arabi business, MetalPro Industries - was washed away by Katrina,
he
> said.
>
> Diaz said he hasn't been dodging the courts or his debts. He's been in
> contact with creditors and trying to arrange payments, he said.
>
> "We have three major banks that we've worked with. We've worked things out
> where everyone is going to be paid," Diaz said. "I'm not hiding or running
> away. I'm just as much of a flood victim as anyone you've ever met."
>
> The 55-year-old Diaz was swamped by debt stemming from the financial ruin
of
> MetalPro.
>
> He owes Central Progressive Bank nearly $60,000, Whitney National Bank
$12.2
> million and thousands to Diagnostic Management Affiliates, a company that
> financed medical services for Diaz's private law practice.
>
> Diaz said his private law practice at 2200 Jackson Blvd. is on hold,
> MetalPro is shut down and he has taken a leave of absence from the
district
> attorney's office where was an assistant prosecutor since 1979.
>
> Until St. Bernard Parish resumes jury trials - there aren't enough people
in
> the parish to convene a proper jury - Diaz, who headed the jury trail
> docket, said he will not draw a paycheck from the district attorney's
> office.
>
> "I do not have one single belonging left since Katrina. But I have my
> integrity," he said.
> MetalPro could help rebuild the hurricane-torn Gulf Coast with modular
steel
> homes if the business could get back on its feet, Diaz said.
>
> "We have contracts to build 5,000 homes in inner city New Orleans, which
are
> needed for poor folks to come back," he said.
>
> When established roughly four years ago on St. Bernard port property,
> MetalPro offered steel-framed homes already in wide use other parts of the
> country.
>
> "Historically, this has obviously been a stick-build lumber region," said
> Jon Luther, executive vice president of the Home Builders Association of
> Greater New Orleans.
> MetalPro employed 80 people before Katrina, Diaz said. The future was
> bright.
> "We had orders for 26,000 homes before the storm," Diaz said. "Every debt
I
> had was up to the minute, current."
>
> Then Katrina pushed 11.5 feet of water into his home. While he helped save
> "a lot of people" with his boat after Katrina, Diaz said the government
> won't help him.
> He applied for Small Business Administration loans and help from the U.S.
> Department of Agriculture but got nothing.
>
> "I just get kicked in the teeth by my government. No one has helped," he
> said.
> Diaz said he has not filed for bankruptcy for MetalPro. But as bills go
> unpaid, banks and others are suing him over his lack of responsiveness.
>
> "We haven't been able to serve him yet with the suit. There's been no
> resolution of the suit," said Lawrence Anderson, an attorney for Central
> Progressive Bank.
> Diaz said he has been in contact with Charles Watts, Anderson's colleague
> and another attorney for Central Progressive Bank.
>
> But Anderson said Watts never received a direct call from Diaz. He said
one
> of Diaz's former employees called Watts July 17 to say an SBA loan was
being
> sought to pay off the debt, Anderson said.
>
> When no payment arrived by Aug. 31, the attorneys resumed trying to serve
> Diaz the lawsuit, Anderson said.
>
> Diaz said it's not his fault he's not living or working in St. Bernard
> Parish so he can easily be served a lawsuit.
>
> "When they walk across the street and I'm not there, (that) doesn't mean
the
> three lawsuits in my life are not addressed," he said. "Why do I need to
get
> served if I've already filed pleadings and addressed them?
>
> Diaz said he plans to pay all his creditors in full, which means he will
> have to sell off property he owns in St. Bernard and other states.
>
> "I have not asked for mercy or to cut anything," he said. "I haven't been
> hiding."
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