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Mahogany's-related ethics complaint tossed
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Marcus Offline
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Post: #41
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
(02-24-2014 11:40 AM)SuperFlyBCat Wrote:  
(02-24-2014 09:55 AM)Marcus Wrote:  
(02-21-2014 08:09 PM)rath v2.0 Wrote:  Wonder if this has something to do with the financial difficulties leading to her "being under attack again"?

http://www.urbanspoon.com/r/32/1694308/r...Cincinnati

Lol

Wow at those reviews. Great job again city leaders. Idiots.

That is something that I have not seem often, virtually all reviews are
bad bad.

I know. You at least have a few positive reviews from time to time, but there are none whatsoever. There are one or two reviews from people who are complaining about all the negative reviews but there is no substance to them.

That business is doomed no matter what kind of picture people want to paint... all of those reviews basically say the same thing, overpriced, the food sucks, the service sucks, they consistently eff up people's bills and they seem to run out of wine all the time... how anyone can put a positive spin on that is beyond me.
 
02-24-2014 01:11 PM
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Bearcat Otto Offline
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Post: #42
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
If you look on the Urban Spoon page in the opinions section, there are 67 reviews. What shows up is a filtered version to show only the bad reviews. Not all of them are bad but enough that I would still consider not going.
 
02-24-2014 01:34 PM
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OneUChoopsfan Away
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Post: #43
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
I prefer Yelp.

Mixed reviews. None outstanding (5*), but several 4*.

Considerable number of disappointed posters.
 
02-25-2014 05:49 PM
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SuperFlyBCat Offline
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Post: #44
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
Mahogany’s owner Liz Rogers financial woes stem from an $80,000 embezzlement by her financial manager, she told city officials.

But she’s working to catch up on back lease payments. Rogers, who had defaulted on nearly $53,000 in rent and faced eviction, paid half that Monday, City of Cincinnati records dated Mondayshowed.

And she’s agreed to pay another $37,730, an amount that includes her March rent, by next Monday at 5 p.m. If she doesn’t, she’ll voluntarily turn her restaurant in The Banks over to Banks landlord NIC Riverbank One by noon Tuesday.

The paperwork does not address the $14,611 she owes the city for missed payments on a $300,000 start-up loan.
http://news.cincinnati.com/article/20140...any-s-woes
 
03-04-2014 10:53 PM
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Eastside_J Away
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Post: #45
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
Good lord - I hear circus music playing.
 
03-04-2014 11:45 PM
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rath v2.0 Offline
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Post: #46
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
Embezzled by her "financial manager". What is this, a 1990's R&B act? Please don't hurt em', Hammer.
 
03-05-2014 05:59 AM
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Teakwood Offline
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Post: #47
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
(03-05-2014 05:59 AM)rath v2.0 Wrote:  Embezzled by her "financial manager". What is this, a 1990's R&B act? Please don't hurt em', Hammer.

Lol...dammit rath, I spit coffee on my shirt and have to change. I'll probably have random Hammer songs in my head all day.
 
03-05-2014 06:39 AM
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Marcus Offline
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Post: #48
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
(03-04-2014 10:53 PM)SuperFlyBCat Wrote:  Mahogany’s owner Liz Rogers financial woes stem from an $80,000 embezzlement by her financial manager, she told city officials.

http://news.cincinnati.com/article/20140...any-s-woes

lol
 
03-05-2014 06:46 AM
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SuperFlyBCat Offline
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Post: #49
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
She is way behind on rent, loan payments to the city, and state sales tax (pure mismanagement).
 
03-05-2014 08:24 AM
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rath v2.0 Offline
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Post: #50
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
Dollars to donuts there will be more state liens for failure to pay the required employer withholdings and sales tax. Mayhap that pot-o-gold gets tapped to pay rent. I see these Greek tragedies unfold all too often.

At this point, the lady is using a squirt gun to put out a house fire. Her business is toast after this press cycle. Despite being a "victim" not even Reds home games will save her. Watch City Council bail her out.
 
03-05-2014 09:15 AM
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Crewdogz Offline
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Post: #51
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
I had heard reports that Mahogany's ownership had written several bad checks to the city; is this not a crime anymore? If true I would think there should be some criminal charges.
 
03-05-2014 09:47 AM
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Major ----de Coverley Offline
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Post: #52
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
Would like to know how much money the owner paid herself and or other relatives. Any recent big private purchases with cash?
This could go well beyond mere incompetance.
 
03-05-2014 10:39 AM
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SuperFlyBCat Offline
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Post: #53
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
(03-05-2014 09:47 AM)Crewdogz Wrote:  I had heard reports that Mahogany's ownership had written several bad checks to the city; is this not a crime anymore? If true I would think there should be some criminal charges.

Question for the Lawyers. She did bounce rent checks to the LL though.
She might have not even sent in checks for the loan to the city.
 
03-05-2014 10:39 AM
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rath v2.0 Offline
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Post: #54
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
There is a knowledge or purpose to defraud requirment.

I believe its only a misdomeanor if you pass a check and know it won't clear.
 
03-05-2014 04:23 PM
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SuperFlyBCat Offline
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Post: #55
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
Wonder if this guy can run a restaurant? LOL
And I was just thinking about him recently. This guy gave council a weal a s s sales pitch and they
pretty much just cut the guy a check. The guy had zero experience successfully renovating real estate.


Man who conned city sent to prison

Lashawn Pettus Brown will have to pull his next scam from prison.

The man who conned the city of Cincinnati out of $185,000 in the Empire Theater development in 2002 and then fled to Japan was sent to prison for three years Wednesday by Hamilton County Common Pleas Court Judge Ethna Cooper.

Brown, 37, earlier pleaded guilty to violating his probation from his 2005 conviction for three counts of tampering with records in the theater scam. His sentence was delayed twice while his attorney, Scott Rubenstein, worked to obtain the money Brown said he has in Japan, where he played professional basketball and ran an entertainment company.

http://news.cincinnati.com/article/20140...n?gcheck=1
 
(This post was last modified: 03-05-2014 04:36 PM by SuperFlyBCat.)
03-05-2014 04:35 PM
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ctipton Offline
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Post: #56
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
Mahogany's owner pays back rent
Sharon Coolidge, CIN 4:19 p.m. EDT April 11, 2014

Liz Rogers is well on her way to keeping the doors of her Mahogany's at The Banks restaurant open.

Rogers made a $40,326 payment Friday, which was the rest of the back rent she owed to her landlord. Failure to pay would have meant immediate eviction.

Rogers also recently made a $500 payment on her loan to the city, though she remains behind on payments by about $15,000. She continues to work with the city to repay the loan, said City of Cincinnati spokeswoman Meg Olberding. City officials understand that in order to make payments to the city, the restaurant had to be operating, Olberding has said.

Rogers has come under scrutiny ever since city officials two years ago gave her nearly $1 million to locate at The Banks. Of that, $300,000 was a loan, the rest a grant to furnish the restaurant.

After a poor winter, Rogers fell behind on her rent and loan payments.

The African American Chamber of Commerce has stepped in to help, providing an advisory council that includes chefs, restauranteurs and business people.

http://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/pol...t/7606283/
 
04-12-2014 12:17 AM
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beck Offline
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Post: #57
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
let's take all the political and racial undertones out of this. Done, so in black and white, what do we have? Bad business decisions continue to be made. This whole thing has been a sham from the beginning, please pass the popcorn.
 
04-12-2014 07:35 AM
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ctipton Offline
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Post: #58
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
Mahogany's owner, Smitherman battle over business plan
Sharon Coolidge, scoolidge@enquirer.com 2:51 p.m. EDT April 15, 2014

Mahogany's owner Liz Rogers was so protective of her business plan she threatened to take the matter to court rather than release it to the Cincinnati city councilman who wanted to review it.

In the end, the owner of The Banks restaurant shared it, imploring that Cincinnati City Councilman Christopher Smitherman not share it with the public in order to protect business secrets, records obtained by the Enquirer show.

Smitherman wanted the plan because Rogers is $23,000 behind on her loan payments to the city and he's concerned she won't be able to repay taxpayers.

He has not yet reviewed the plan; the Enquirer is seeking a copy of the plan.

Specifically, Rogers' lawyer, Janaya Trotter, told Smitherman she would ask a judge to halt the plan's release, adding that "the resources to litigate this matter... could be directed to making its loan with the City of Cincinnati current."

Later Rogers changed her mind, with Trotter writing in the follow-up that the city "has shown a commitment to Mahogany's success" and that a better use of her resources would be pay off the loan.

Rogers is meeting with Cincinnati city officials Wednesday to come up with a new payment plan. The current plan calls for her to pay $3,000 a month.

Rogers owes Cincinnati taxpayers $23,000 after falling seven months behind on her loan payments, city hall records show. She'll owe another $3,000 on May 1, an amount that would be close to 10 percent of the total loan.

She continues to work with the city to repay the loan, City of Cincinnati spokeswoman Meg Olberding told The Enquirer earlier this month. City officials understand that in order to make payments to the city the restaurant has to be operating, Olberding has said.

In Rogers' response to the city, Trotter added to Smitherman, a financial planner: "It is my client's hope that as a small business owner yourself and a sitting member of City Council that you have the same commitment to seeing the only African American owned business at The Banks succeed. While no one is sure of your reason for requesting my client's business plan, and recognizing by law you are not required to reveal your reason for its request, it is my client's hope that you will not release this information to potential competitors, which means releasing this information to the public at large."

Smitherman, one of three council members who voted against providing public help for Mahogany's, said his request is a "rational one."

"We're talking about other people's money so seeing the plan is important to know what the business owners' plan was to be successful," he said.

Rogers has come under scrutiny ever since city officials two years ago gave her nearly $1 million to locate at The Banks. Of that, $300,000 was a loan, the rest a grant to furnish the restaurant.

After the particularly bad winter, Rogers fell behind on her rent and loan payments and risked being evicted. She also told the city she was a victim of an $80,000 embezzlement; although Cincinnati police found no evidence of theft.

The African American Chamber of Commerce has stepped in to help, providing an advisory council that includes chefs, restaurateurs and business people.

Last week Rogers paid the last of her back rent, which at one point reached about $65,000.

http://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/pol...n/7741469/
 
04-15-2014 04:57 PM
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SuperFlyBCat Offline
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Post: #59
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
Really surprised that she paid the back rent. Did business ramp up that much or did someone give her money?
Sad that AA chamber of commerce had to step in with an advisory council. She was a terrible risk and not
worthy of a $300,000 loan or the $685,000 grant. A guy like David Faulk is a worthy risk.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/love-lette...17680.html

Chef David Falk, who owns and operates three restaurants as part of his Boca Restaurant Group, has lived and honed his craft at restaurants in Chicago, Rome and Florence. A graduate of the Culinary Institute of America, Falk moved home to Cincinnati in September 2001 and opened Boca, his first restaurant. Falk lives perched above downtown in the historic Prospect Hill neighborhood.

Italianate: an architectural style familiar to Cincinnatians, to me, this word means history, it means culture and the effect of row after row of rooftops overlooking the city I have called my home for so many years now. In the mid 19th century, you were the third largest city in America teeming with breweries, meat packing plants, and soap making facilities, yarn-spinners, potters, drunks, millionaires, future presidents, and every kind of immigrant imaginable. This is the kind of city I wanted to find when I left for New York, Chicago and later Rome. I wanted to be among the romantics, the artists, the students of the good life. I spent ten years searching for something I found almost immediately upon returning. Sometimes moving forward requires going back.

I am a chef. I am a restaurateur. It's what I do and I love doing it. I believe the same things that make a great restaurant make a great city: the connection between a vision and the people that carry it out, the structures that seem to rise from the mind to the sky and the progress of those who create them. Cincinnati, you are a city of creators. Restaurants, like cities, would not exist without the tireless ones, the ones that spend every ounce of energy toiling to make them great because they believe in the vision of visionaries.

I left because I was young and bored. Bored of mediocrity, bored of sugar in tomato sauce, bored of preppy girls with perfectly-starched preppy collars. That's all changed now. You're no longer drinking your pains away with Dayton, making subtle jabs at Akron, when Lebron James was just a glimmer in Cleveland's eye.

Cincinnati, you've grown into yourself, you eat vitamins, you've visited places, famous places, places where tourists take photographs. The braces are gone, you learned about "product"; people are calling you. They want something long-term.

Yet, you contradict yourself, and damn, if that doesn't make you hot. Your soul contains multitudes, as Whitman put it. You are Findlay Market, teeming with suburbanites and urbanites, homeless and renters, bleary-eyed bachelors and bright-faced families. You are the Roebling Bridge, the singing bridge. Hit me if this sounds lame, but you are hip. You're taking less time to do your nails because you can't wait to get back to killing it.

I don't always love you in winter. Would it kill you to snow once in awhile? But sometimes you relent, covering my Prospect Hill in white and my mind leaps continents and eras to snow-bound villages of my childhood daydreams. I love you in the fall when I drive out to New Richmond and you glow all shades of red, yellow and orange. Spring reminds me why we got involved in the first place: it was a warm sunny afternoon in one of your parks or some tree-lined street, the colors in the sky matching the pinkish hue of your lips. I even love you in summer... for about a week, and then the air gets so thick you could swear you were swimming in it. All of your faces are flawed and beautiful and inspire in me the passion I felt when I first saw your skyline stretched over the river as I drove through the Cut-in-the-Hill.

I left you for other women. They did not have your warmth, your endless gratitude or that look you give me when you're ready to leave a party. I remember that I have to share you now; you're a hot commodity; the bee's knees. But you taught me humility. The bend in the river always reminds me of the smiles of my guests as they leave my restaurants. I smile back knowing that sometimes a smile says enough.

When I left, Cincinnati's food scene was largely uninspired. Although, I must admit, I've always been intoxicated by your controversial chili. This strange Greek concoction maligned by some, fiercely defended by others, nursed me through so many hangovers (and contributed to a few). But you've changed and you're so much more. The facsimile boredom has imploded leaving in its white-bread dust gloriously reformed Cincinnati cuisine. You've given hillbillies and debutants equal opportunity to expand a passion for food that would make Fernand Pointe scream, "La Grande Cuisine!"

I'm humbled. You've accepted me with open arms, embracing my many quirks and whims, supporting my ambition and allowing me to take root in your core where the iconic Maisonette once held your heart. Shepherding me back to the place where I began. We are lucky enough to have people in this city driven by the pursuit of an ideal; dedicated to doing things the right way, the slow way. There was a time when you couldn't even get a decent cup of coffee in this town. Now, I can't throw a rock without hitting some hipster with a pour-over or a chemex, but I find it increasingly difficult to start my day without a cup brewed from this "collective" passion for coffee. When I buy beef, aged by generations of butchers or slide my tongue over cold French Pot ice cream to escape your summers, I feel close to you.

It's true, you're no longer known as the "Crown Jewel of the West," bragging to St. Louis about having the second tallest building in the world, your river filled to capacity with boats and barges, but you rumble with a new greatness. I can feel it when the symphony is warming up to Sceherazade in Music Hall, a building that can stir romance in the most cold-hearted soul; that feeling of butterflies in my stomach like it's the first date. I start to see our future together, imagining what our lives will look like. Will we continue to grow together? Will you always look this good?

Cincinnati, you and I both grew and changed while I was away. You are courageous; a romantic pioneer. I think I realized just how far you had come one night this summer, our city park ablaze with lights, lights that took an army of tech engineers to achieve, lights as a gift to your many lovers, 35,000 of them squeezed together in celebration. To steal a phrase from Fitzgerald's Great Gatsby, in those lights I saw our "orgiastic future." While Fitzgerald's light recedes farther and farther out of view, your light, Cincinnati, shines even brighter. You are no longer that embarrassing girlfriend I don't tell my friends about, insecure and self-conscious. You're alive and breathing in gasps of energy and I scream my love for you from the Italianate rooftops.

David Falk
 
04-15-2014 05:10 PM
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ctipton Offline
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Post: #60
RE: Mahogany's behind on city loan, payments to state
State closes Mahogany's at The Banks over back tax payments
State won't disclose how much is owed

UPDATED 4:59 PM EDT Aug 26, 2014

[Image: Mahogany-s-at-the-banks-generic.jpg]

CINCINNATI —A troubled restaurant at The Banks is closed again.

Mahogany's was closed Tuesday by the Ohio Department of Taxation.

The state said the restaurant did not pay its sales taxes.

The amount in question was not released.

The department said it was standard procedure to close any restaurant that failed to pay its taxes for two consecutive tax periods or three times in 12 months.

If the restaurant pays the amount owed, it will be allowed to reopen.

One employee told WLWT News 5 that her last paycheck bounced and that she and other employees received a call Tuesday telling them the restaurant would be closed and they would have the day off.

A city spokesman said owner Liz Rogers was also behind on a city loan repayment. He stressed that it was in everyone's best interest that the restaurant remain open so it can continue paying its employees and repaying its debts.

Mahogany's got a new general manager and menu in July in hopes of increasing business.

Mike Comisar, the former co-owner of the famed Maisonette, took the reins. Rogers will still own the restaurant, but Comisar will help with the changes.

Rogers has been under scrutiny in the past over missed rent and loan payments.

The city of Cincinnati loaned Rogers $300,000 to open the restaurant in July 2012. She also received a $684,000 grant.

Rogers owed $50,000 in back rent payments to The Banks' developer earlier this year.

The soul food restaurant is the only African-American-owned business at The Banks.

Rogers previously said a harsh winter hindered business.

http://www.wlwt.com/news/state-closes-ma...=H#!bKLSAh
 
08-26-2014 06:32 PM
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