TEXT NEWSTIPS/PHOTOS - 925-800-NEWS (6397)
Advertisement
Home » Contra Costa County Files Charges Against Unlicensed Landscape Contractor

Contra Costa County Files Charges Against Unlicensed Landscape Contractor

by CLAYCORD.com
8 comments

The Contra Costa County District Attorney’s Office announced Thursday felony and misdemeanor charges filed against an unlicensed contractor for allegedly defrauding multiple victims in the county.

Modesto resident Adan Contreras Rivas, 41, is being held on $600,000 bail in the Martinez Detention Facility on 38 charges, including those for financial elder abuse, theft by false pretense, theft with specified priors, and violations related to his fraudulent contracting practices.

Authorities have investigated Rivas since June, when initial accusations were reported by a Walnut Creek resident. Rivas was arrested in Morgan Hill Nov. 8, when he was operating under the name “Gutierrez Tree Services.”

Advertisement

He has also used other business names like “New View Tree Care.” Prosecutors said in a statement that Rivas allegedly posed as a licensed contractor in the landscaping and paver industry and took thousands of dollars from unsuspecting consumers.

According to the District Attorney’s Office, his alleged victims fit a particular profile: often elderly and residing in affluent neighborhoods in Walnut Creek and Concord. Investigators believe there are more victims around Contra Costa County, as well as the South Bay and the Central Valley.

Prosecutors said unlicensed contractors pose a threat to consumers by failing to acquire skills and licensure when hired to perform home improvement or construction projects. Some unlicensed contractors illegally require excessive down payments for construction or landscaping projects, and frequently fail to begin or complete projects once they receive money.

Consumers are often unaware unlicensed contractors don’t have completed background checks and usually don’t carry workers’ compensation insurance for their employees — which increases liability risks to consumers.

Advertisement

California law requires contractors to be licensed and possess workers’ compensation insurance for employees. Licensed contractors are only allowed to request a down payment of $1,000 or 10 percent of the contract (whichever is less).

For more information on how to verify a contractor’s license, people can go to cslb.ca.gov.

8 comments


Exit 12A November 17, 2022 - 5:34 PM - 5:34 PM

.
Is Rivas’ a US citizen or card-carrying resident alien?
.
The public should be informed of the immigration status of ALL those charged with a felony.
.
If no one is excluded, then it’s not discrimminatory, right?
.
Riiiiight.

6
5
ON DA November 17, 2022 - 7:01 PM - 7:01 PM

I doubt his real name is Rivas. And the charges only encompass known activity. He seems to have quite an extensive history.

Yoyohop November 18, 2022 - 8:48 AM - 8:48 AM

What exactly was the crime besides skirting licensure rules?

Would licensure have actually prevented the crime?

Rich November 18, 2022 - 9:06 AM - 9:06 AM

There is more to this story. This DA normally wouldn’t hold a POC on bail for crimes against “the privileged”. Rivas must of ripped off the wrong connected person

2
1
The Fearless Spectator November 18, 2022 - 8:14 PM - 8:14 PM

Bingo!

Clem November 18, 2022 - 9:17 AM - 9:17 AM

What about the thousands of unlicensed contractors and “gardeners” that operate in California and fail to pay taxes on their cash businesses! Go after them too instead of pretending it’s not an issue.

7
1
Ricardoh November 18, 2022 - 9:30 AM - 9:30 AM

Isn’t funny that the guy that ran down the police cadets in Southern California was let loose with no bail but the landscapers bail is six hundred thousand. What happened to equal justice?

5
2
Gittyup November 19, 2022 - 10:31 AM - 10:31 AM

“Justice is blind.” Right? Or, it used to be.


Comments are closed.

Advertisement

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter!

Latest News

© Copyright 2023 Claycord News & Talk