Showing posts with label estate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label estate. Show all posts

Monday, April 25, 2016

Prince Rogers Nelson estate may be left to his siblings - List of brothers, sisters - Death, Obituary, Estate

Prince Rogers Nelson, cause of death, medical examiner report, autopsy, toxicology report, lab results, fentanyl overdose, opiod, obituary, estate, probate, siblings, brothers, sisters, death, died
Prince Rogers Nelson, obituary, estate, probate, siblings, brothers, sisters, death, died
UPDATE: 06/02/2016 The medical examiner stated the cause of death of Prince Rogers Nelson is accidentally self-administered fentanyl overdose. He was 5'3" 112 lbs. Sad.

"Fentanyl, prescribed by doctors for cancer treatment, can be made illicitly and is blamed for a spike in overdose deaths in the United States. It's 25 to 50 times more potent than heroin and 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration."

UPDATE: 04/26/2016 Prince's sister Tyka just filed docs stating Prince had no will. Tyka lists his living siblings. "Tyka lists the people who are potential beneficiaries ... all of whom are half brothers and sisters. They are John, Norrine, Sharon, Alfred and Omarr. They are all living siblings of Prince. She also says she's an heir entitled to her cut."

http://www.tmz.com/2016/04/26/prince-no-will-probate-sister-tyka/

The list of living siblings I posted below yesterday is correct.

Prince Rogers Nelson born June 7, 1958, died April 21, 2016 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prince may have died without a will also called intestate. Based on the laws of Minnesota his estate would go to his current wife, parents and siblings. As he was currently married, his parents are dead that leaves his estate to his brothers and sisters. If a sibling is dead, that portion would be divided upon that person's children if any. Here are a list of all of Princes full and half siblings.

He has one full sister Tyka Evene Nelson May 18, 1960. He has seven other half siblings. Two of them are dead Lorna Lee Nelson and Duane Joseph Nelson. This leaves six living siblings, half siblings to share the estate along with any children of the deceased siblings.
Prince Rogers Nelson, obituary, estate, probate, siblings, brothers, sisters, death, died


Mary Cummins of Animal Advocates is a wildlife rehabilitator licensed by the California Department of Fish and Game. Mary Cummins is also a licensed real estate appraiser in Los Angeles, California.

Mary Cummins, Mary K. Cummins, Mary Katherine Cummins, Mary Cummins-Cobb, Mary, Cummins, Cobb, real estate, appraiser, appraisal, instructor, teacher, Los Angeles, Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, Pasadena, Brentwood, Bel Air, California, licensed, permitted, single family, condo, pud, hud, fannie mae, freddie mac, uspap, certified, residential, certified resident, apartment building, multi-family, commercial, industrial, expert witness, civil, criminal, orea, dre, insurance, bonded, experienced, bilingual, spanish, english, form, 1004, 2055, land, raw, acreage, vacant, insurance, cost, income approach, market analysis, comparative, theory, appraisal theory, cost approach, sales, matched pairs, plot, plat, map, diagram, photo, photographs, photography, rear, front, street, subject, comparable, sold, listed, active, pending, expired, cancelled, listing, mls, multiple listing service, claw, themls,

Monday, October 26, 2015

Elton John, David Furnish buy 9904 Kip Dr, Beverly Hills, California 90210 - Mary Cummins, real estate appraiser

Elton John, David Furnish buy 9904 Kip Drive, Beverly Hills, California 90210, Bel Air, Holmby hills, home, house, mansion
Elton John and his husband David Funish purchase ten bedroom mansion in Beverly Hills post office October 2015. John and Furnish purchased the home for $32,670,000. It was originally listed at $43,000,000. It was also offered for lease for $195,000 per month.

"A long private drive leads to this nearly twenty acre estate, beautifully landscaped for maximum privacy and security just minutes to the Beverly Hills Hotel. Over 30,000 square feet of living space, designed by KAA Associates provide for large scale entertaining and world class art collections. All principle rooms face acres of gardens and grounds with spectacular views of canyon and city lights as background. Main house comprises of 10 bedrooms, 22 baths, formal living room, formal dining room, gourmet kitchen with breakfast room, library, two family rooms and professional screening room. Luxurious amenities include garage for eight cars, elevator , wine cellar, gym, game room. Separate staff quarters with three bedrooms and full kitchen, mosaic-tiled pool with stunning pool house and a hidden tennis court."

Elton John, David Furnish buy 9904 Kip Drive, Beverly Hills, California 90210, Bel Air, Holmby hills, home, house, mansion

Elton John, David Furnish buy 9904 Kip Drive, Beverly Hills, California 90210, Bel Air, Holmby hills, home, house, mansion

Elton John, David Furnish buy 9904 Kip Drive, Beverly Hills, California 90210, Bel Air, Holmby hills, home, house, mansion

Elton John, David Furnish buy 9904 Kip Drive, Beverly Hills, California 90210, Bel Air, Holmby hills, home, house, mansion
I just check records. The house has not yet legally sold. There has been no transfer in ownership. Home was actually built in 2001, not 2011.

Elton John, David Furnish buy 9904 Kip Drive, Beverly Hills, California 90210, Bel Air, Holmby hills, home, house, mansion


Mary Cummins of Animal Advocates is a wildlife rehabilitator licensed by the California Department of Fish and Game. Mary Cummins is also a licensed real estate appraiser in Los Angeles, California.

Mary Cummins, Mary K. Cummins, Mary Katherine Cummins, Mary Cummins-Cobb, Mary, Cummins, Cobb, real estate, appraiser, appraisal, instructor, teacher, Los Angeles, Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, Pasadena, Brentwood, Bel Air, California, licensed, permitted, single family, condo, pud, hud, fannie mae, freddie mac, uspap, certified, residential, certified resident, apartment building, multi-family, commercial, industrial, expert witness, civil, criminal, orea, dre, insurance, bonded, experienced, bilingual, spanish, english, form, 1004, 2055, land, raw, acreage, vacant, insurance, cost, income approach, market analysis, comparative, theory, appraisal theory, cost approach, sales, matched pairs, plot, plat, map, diagram, photo, photographs, photography, rear, front, street, subject, comparable, sold, listed, active, pending, expired, cancelled, listing, mls, multiple listing service, claw, themls,

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Date of death, historical appraisal of real property for estate and tax purposes - Mary Cummins real estate appraiser, appraisal in Los Angeles, California

Mary Cummins, date of death, historical, appraisal, appraiser, Los Angeles, California
When some passes away and owns real estate a date of death, historical appraisal may be needed for tax or estate purposes. The appraiser's job is to ascertain the value of the property at the day of death. Cummins has been doing date of death, historical appraisals of real estate in Los Angeles, California for banks, lawyers and private individuals for over thirty years.

With an average residential property the appraiser gathers sales of similar homes without a certain distance within six months or so before the day of death. For example if the home was built in 1950, is 2,000 sf, 3 bed, 2 ba, on a 6,500 sf lot the appraiser would initially search for sold homes +/- 15% difference in square footage (1,700-2,300 sf), sold six months before date of death, within 1/2 mile radius of subject, in the same city and development. Ideally we should find at least six sold homes very similar to the subject property. We would then choose the most similar comparables based on condition, location, amenities, improvements...

Unfortunately this rarely happens except in newer tract homes so the appraiser must widen the search to find the most comparable sold properties. Location, size of improvement, bed/bath count are generally the most important factors. If the home has a view or is located on the beach, all comparables must have similar views, locations. The difference between view, no view can be up to 50% in some nicer areas near the ocean.

After we have chosen our six most similar sold comparables, we input them into our real estate appraisal form. We use ala mode software. We input the most similar of the six comparables into the number one column then add the rest in descending order based on degree of similarity. After this we adjust for each of the line item differences if necessary such as the differences in square footage, bed/bath count, lot size, condition, age.... Ideally we should have chosen the most similar comparables so we should have few adjustments.

Besides the sales approach we often include the cost approach. This generally sets the upper limit of value. This is not the best indication of value as there are generally few vacant land sales available in the immediate area. The appraiser generally has to obtain a land value by abstraction or allocation. Sometimes an income approach is added if perhaps the property is a vacation rental.

After we have done all of our research and have our sales, cost and income approach valuations we reconcile the three values to come up with the appraised value. With a single family home or two to four plex in most areas the sales market approach carries the most weight with the cost approach setting the upper level of value.

The final part of a date of death, historical appraisal is to add the limiting conditions. With this type of report the appraiser states that the property was inspected as of a certain date. The report was signed as of a certain date. But, the date of the "value" of the property is the date of death. The appraiser assumes the property was in the same condition on the date of death as inspected. If not, the appraiser makes note of the condition at date of death and includes this in the valuation.

Contact Mary Cummins of Cummins Real Estate Appraisals if you have a question or need a date of death, historical appraisal (310) 877-4770 or Mary@MaryCummins.com Average single family residential appraisal is $300.

Mary Cummins of Animal Advocates is a wildlife rehabilitator licensed by the California Department of Fish and Game. Mary Cummins is also a licensed real estate appraiser in Los Angeles, California.

Mary Cummins, Mary K. Cummins, Mary Katherine Cummins, Mary Cummins-Cobb, Mary, Cummins, Cobb, real estate, appraiser, appraisal, instructor, teacher, Los Angeles, Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, Pasadena, Brentwood, Bel Air, California, licensed, permitted, single family, condo, pud, hud, fannie mae, freddie mac, uspap, certified, residential, certified resident, apartment building, multi-family, commercial, industrial, expert witness, civil, criminal, orea, dre, insurance, bonded, experienced, bilingual, spanish, english, form, 1004, 2055, land, raw, acreage, vacant, insurance, cost, income approach, market analysis, comparative, theory, appraisal theory, cost approach, sales, matched pairs, plot, plat, map, diagram, photo, photographs, photography, rear, front, street, subject, comparable, sold, listed, active, pending, expired, cancelled, listing, mls, multiple listing service, claw, themls,

Friday, September 12, 2014

Mary Cummins Real Estate Appraiser Los Angeles, California

Mary Cummins Real Estate Appraiser Appraisal Los Angeles California Animal Advocates

Mary Cummins Real Estate Appraiser Appraisal Los Angeles California Animal Advocates

Mary Cummins Real Estate Appraiser Appraisal Los Angeles California Animal Advocates

Mary Cummins Real Estate Appraiser Appraisal Los Angeles California Animal Advocates

Mary Cummins Real Estate Appraiser Appraisal Los Angeles California Animal Advocates

Mary Cummins Real Estate Appraiser Appraisal Los Angeles California Animal Advocates

Mary Cummins Real Estate Appraiser Appraisal Los Angeles California Animal Advocates

Mary Cummins Real Estate Appraiser Appraisal Los Angeles California Animal Advocates

Mary Cummins Real Estate Appraiser Appraisal Los Angeles California Animal Advocates

Mary Cummins Real Estate Appraiser Appraisal Los Angeles California Animal Advocates

Mary Cummins Real Estate Appraiser Appraisal Los Angeles California Animal Advocates


Mary Cummins of Animal Advocates is a wildlife rehabilitator licensed by the California Department of Fish and Game. Mary Cummins is also a licensed real estate appraiser in Los Angeles, California.

Mary Cummins, Mary K. Cummins, Mary Katherine Cummins, Mary Cummins-Cobb, Mary, Cummins, Cobb, real estate, appraiser, appraisal, instructor, teacher, Los Angeles, Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, Pasadena, Brentwood, Bel Air, California, licensed, permitted, single family, condo, pud, hud, fannie mae, freddie mac, uspap, certified, residential, certified resident, apartment building, multi-family, commercial, industrial, expert witness, civil, criminal, orea, dre, insurance, bonded, experienced, bilingual, spanish, english, form, 1004, 2055, land, raw, acreage, vacant, insurance, cost, income approach, market analysis, comparative, theory, appraisal theory, cost approach, sales, matched pairs, plot, plat, map, diagram, photo, photographs, photography, rear, front, street, subject, comparable, sold, listed, active, pending, expired, cancelled, listing, mls, multiple listing service, claw, themls,

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Heidi Klum selling 12759 Chalon Road, Brentwood home for $25,000,000 - Mary Cummins, Real Estate Appraiser, Los Angeles, California

Heidi Klum, Seal, Brentwood home - Mary Cummins, Real Estate Appraiser, Los Angeles, California

Heidi Klum, Seal, Brentwood home - Mary Cummins, Real Estate Appraiser, Los Angeles, California, 12759 Chalon Road, Los Angeles, CA 90049

12759 Chalon Road, Los Angeles, CA 90049 The Italian-style villa, completed in 1999, has been given the Heidi makeover—a complete renovation that revived and refreshed a front-row oceanview estate in the premier guard-gated community in Brentwood, located off bucolic Mandeville Canyon.

The Emmy Award–winning executive producer and host of “Project Runway” and judge on “Germany’s Next Topmodel” and the top-rated “America’s Got Talent” tapped her creative skills to transform the 12,300-square-foot, 8-bedroom 10-bath estate into a warm family home.

Iron gates open to a central motor court with a fountain. Radiating out from the double-height entrance hall are the main living areas—formal living room, formal dining room with wood paneling imported from a private dining room of a hotel in Paris, library with ornate ebonized wood bookcase that came from Napoleon’s country home in France, eat-in chef’s kitchen, butler’s pantry, family room, home office, media room and temperature-controlled wine cellar.

The high-ceilinged, perfectly proportioned rooms and hallways provide plenty of gallery-like wall space for art and photography. French doors offer access to multiple terraces and patios for a variety of outdoor dining and entertaining options.

Upstairs, the master suite consists of a bedroom, living room, terrace with ocean views, his and her custom closets and his and her bathrooms. There are 7 other bedrooms, including a professionally customized dressing/styling room.

Set on approx. 8.5 acres with approx. 3 acres of flat land, the grounds have ample recreational spaces for adults and children—infinity-edge pool and spa, koi pond, formal rose garden, fountains, lawns, gazebos, rolling green for golf putting and driving, children’s playhouse and slide, secret gardens and hiking trails—all with unobstructed ocean views and complete privacy.

Offered at $25 million.
Shown to pre-qualified buyers only.

Heidi Klum, Seal, Brentwood home - Mary Cummins, Real Estate Appraiser, Los Angeles, California

Heidi Klum, Seal, Brentwood home - Mary Cummins, Real Estate Appraiser, Los Angeles, California

Heidi Klum, Seal, Brentwood home - Mary Cummins, Real Estate Appraiser, Los Angeles, California

Heidi Klum, Seal, Brentwood home - Mary Cummins, Real Estate Appraiser, Los Angeles, California
http://www.heidiklumestate.com/

Heidi Klum bought a Bel Air estate last year which she is currently renovating.

https://homes.yahoo.com/news/heidi-klum-buys-home-bel-air-183101453.html

Mary Cummins of Animal Advocates is a wildlife rehabilitator licensed by the California Department of Fish and Game. Mary Cummins is also a licensed real estate appraiser in Los Angeles, California.

Mary Cummins, Mary K. Cummins, Mary Katherine Cummins, Mary Cummins-Cobb, Mary, Cummins, Cobb, real estate, appraiser, appraisal, instructor, teacher, Los Angeles, Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, Pasadena, Brentwood, Bel Air, California, licensed, permitted, single family, condo, pud, hud, fannie mae, freddie mac, uspap, certified, residential, certified resident, apartment building, multi-family, commercial, industrial, expert witness, civil, criminal, orea, dre, insurance, bonded, experienced, bilingual, spanish, english, form, 1004, 2055, land, raw, acreage, vacant, insurance, cost, income approach, market analysis, comparative, theory, appraisal theory, cost approach, sales, matched pairs, plot, plat, map, diagram, photo, photographs, photography, rear, front, street, subject, comparable, sold, listed, active, pending, expired, cancelled, listing, mls, multiple listing service, claw, themls,

Saturday, March 22, 2014

100th Anniversary of the City of Beverly Hills - Mary Cummins, Animal Advocates

Beverly Hills City Hall, Mary Cummins, Real Estate Appraiser

My family lived in Beverly Hills, California. I grew up going to Beverly Hills Catholic School now called Good Shepherd Catholic School on Linden and Charleville. We attended Good Shepherd Catholic Church on Santa Monica Blvd and Roxbury. I then attended Beverly Hills El Rodeo elementary school then Beverly Hills High School. I was on the swim and water polo team. Below is a brief history of Beverly Hills from the Beverly Hills Historical Society. There's a link at the bottom if you want to see images and videos.

"BEVERLY HILLS, A BRIEF HISTORY

Throughout history, there appears to have always been something special about the land that became Beverly Hills. The original inhabitants, the native Tongva, recognized it as a kind of oasis in a semi-arid basin, the place they poetically called "the gathering of the waters." The Spanish explorer Don Jose Gaspar de Portolà realized it, too, and when his expedition happened upon the Tongva's Eden, he recorded the locals' name for it in Spanish, El Rodeo de las Aguas.

The Tongva native above the electric fountain. Intersection of Wilshire and Santa Monica Boulevards.

With Europeans, however, came a series of difficulties, beginning with smallpox, which wiped out the majority of Tongva. In 1838, the governor of the Mexican-controlled California territory deeded a land grant of 4,500 acres that make up the core of present-day Beverly Hills to Maria Rita Valdez Villa, the African-Mexican widow of a Spanish soldier. It became a cattle and horse ranch, El Rancho Rodeo de las Aguas. She built an adobe home at what is now the intersection of Alpine Drive and Sunset Boulevard. As was the custom, livestock grazed wherever they liked but were herded annually at a festive rodeo where a giant eucalyptus stood near today's intersection of Pico and Robertson Boulevards.

In 1852, Maria Rita survived a siege and shoot-out with Native Americans who attacked the rancho. This may have influenced her to sell her land two years later to Henry Hancock and Benjamin Wilson. Unfortunately for the new owners, the waters dried up a few years later, followed by a long drought that left their livestock to die (Hancock and Wilson are remembered today with Hancock Park and Mt. Wilson, respectively). By 1868, the land came into the hands of Edward Preuss, who sought to establish a community for immigrant German farmers, to be called the City of Santa Maria. In the meantime, he turned the ranch into a lima bean field, selling his crop to cover taxes. Santa Maria was never to be after yet another drought ensued, thwarting Preuss' dream.

Early in the 1880s, Henry Hammel and Charles Denker acquired the land with the intention of creating "Morocco," a subdivision with a North African theme. The U.S. economic collapse of 1888 put a quick end to that scheme. In 1900, the fortunes of the former rancho began to improve. A group of oil-speculating investors, led by Burton E. Green, bought the bean field on behalf of Amalgamated Oil Company. Green drilled a series of wells that failed to strike oil; however, they did strike water, a lot of water -- enough to support a town. In 1906, Green and his partners reorganized as the Rodeo Land and Water Company. Inspired by Beverly Farms, Massachusetts, Green and his wife renamed the bean field “Beverly Hills.”

In 1907, landscape architect Wilbur D. Cook was hired to design a street plan for Beverly Hills. Applying the tenets of the great Frederick Law Olmstead, Cook laid out curving streets with larger lots on the north side and a basic grid with smaller lots on the south side, with a triangular commercial district in between. All streets were (and remain) tree-lined. A plentiful amount of land was set aside for public parks, plus four elementary schools and a high school. The vision was to make the area affordable to a range of incomes, as long as the buyers weren’t black or Jewish. These shameful restrictive covenants would eventually fall in a lawsuit brought by Hattie McDaniel, Ethel Waters, and other notable African-Americans in the 1940s.

The first house was completed in 1907, but sales were slow. To bolster the interest of potential buyers, Green, in 1912, completed construction of the Beverly Hills Hotel on the site where the waters once gathered. The luxurious establishment served not only travelers but the locals as a de facto city hall, community center, movie theatre, and religious worship venue. Sitting in what was then the middle of nowhere, the hotel was reached by the specially-constructed Dinky Railroad, a wondrous attraction in itself at the time. By 1914, the local population was large enough to support incorporation of Beverly Hills as a city, but real growth didn’t take off until the era’s most glamorous couple, Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks, bought a lot on Summit Drive, where they built their home, Pickfair. Following their fashionable lead was a host of film industry stars, directors, and producers, who began the celebrity mystique that remains a constant of Beverly Hills to this day.

What also brought fame to the young city was the addition in 1919, of the Beverly Hills Speedway, the site of auto races second in importance only to Indy. The course, covering most of the southwest quadrant of the city, barely made it through half of the Roaring Twenties. Among the notable structures built on land formerly traversed by race cars was the Beverly Wilshire Hotel in 1928. The same year, Edward L. Doheny completed Greystone, a 55-room mansion and estate, a wedding gift for his son, which is now owned by the city and operated as a museum, park, and event venue.

With growth came the return of a problem that haunted the 19th-century rancho, a potential shortage of water.  In 1923, an effort to secure a steady water supply through annexation by the City of Los Angeles was defeated by the voters thanks to opposition led by Mary Pickford, who feared the loss of local identity.  Celebrities continued to be important to civic life, most notably the nationally-cherished humorist and honorary mayor of Beverly Hills, Will Rogers, in whose memory the park across Sunset Boulevard from the Beverly Hills Hotel was renamed after his death.

The 1930s brought construction of the magnificent Beverly Hills City Hall (architect, William Gage) in the Spanish Renaissance style, the main post office opposite City Hall, and the extension of Santa Monica Park, across the street from the new civic buildings, from three blocks to the entire length of the north side of Santa Monica Boulevard from Wilshire Boulevard to North Doheny Drive, along with being renamed Beverly Gardens Park. The elegant “Electric Fountain,” featuring a central pillar atop which is posed a kneeling Tongva native amidst the spray of the “gathering waters,” was installed at the northeast corner of Wilshire and Santa Monica boulevards.  The jets of water effuse a multi-color glow at night, thanks to a programmed lighting system.

In the late 1940s, as the nation entered the post-World War II recovery, the city began to develop rapidly.  With Rodeo Drive as its focus, the commercial district became known as the Golden Triangle as an ever-increasing number of internationally-renowned retailers opened there.  By the 1950s, the city’s reputation as a haven for the renowned, locale for grand homes, center of luxury shopping, and go-to place for fine dining spread worldwide with the production of films and television series set within it.  The city also grew physically with the annexation of a large tract of land in the hills above the east side of town, the area known as Trousdale Estates, originally part of the Greystone estate.

Facing stiff competition for shoppers from new nearby shopping malls, Beverly Hills moved to shore up its status as the region’s premier shopping area.  In 1989, Two Rodeo and its pedestrian path, Via Rodeo, opened, quickly becoming not only a shopping and tourist magnet but a popular photo and film backdrop.  By the 1990s, the demand for services and the need for seismic retrofitting moved the city to restore and strengthen City Hall and build an expanded civic center with a modernized main fire station and library and an entirely new police headquarters (architect, Charles Moore).  In 1996, the Paley Center for Media opened its west coast location, a significant new building by Richard Meier, at the southwest corner of North Beverly Drive and South (“Little”) Santa Monica Boulevard.  In addition, the shopping blocks of North Rodeo Drive were enhanced with new landscaped medians and sidewalks, as well as improved street lighting.  Similar sidewalk and lighting enhancements were made to the shopping streets of North Beverly Drive and North Cañon Drive.

Moving into the 21st Century, the city added two new important attractions, the 9/11 Memorial, a striking design containing an actual steel beam recovered from the ruins of the World Trade Center, and the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts (design:  SPF:a – Studio Pali Fekete architects), a significant cultural resource that repurposes the classic U.S. Post Office building that was decommissioned by the U.S. Postal Service.  The grand hall of the old post office with its enduring ceiling murals (artist, Charles Kassler, Jr.), a product of the WPA during the Great Depression, is now the lobby, with what was once the work area behind the clerks’ windows and post boxes turned into a flexible 150-seat theatre, a theatre school with three classrooms, a café, and gift shop.  A modern addition, the 500-seat Goldsmith Theatre, is a state-of-the-art-facility for presenting a wide range of world-class performers.

As Beverly Hills approached the 100th anniversary of its incorporation, concern began to grow over the lack of an historic preservation ordinance to protect significant structures located within the city limits.  In response, the City Council enacted one with the honor of Historic Landmark No. 1 being bestowed upon the Beverly Hills Hotel.  Upon achieving its centennial in 2014, Beverly Hills continues to mature with renewed appreciation for its past, remaining true to Burton Green’s vision of an oasis of refinement, while meeting the challenges of the future."


http://www.beverlyhillshistoricalsociety.org/home

Mary Cummins of Animal Advocates is a wildlife rehabilitator licensed by the California Department of Fish and Game. Mary Cummins is also a licensed real estate appraiser in Los Angeles, California.

Mary Cummins, Mary K. Cummins, Mary Katherine Cummins, Mary Cummins-Cobb, Mary, Cummins, Cobb, real estate, appraiser, appraisal, instructor, teacher, Los Angeles, Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, Pasadena, Brentwood, Bel Air, California, licensed, permitted, single family, condo, pud, hud, fannie mae, freddie mac, uspap, certified, residential, certified resident, apartment building, multi-family, commercial, industrial, expert witness, civil, criminal, orea, dre, insurance, bonded, experienced, bilingual, spanish, english, form, 1004, 2055, land, raw, acreage, vacant, insurance, cost, income approach, market analysis, comparative, theory, appraisal theory, cost approach, sales, matched pairs, plot, plat, map, diagram, photo, photographs, photography, rear, front, street, subject, comparable, sold, listed, active, pending, expired, cancelled, listing, mls, multiple listing service, claw, themls,

The Disappeared Los Desaparecidos Art Installation in Los Angeles, California by Mary Cummins

THE DISAPPEARED. Graphic artist Pauline Mateos created the art installation with the names and faces of people who have been detained or de...