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Parking garage at Aventura
Mall
Photo by
Aixa Montero

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ax
security in the vast parking garage at upscale
Aventura Mall in north Miami-Dade County is
placing shoppers at risk of serious crime,
according to a new lawsuit by a woman who says
she was raped as a result of the purported
lapses.

But the developer and owner of the mall,
Turnberry Associates in Aventura, not only
denies any security problems but says the woman
was not raped on its premises. The mall contends
it has no independent knowledge, other than the
woman’s claim, that the incident took place.

Mary Mass, 44, an Aventura resident who works as
a real estate agent for Coldwell Banker, alleges
that as a result of poor security she was raped
one afternoon in November 2000 on the fourth
floor of the parking garage near
Bloomingdale’s.

In her negligence lawsuit, filed Nov. 27 in
Miami-Dade Circuit Court, Mass contends that the
rape was part of a broader security problem at
the mall garage, where a woman was murdered 10
months earlier on the same garage floor. In
addition to the murder and rape, she asserts,
the upscale mall has had multiple reports of
criminal activity in the parking garage — from
reckless display of a firearm to battery to
theft — but has failed to improve security.

Mass, who is represented by Spencer Aronfeld of
Aronfeld Trial Lawyers in Coral Gables, claims
that the mall “failed to respond to the
entirely foreseeable and predictive nature of
serious criminal activity, which had
historically occurred on the property.”

She alleges that New York City-based
Bloomingdale’s, which is a division of
Federated Department Stores, and
Pennsylvania-based Allied Security, which
provides security services at the mall, also
were negligent. She’s demanding $10 million in
compensatory damages for medical costs, lost
wages, and pain and suffering. She said she
hopes to start a foundation for rape victims.

Whether or not there is a security problem at
the Aventura Mall, parking lots filled with
shoppers have been hot spots for crime for
several years. In 1995 an internal memo by a
Wal-Mart executive cautioned that the problem of
shoppers being assaulted in store parking lots
had become severe. Indeed, according to a story
in the Orlando Sentinel this week, the crime
rate around an Orlando-area mall rose by more
than 70 percent the year after the store opened.

Wal-Mart is hardly alone. In December the family
of a man who was beaten to death in the parking
lot of Illinois grocer Eagle Country Markets was
sued in Bloomington, Ill., for failing to take
adequate safety precautions. In September a
large Columbia, S.C., mall was concerned enough
about security that it undertook a
multimillion-dollar renovation to install a
42-camera system.

Responding to the lawsuit, Turnberry Associates
said the parking garage is safe, and it denied
that the rape occurred. “Aventura Mall denies
that the incident alleged in the complaint
occurred at the Aventura Mall or the
Bloomingdale’s parking garage,” the mall
stated in a court filing dated Dec. 23.

The mall, which is being represented by Robert
W. Hudson, a partner at Carlton Fields in Miami,
also rejected any allegation that there is a
wider security problem. In court papers, it
denied the accuracy of Mass’ statement that
the mall has ignored numerous security problems.
It termed her allegations “argumentative,
inflammatory and unnecessary.”

Hudson did not return calls for comment.

Donald Soffer, chief executive officer of
Turnberry Associates, was on vacation in the
Bahamas and could not be reached for comment.
Marcie Getelman, general counsel for Turnberry
Associates, reiterated the mall’s claim that
there is no evidence the rape took place. She
also added that security in the mall is
“fine.”

Allied’s attorney, Paul H. Field, a partner at
Lane Reese Aulick Summers & Field in Coral
Gables, did not return calls for comment. A
Bloomingdale’s spokeswoman declined to
comment.

Aventura Mall is a high-end mall with
approximately 250 stores in Aventura, an
affluent northern Miami-Dade community. In
addition to the Aventura Mall, other properties
owned by Turnberry Associates include the
Fontainebleau II in Miami Beach and Porto Vita
in Aventura. It also developed Turnberry Isle
Resort & Club in Aventura.

In her lawsuit, Mass contends that on Nov. 13,
2000, after shopping in the mall, she returned
to her sport utility vehicle on the fourth floor
of the garage.

As she approached her vehicle and reached for
her keys, she claims, she was grabbed from
behind. Her assailant held a knife to her
throat, forced her behind her car and raped her.
She says she never saw the face of the rapist,
who fled the scene.

Mass did not report the incident to mall
security or to Aventura Police until nearly nine
months later, in August 2001. According to Capt.
William Washa of the Aventura Police, Mass
reported the incident so late that the chances
of identifying the assailant were slim.

In an interview, Mass said she had been friendly
with Donald Soffer and several members of his
family for a long time, and originally did not
plan to file a lawsuit. Instead, she said, she
asked the Soffer family to pay a $10,000
settlement and to cover the costs of her rape
treatment at the Roxcy Bolton Rape Treatment
Center at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami.
But she said the Soffer family refused to pay.

After her rape, she said, she returned to the
parking garage and found that security was
“nonexistent.” That’s when she decided to
file suit. “If this had happened to one of the
Soffers, there would be a security officer on
every floor,” Mass said.

Ironically, prior to her rape, she said, she
learned about the January 2000 murder in the
garage from Jackie Soffer, daughter of Donald
Soffer and partner in Turnberry Associates,
while they were lunching together. Jackie Soffer
did not return calls for comment.

On the morning of Jan. 4, 2000, a 28-year-old
North Miami Beach resident named Cathy Hilton,
who was a waitress at the mall’s Rainforest
Cafe, was murdered in the Bloomingdale’s
garage after getting out of her car to go to
work.

According to Aventura police, a drifter named
Timothy Joseph Layton strangled Hilton with a
plastic rope, and stole her Mustang convertible.
Using a security videotape, police were able to
arrest Layton, who confessed to the crime and is
now in prison.

Following the Hilton murder, officials at the
mall announced plans to increase security.
“You’ll see a higher level of visibility of
patrolling than before,” said Bob Burke, the
mall manager at the time.

Besides the Hilton murder, there have been
several other reported instances of violent
crime at the mall over the last three years. In
June 1999, a man fired two shots at a mall
security guard who had asked him to put out his
cigar. In November 2000, a man shot and killed
another man who had been having an affair with
his wife, then shot and killed himself.

Mass explained her long delay in reporting the
rape by saying she didn’t do so until after
beginning treatment at Roxcy Bolton. She noted
that it is not uncommon for rape victims to not
immediately report such crimes.

But Capt. Washa said her delay greatly lessened
the chances of catching the assailant. “Had
she come forward a week or even a month after it
happened, the guy might have been caught,”
said Washa. “We might have been able to catch
the guy on a video camera. But because it was so
late everything had been erased.”


Matthew Haggman can be reached at mhaggman@floridabiz.com
or at (305) 347-6649.
Published on aronfeld.com with
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