
""Upon further internal review, the city has determined that its prior public communication contained inaccurate information," Beverly Hills admitted in a statement posted on Instagram. "Specifically, no permit application was submitted nor denied for the event and the residence does not have any prior related violations on record. The city takes full accountability for the internal error that resulted in the inaccurate statement being distributed and is working to ensure it does not happen again.""
"Brown posted footage of the moment. Beverly Hills released a statement afterward to Gary Washburn of The Boston Globe, claiming "Despite the fact that the permit was denied, organizers still chose to proceed with inviting hundreds of guests knowing that it was not allowed to occur." In response, Brown denied the charge, saying simply, "That was not true," noting that the event had taken place on private property of a host who had agreed to the event."
Jaylen Brown held an event at Oakley founder James Jannard's mansion during NBA All-Star weekend that was interrupted when seven police cars arrived and a planned panel was shut down. Beverly Hills initially told The Boston Globe that a permit had been denied and criticized organizers for proceeding. Brown denied that account, saying the gathering occurred on private property with the host's agreement. After an internal review, the city acknowledged its previous statement contained inaccurate information, confirmed no permit application was submitted or denied, accepted full accountability for the error and apologized to Brown and the Jannard family.
Read at Boston.com
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