The Garden Island corrects errors of fact in news stories. If you notice an error, please contact us at one of the numbers listed in the staff box below. •The Tuesday article “Officials: Lull death a suicide; hunt continues for
The Garden Island corrects errors of fact in news stories. If you notice an error, please contact us at one of the numbers listed in the staff box below.
•The Tuesday article “Officials: Lull death a suicide; hunt continues for his assets” should state that Kaua‘i accountant William Hancock and admitted fraud artist James Lull were never in a partnership but were co-stockholders in a corporation that was a member of the development group Kapa‘a 382, LLC.
The reason the Honolulu bankruptcy court judge ruled that Hancock must pay $1 million to Lull’s bankruptcy trustee is the judge ruled Hancock had benefited from a $1 million payment Lull made for a debt that he owed to Kapa‘a 382, to Hanalei’s William Mowry, to pay down a Kapa‘a 382 loan from Mowry on which Lull and Hancock were personal guarantors. Hancock said the amount of the court judgment may be in dispute, whether it is $1 million or $500,000, and that he filed a notice of appeal Monday.