LA Council Challenger Jordan Rivers Stands Firm Amid Childhood Stabbing Claims

By Matthias Binder
L.A. City Council candidate stays in race after report that he stabbed a boy at age 12 (Featured Image)

The Garage Playdate That Turned Violent (Image Credits: Ca-times.brightspotcdn.com)

Los Angeles City Council District 15 — A decade-old civil lawsuit alleging that candidate Jordan Rivers stabbed a neighbor boy during a playdate has reignited debate in the harbor-area race.[1][2]

The Garage Playdate That Turned Violent

On July 30, 2016, then-12-year-old Jordan Rivers visited the San Pedro home of 8-year-old Nicholas Parszik, about five houses away from his own. The boys planned to play video games in the garage. What followed was a sudden incident that left Nicholas with stab wounds to his neck and shoulder.[1][2]

Nicholas’ older brother, Nathaniel, played basketball outside roughly 50 yards from the garage. He heard a scream, rushed over, and saw Rivers shove past him before sprinting home. Paul Parszik, Nicholas’ father, recounted his son running inside covered in blood: “My son came running into the house with half his shirt covered in blood… He was screaming and crying.”[2][3] Paramedics arrived as Paul pressed his fingers into the wounds to stem the bleeding. Doctors later warned the family that the blade missed vital areas by a quarter inch.[1]

Civil Lawsuit and Quiet Resolution

The Parszik family filed a civil suit in Los Angeles County Superior Court in 2018. They claimed Rivers inflicted severe, life-threatening injuries in an unprovoked attack. The complaint sought compensation for medical costs and emotional trauma. Nicholas recovered physically but carries permanent scars.[1][2]

Rivers’ mother, Eunice Rivers, settled the case out of court for $10,000 without admitting fault. Paul Parszik later alleged in court filings that the full amount, plus interest, remained unpaid. He described the suit partly as a push to prompt the Rivers family to relocate, though they stayed in the neighborhood. Juvenile records from any law enforcement involvement remain sealed, and Rivers served no time in juvenile hall.[1]

Rivers Denies Intent, Vows to Continue Campaign

Rivers called the episode an accident from his youth. He explained carrying a cooking knife under a video game controller after preparing food, unaware during play-fighting until Nicholas was hurt. “I do not believe that past situations or indeed past mistakes define or determine who a person is or what they are,” he stated.[1]

The California Post first reported the lawsuit on March 9, 2026, the deadline for candidates to withdraw. Rivers dismissed any racial bias in the coverage and affirmed his commitment to the June 2 primary. A lifelong District 15 resident and community organizer, he affiliates with the Greens and attended a pro-Cuba event recently.[1][2]

Opponent and Victim Family React

Incumbent Tim McOsker, seeking a second term, expressed sympathy. “I am saddened and troubled that this happened here in our community, and my heart breaks for the victim and his family,” he said. His campaign, which raised over $190,000 by late last year, deferred the withdrawal decision to Rivers. Another candidate, Phillip L. Crouch Jr., appears on the ballot.[1][4]

Paul Parszik learned of the candidacy recently and plans to confront Rivers at events. “I can’t wait to go home and go to his first rally and say, ‘Hey, you stabbed my kid and you have no remorse,’” he declared. He questioned Rivers’ fitness for office: “If you don’t have the responsibility or the self-control for something like that, you have no business being a council person.”[1][3]

  • Incident date: July 30, 2016
  • Lawsuit filed: 2018
  • Settlement: $10,000 by Rivers’ mother
  • Candidacy filing: February 2026
  • Primary election: June 2, 2026

Key Takeaways

  • A settled civil suit alleges a 2016 stabbing during a childhood playdate, but no criminal conviction exists.
  • Rivers frames it as an accident and rejects character judgments based on youth.
  • The District 15 race now spotlights past actions amid McOsker’s incumbency advantage.

As the primary approaches, voters in San Pedro and surrounding areas weigh Rivers’ growth against the scars of 2016. Does a decade-old mishap disqualify a young activist from leadership? Share your thoughts in the comments.

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