Los Angeles Times

Federal probe ensnares former L.A. council aide

Staffer’s racketeeri­ng plea will represent the corruption probe’s closest link yet to Councilman Huizar.

- By David Zahniser, Joel Rubin and Emily Alpert Reyes

George Esparza, who worked for Councilman Jose Huizar, agrees to plead guilty to felony racketeeri­ng in the “pay-to-play” investigat­ion at City Hall.

For years, George Esparza was known as one of Los Angeles City Councilman Jose Huizar’s closest aides, driving him around town, attending to him at events and serving as his special assistant.

On Wednesday, the 33year-old former Huizar staffer agreed to plead guilty in the ongoing corruption investigat­ion at City Hall, becoming the closest associate of the councilman so far to be snared in the federal “pay-to-play” probe.

In a deal with prosecutor­s, Esparza will admit to participat­ing in an audacious scheme to hit up real estate developers for cash, luxurious trips, political contributi­ons and other bribes in exchange for help with major developmen­t projects, court records show. He will plead guilty to a racketeeri­ng conspiracy charge.

Esparza is the fourth person to agree to plead guilty in the sprawling investigat­ion. The machinatio­ns carried out by Esparza and others amounted to a criminal enterprise, according to prosecutor­s who charged him under a law used to combat organized crime syndicates.

In charge of the operation, prosecutor­s allege, was Esparza’s boss — a councilman who is not named in court records but is known to be Huizar based on a host of details in federal filings. Prosecutor­s said the councilman received more than $1 million worth of bribes from just one of the real estate developers doing business in his district.

A lawyer for Esparza did not respond to a request for comment. Esparza has been working in recent years as chief of staff to Assemblywo­man Wendy Carrillo (D-Los Angeles), who also did not respond to The Times’ inquiries.

Huizar’s attorney declined to comment. The councilman, whose district stretches from downtown to Eagle Rock, has not been arrested or charged with a crime.

Under the terms of the

plea deal, Esparza will cooperate with the ongoing investigat­ion. Prosecutor­s already have won plea deals from a former City Council member, a political fundraiser and a real estate consultant, who admitted to participat­ing in illicit activities that involved either Huizar or others in his orbit.

Esparza, who worked as a special assistant to Huizar from 2013 to 2018, featured in those allegation­s and others that prosecutor­s detailed in court filings Wednesday.

In one, Esparza and the councilman enriched themselves with the largesse from the billionair­e head of a major Chinese real estate company, who paid more than $1 million in bribes in exchange for help clearing the way for a 77-story skyscraper the company wanted to build downtown, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

Details on that project, contained in federal filings, match up with a developmen­t proposed by Shenzhen New World Group, a Chinese company that sought to build a 77-story tower on Figueroa Street. The Times was unable to immediatel­y reach a representa­tive of the developer for comment.

Esparza told investigat­ors that between 2014 and 2018, the developer provided him and his boss free flights on private jets, gambling chips, expensive meals and other perks during more than a dozen trips to casinos in Las Vegas, court records show. In 2016, the developer also flew the pair to Australia for another gambling trip.

The developer shelled out more than $850,000 for the trips, providing more than $200,000 in chips to the councilman, prosecutor­s alleged in court records.

In addition, Esparza acknowledg­ed he had helped facilitate a deal in which the same developer helped the councilman secure a $570,000 loan — money he used in 2014 to settle a sexual harassment lawsuit filed by a former aide. That same year, Huizar was facing a sexual harassment lawsuit from a former aide, which was settled under terms that were kept confidenti­al.

In exchange for the financial benefits, the councilman “routinely assisted” the developer over the years, drawing up a City Hall resolution praising the company’s chairman in 2014, prosecutor­s said. The 77-story project on Figueroa Street has been on hold for years and has not received a final vote, according to planning officials.

Esparza also admitted to helping the councilman, who chaired a powerful committee that oversaw major real estate projects, to shake down developers for contributi­ons to a political action committee meant to assist a relative who was running to replace the councilman.

Details in federal filings make clear that prosecutor­s are referring to Richelle Huizar, the councilman’s wife, who ran briefly for his seat in 2018. Richelle Huizar has not been named in the filings or charged with a crime. Her attorney declined to comment Wednesday.

When businesses did not play ball with the councilman, there were consequenc­es, according to federal prosecutor­s. During one phone call, Esparza complained that a developer had not come through with certain “commitment­s.”

“Why even be helpful to them…. We are not going to help them,” he said, according to the federal filing.

The sweeping case has led to three other plea deals: In March, former City Councilman Mitchell Englander agreed to plead guilty to scheming to falsify facts in a probe of his acceptance of envelopes of cash and other gifts. Former City Planning Commission­er Justin Jangwoo Kim agreed to plead guilty to bribery in a case involving a box containing $200,000 in cash.

In Wednesday’s filing, prosecutor­s identified Esparza as the council aide who showed up at his boss’ home with the box of cash.

This month, real estate consultant George Chiang agreed to plead guilty to a racketeeri­ng charge, admitting he was involved in a scheme in which a Chinese real estate company bribed a council member in exchange for help on a major developmen­t project. Details in that filing also make clear prosecutor­s were referring to Huizar.

Esparza told The Times last year that he had stopped working for the councilman because he was “profoundly uncomforta­ble” with the councilman’s conduct.

“So I got out before I became collateral damage,” he said in a statement at the time.

After resigning from his City Hall post, Esparza secured a job with Carrillo, earning around $117,000 annually, according to state records from this year.

While working for Carrillo, Esparza and his boss were reprimande­d by Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon for engaging in inappropri­ate workplace conduct. Rendon cited allegation­s that Esparza had made “inappropri­ate sexual comments.”

‘I got out before I became collateral damage.’ — George Esparza, in a statement last year on why he had stopped working for Councilman Jose Huizar

 ?? Kirk McKoy Los Angeles Times ?? COUNCILMAN Jose Huizar has not been named in the “pay-toplay” probe at City Hall.
Kirk McKoy Los Angeles Times COUNCILMAN Jose Huizar has not been named in the “pay-toplay” probe at City Hall.

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