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Civics & Democracy

Reform bills inspired by LAist investigation signed into law by Newsom

An empty silver chair on a dais with a microphone and a placard that reads "Andrew Do/District 1"
The empty seat of Orange County Supervisor Andrew Do who was not in attendance for the Aug. 27 Board of Supervisors meeting.
(
Brian Feinzimer
/
LAist
)

Three state bills inspired by LAist’s investigation into millions of taxpayer dollars in Orange County that are unaccounted for have been signed into law by California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Two new laws will go into effect Jan. 1, 2025

  • AB-2946 will require a majority vote by the Orange County Board of Supervisors before discretionary funds are awarded to a nonprofit or community group. The supervisors will also be required to post details of how the money was spent online.
  • AB-3130 will require county supervisors across the state to disclose any family ties they have to a nonprofit’s employees or officers before any board awards money to the group.

A third takes effect Jan. 1, 2026

  • Senate Bill 1111 will make it a crime in California for elected officials to be involved in awarding government contracts to organizations if they know their child is an officer or director of the vendor, or has at least 10% ownership. State Sen. Dave Min introduced the bill, and said LAist’s reporting led him to take on the issue. The bill has been significantly narrowed since it was introduced.

“[W]e are taking a crucial step towards restoring public trust in how district discretionary funds are managed in Orange County,” Assemblymember Avelino Valencia said in a statement Monday, responding to the signing of AB 2946. “This law will provide the necessary oversight and transparency to ensure that taxpayer dollars are spent responsibly.”

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In a statement Monday, Min said Senate Bill 1111 "is a huge win for our efforts to root out public corruption and stop the cheating of taxpayers."

The backstory

Earlier this year, as part of a months-long investigation, LAist uncovered more than $13 million in public money that Do directed to a little-known nonprofit, Viet America Society, led on and off by his now 23-year-old daughter, Rhiannon Do. Around $6.2 million of this money was from Supervisor Do’s discretionary funds. Most of that money was directed to the group by Supervisor Do outside of the public’s view and never appeared on public meeting agendas. He did not publicly disclose his family ties, which is not illegal.

Most of the money was meant to feed needy seniors during the pandemic. Last month, the county filed a lawsuit alleging Rhiannon Do and other leaders at the group instead illegally diverted the money into buying themselves homes in Orange County. Soon after, federal agents searched houses owned by Supervisor Do, Rhiannon Do, the nonprofit’s founder, Peter Pham, and other locations connected to the group. All three have denied wrongdoing.

Catch up on the investigation

In November 2023, LAist began investigating how millions in public taxpayer dollars were spent. In total, LAist has uncovered more than $13 million in public money that was approved to a little-known nonprofit that records state was led on and off by Rhiannon Do, the now 23-year-old daughter of Supervisor Do. Most of that money was directed to the group by Supervisor Do outside of the public’s view and never appeared on public meeting agendas. He did not publicly disclose his family ties.

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Much of the known funding came from federal coronavirus relief money.


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Corrected September 16, 2024 at 6:21 PM PDT
A previous version of this story incorrectly stated the day the bills were signed. LAist regrets the error.
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