Nick Gerda
is an accountability reporter who has covered local government in Southern California for more than a decade.
Published November 11, 2024 5:30 PM
Michelle Steel (R-CA) poses for a portrait outside the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. on Dec. 3, 2020.
(
Bonnie Jo Mount
/
The Washington Post via Getty Images
)
Topline: Following an LAist investigative article, two state senators are raising serious concerns about $1.2 million in taxpayer meal funds Rep. Michelle Steel awarded her campaign mail vendor in 2020. The money was directed back when Steel was an Orange County supervisor first running for Congress.
Action demanded: In a letter to the current chair of the O.C. Board of Supervisors, Republican state Senator Janet Nguyen wrote, “Recent revelations by LAist regarding new misuse of federal pandemic relief funds intended for senior citizens is extremely concerning.” She called on the county to “immediately freeze” its active contract with Steel’s campaign mail firm, DTN Tech, stop all payments to it, and audit all of the county’s contracts with the firm.
‘Misuse of funds’: State Senate Judiciary Chair Tom Umberg (D-Santa Ana) called Steel’s actions a “misuse of funds” and “inappropriate” and wants supervisors to take action. “The Orange County Board of Supervisors must take serious and extensive action to uncover any other wrongdoing and ensure this cannot happen again,” he wrote. “The people of Orange County deserve trustworthy stewards of taxpayer dollars.”
What the Steel campaign says: Asked for a response to the state senators’ criticism, Steel campaign spokesperson Lance Trover said: “Politicians seeking headlines should quit lying to their constituents.” He added that 50,000 meals were provided to people “while helping restaurants during the pandemic.”
Following an LAist investigative article, two state senators are raising serious concerns about $1.2 million in taxpayer meal funds Rep. Michelle Steel awarded her campaign mail vendor in 2020. The money was directed back when Steel was an Orange County supervisor first running for Congress.
The concerns are being expressed separately by state Senate Judiciary Chair Tom Umberg (D-Santa Ana) and state Sen. Janet Nguyen, a Republican who represents many of the same communities as Steel, including much of Little Saigon in Orange County.
LAist’s reporting found that Steel had her campaign mail vendor charge taxpayers far more than vendors billed in districts led by other supervisors. The meals in Steel’s program cost $24 per meal, three times as much as in two of the other districts.
Nguyen is on track to replace former O.C. Supervisor Andrew Do, outpacing her runoff opponent 62% to 38% in the latest vote count. Do recently resigned and pleaded guilty to bribery in connection with a scheme to steal millions he awarded from the same pandemic meals program.
A call for an ‘immediate’ freeze and audit
In her letter, Nguyen called on the county to “immediately freeze” its active contract with Steel’s campaign mail firm, DTN Tech (DTN), and stop all payments to it.
“The county needs to complete audits of all pandemic relief funds before any additional taxpayer funds are dispersed,” Nguyen wrote.
“The fact that a journalist discovered this latest debacle is inexcusable and now I am wondering what else we’re going to find,” she added, calling for an audit of pandemic relief dollars and all of the county’s contracts with DTN.
It’s unclear whether county officials will take any action regarding DTN or investigate what happened. The supervisors’ chair, Don Wagner, didn’t respond to a request for comment.
“The pervasive misuse of funds by Orange County officials — former Mayor Harry Sidhu, Supervisor Andrew Do, and now Congresswoman (former Supervisor) Steel — are real consequences of a lack of checks and balances and proper oversight in local government,” Umberg wrote.
He also called on county supervisors to take action.
“The Orange County Board of Supervisors must take serious and extensive action to uncover any other wrongdoing and ensure this cannot happen again," he added. "The people of Orange County deserve trustworthy stewards of taxpayer dollars.”
The only county supervisor to respond to a request for comment from LAist was Vicente Sarmiento, who called for an investigation.
“Michelle Steel’s misuse of taxpayer dollars to enrich her political allies is outrageous, and confirms my insistence that an external investigation of federal pandemic related funds received by the County must also be conducted,” Sarmiento said in a written statement.
Sarmiento has been calling for the Board of Supervisors to hire an outside auditing firm to investigate pandemic relief and mental health service dollars. Both of those funding sources were awarded by Do to the nonprofit at the center of the bribery scheme he pleaded guilty to.
The response from Steel’s campaign
Asked for a response to the elected officials’ statements about DTN, Steel’s campaign said they’re lies.
“Politicians seeking headlines should quit lying to their constituents — DTN, a logistics and event management company, was given a contract to manage a meals program,” said Lance Trover, a campaign spokesperson for Steel, adding that the contract also helped restaurants.
Trover said an audit of the contract was completed and approved by the county. Steel is currently leading in the vote count for the 45th Congressional District against Derek Tran, a Democrat, by about 1.4 points.
“The Congresswoman stands by the work that was done to feed 50,000 meals during the COVID pandemic — if the county wishes to conduct a further audit she welcomes it,” Trover added.
The audit focused on whether DTN followed the contract’s requirements. Such reviews, known as a “single audit,” do not focus on whether the contract’s cost per meal was appropriate, nor whether the contractor was selected through a fair process.
DTN’s CEO Serena Nguyen has explained the higher meal costs as providing a “gourmet” experience compared to other districts. The company paid 90% of the $1.2 million in taxpayer funds to restaurants, with two-thirds of those payments going to restaurants that have hired DTN as a printing client, according to an LAist review of social media posts and county records.
DTN’s response
In response to the lawmakers’ criticism, Serena Nguyen said DTN succeeded in doing the meals work it was paid for, and doesn't have any active county contracts.
She echoed comments shared by Trover, saying in an emailed response to LAist that the company “has successfully completed all required audits with no irregular findings, and we welcome any further review by the county of this project.”
“We stand by the services provided during the COVID-19 Pandemic,” she added.
“We stand firmly by our record, and unfortunately, politics is driving these false accusations,” Nguyen wrote.
Destiny Torres
is LAist's general assignment reporter and brings you the top news you need for the day.
Published May 12, 2026 11:24 AM
A newly formed committee will ensure the health department implements its civil law enforcement policy, which instructs public health workers on how to protect patients brought in by law enforcement, including immigration agents.
(
J.W. Hendricks
/
Getty Images
)
Topline:
The L.A. Board of Supervisors today approved creating a committee to ensure the health department implements its civil law enforcement policy, which instructs public health workers on how to protect patients brought in by law enforcement, including immigration agents.
Supervisor Kathryn Barger abstained from the item.
What we know:The committee — made up of hospital officials, county counsel and the office of immigration affairs — will require training for health workers on the civil law enforcement interaction policy. The group will also collect feedback from staff on how to improve the policy and report back to the board in a month.
Background: The L.A. County policy, which went into effect in March, reiterates that all patients have the right to communicate with loved ones and connect to legal support. Health workers and advocates have shared concerns that not enough people know about the policy.
Why now? Supervisor Hilda Solis, who introduced Tuesday’s motion, said since ICE raids ramped up last summer, public health workers have had more interactions with federal agents. And in trying to protect patients, Solis added, some workers risk being accused of obstructing justice.
“Despite the county’s sensitive location policy … immigration enforcement officials have pushed boundaries or blatantly ignored laws,” Solis said. “This has put many of our county employees in a difficult position of trying to enforce the law and protect patients’ rights.”
The U.S. war with Iran has pushed inflation to its highest level in almost three years.
Why it matters: Consumer prices in April were up 3.8% from a year ago, according to a report Tuesday from the Labor Department. That was the biggest annual increase since May 2023.
Gas prices are a big driver: Gasoline prices have jumped sharply since the war began, snarling tanker traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, a vital corridor for energy shipments. The average price of regular gas is $4.50 a gallon, according to AAA.
Read on ... for a helpful chart and three areas that exemplify the rising cost of living.
The U.S. war with Iran has pushed inflation to its highest level in almost three years.
Consumer prices in April were up 3.8% from a year ago, according to a report Tuesday from the Labor Department. That was the biggest annual increase since May 2023.
Prices rose 0.6% between March and April.
From gas prices to housing, here are three things to know about the rising cost of living.
Loading...
Gas prices are a big driver
Gasoline prices have jumped sharply since the war began, snarling tanker traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, a vital corridor for energy shipments. The average price of regular gas is $4.50 a gallon, according to AAA. That's up 38 cents from a month ago. The jump in energy prices accounted for 40% of the monthly increase in the consumer price index in April.
Rising fuel costs are affecting other prices as well
When energy costs jump sharply, it can have spillover effects. Air fares, for example, jumped 2.8% last month and are more than 20% higher than they were a year ago, as airlines struggle with a spike in jet fuel prices.
The cost of diesel fuel has risen by $1.88 a gallon since the war began. If that lasts, it could put upward pressure on the price of everything that's delivered by truck or train.
Excluding volatile food and energy costs, "core" inflation was 2.8% in April.
Housing prices also contributed to higher inflation in April
Housing costs were also a driver of inflation, jumping 0.6% between March and April, but some of that is a statistical fluke resulting from the six-week government shutdown last fall. Government number-crunchers were temporarily idled in October, so were unable to collect housing prices that month. That's had the effect of artificially lowering the measure of housing inflation. Tuesday's report provides a kind of catch-up.
Copyright 2026 NPR
Keep up with LAist.
If you're enjoying this article, you'll love our daily newsletter, The LA Report. Each weekday, catch up on the 5 most pressing stories to start your morning in 3 minutes or less.
Libby Rainey
has been reporting on L.A.'s preparations for World Cup games this year.
Published May 12, 2026 5:00 AM
The Los Angeles will host eight FIFA World Cup matches at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood this summer.
(
Luke Hales
/
Getty Images
)
Topline:
Advocates had pushed L.A.’s World Cup host committee, an arm of the Los Angeles Sports & Entertainment Commission, to produce its human rights plan. But now that it's out, they're not satisfied.
What's in the plan? It includes a list of online resources including where to file complaints with various local and state level agencies and a summary of local, state and federal laws protecting human and civil rights. The committee is also touting a partnership with L.A. County in which people can call 211 to report a concern during the tournament.
How are activists responding? "Los Angeles is weeks away from hosting one of the largest sporting events in the world, and yet what has been posted is not a plan,” Stephanie Richard, director of the Sunita Jain Anti‑ at Loyola Law School, said in a statement. “It is a list of laws and hotline numbers."
Read on…for concerns about ICE and other issues dropped in the human rights guidance.
The Los Angeles World Cup host committee has quietly posted its guidance on human rights after months of speculation over where the plan was and when it would be published.
Advocates had pushed the committee, an arm of the Los Angeles Sports & Entertainment Commission, to produce its plan. But now that it's out, they're not satisfied with what they're seeing.
The human rights guidance is required by FIFA and outlined on the host committee's website. It includes a list of online resources including where to file complaints with various local and state level agencies and a summary of local, state and federal laws protecting human and civil rights. The committee is also touting a partnership with L.A. County in which people can call 211 to report a concern during the tournament.
"Los Angeles is weeks away from hosting one of the largest sporting events in the world, and yet what has been posted is not a plan,” Stephanie Richard, director of the Sunita Jain Anti‑Trafficking Initiative at Loyola Law School, said in a statement. “It is a list of laws and hotline numbers."
The human rights document also skirts fears around ICE and its potential presence at the tournament and surrounding celebrations. Todd Lyons, the agency's head, said earlier this year that ICE's investigatory branch will play a key role in security for the tournament.
But ICE and immigration enforcement aren't mentioned on the host committee's web page on human rights or in its outline of its approach to human rights. "Immigration status" only gets a mention in the list of existing anti-discrimination laws.
"It certainly could have been much stronger," Angelica Salas, executive director of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights in Los Angeles, said of the plan. She added that her organization participated in a roundtable on the plan, and she was disappointed ICE and recent immigration sweeps weren't mentioned in the resulting document.
"In order for all of this to happen, immigrant workers are part of it," she said of the World Cup. "Your hotel workers, your service workers, stadium workers, drivers."
What other host committees are saying about ICE
There have been some recent signs that other host committees aren't concerned that ICE will disrupt the tournament.
The head of the Miami host committee recently told The Athletic that Secretary of State Marco Rubio personally assured him that ICE would not be at World Cup stadiums.
The head of security for Houston's host committee told Axios that plans with the federal government had never included immigration enforcement.
LAist reached out to spokespeople for the host committee for comment via email, phone and text, but did not hear back in time for publication. FIFA's press team also did not respond to an email from LAist.
According to the host committee's website, the human rights plan is the result of coordination with the city and county of Los Angeles, the city of Inglewood, and 14 roundtable discussions held in the fall of 2025.
"As a non-profit organization, the Host Committee’s role is primarily and necessarily focused on aligning and collaborating with governmental and non-governmental organizations," the document sums up the committee's approach.
The plan also promises more actions, including "Know Your Rights" training for L.A. residents and visitors and "Know Your Responsibilities" training for businesses and vendors. The committee also says it will develop a "rapid response" strategy to respond to potential problems at the tournament.
Available details on those plans were scant. And with the tournament just 30 days away, labor unions and community groups are continuing to voice concerns about potential ICE presence at SoFi Stadium and other potential consequences of the tournament coming to town.
Adelanto and similar ICE detention centers are holding more people in solitary confinement than under previous administrations
(
Patrick T. Fallon
/
AFP via Getty Images
)
Topline:
Immigrant detention centers across the U.S. are holding more people in solitary confinement than under previous administrations — and for longer periods of time. In this story, LAist zooms in on the use of what’s been dubbed “segregation” at the Adelanto ICE processing center, learning from experts who’ve conducted site visits and detainees with lived experience.
Why it matters: Medical experts say this type of isolation can worsen medical issues and mental health conditions. Experts who monitor immigrant detention centers also say solitary confinement is being used to punish civil detainees, sometimes for minor infractions or for requesting things they need.
What ICE data shows: Some 2,000 immigrants are currently being held at the Adelanto detention center. An LAist analysis of the most recent ICE data found that, ranked by percentage of the detainee population in “segregation,” Adelanto is among the U.S.’s top 10 facilities.
What's next: Immigrants rights groups have filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of Adelanto detainees, seeking to improve conditions for all people being held there. The next court hearing is scheduled for May 22.
In 2019, Xiaoman Ding was diagnosed with a pituitary tumor in her brain that caused her debilitating headaches. At times, she couldn’t open her eyes or walk.
So while she was detained at the Adelanto ICE Processing Center after being arrested at an immigration courthouse in Santa Ana last June, she made repeated requests for medical treatment. Instead of getting the normal medications she took to manage her symptoms, she said she received Tylenol and ibuprofen.
By July, her pain became so “unbearable” she told a nurse at the detention center she wanted to take her own life. The facility placed her in solitary confinement for three days for monitoring.
“I never told anyone that I experienced suicidal thoughts again,” she said in court documents that form part of a federal lawsuit filed in January by a private law firm and immigrant right' group seeking to improve conditions at the facility. “I was afraid that I would be put into solitary confinement.”
The case continues to make its way through the court system. The next hearing is scheduled for late May.
In declarations accompanying the lawsuit, detainees shared their experiences in isolation. Many of them said they were placed in solitary confinement after asking for things that are essential for their dignity — or to fight their case in court. Others said the confinement made them reluctant to ask for help in the future.
To prevent a future crisis, here's how to help someone make a safety plan.
How detention centers isolate detainees
About 2,000 immigrants are currently being held at the ICE detention center in Adelanto. The site is run by The GEO Group, a private prison operator.
(
Chris Carlson
/
AP
)
Across the country, immigrant detention centers like Adelanto are holding more people in solitary confinement than under previous administrations — including President Donald Trump’s first term. Immigration and Customs Enforcement data also shows that detainees are being isolated for longer periods of time, and experts say solitary confinement can worsen the conditions of people who need support.
People in custody can be placed in “segregation,” as it is dubbed at these centers, for numerous reasons. These can include disciplinary issues, as well as claims by facility officials that the move is needed to protect detainees who could be harmed if left among the general population. People in detention can also be put in segregation if they are on suicide watch, if they’re experiencing a “serious mental or medical illness” or for staging a hunger strike.
Detainee advocates say isolation is also being used to punish immigrants in civil detention.
The “threshold to use solitary is often quite low and arbitrary,” said Katherine Peeler, an assistant pediatrics professor at Harvard Medical School and medical advisor with Physicians for Human Rights. The nonprofit publishes reports on solitary confinement at immigrant detention centers, rooted in public records, ICE data and testimony from detainees.
Some 2,000 immigrants are currently held at the Adelanto detention center, about 90 miles northeast of downtown L.A. in San Bernardino County. An LAist analysis of the most recent ICE data found that, ranked by percentage of the detainee population in segregation, this site is among the top 10 facilities in the United States.
How segregation can make medical issues worse
To get a sense of what immigrant detainees experience in segregation, Peeler asks the public to envision confinement.
“You are contained in a small cell, usually the size of a parking space,” she said. “Imagine being in a parking space and enclosing it all the way . . . You can't get out. You can't change the temperature.”
“The inability to control your environment, as well as the lack of contact with other humans, is known in medical literature to lead to great deals of anxiety, depression [and] extreme loneliness,” Peeler added. “People have been known to have hallucinations and agitation, [as well as] reduced cognitive functioning.”
The most recent Physicians for Human Rights report found that, between April 2024 and May 2025, ICE detention centers placed over 10,500 people in solitary confinement — often for more than 15 days. UN human rights experts consider solitary confinement placements that last that much or more to be torture, though the Supreme Court has held that isolation doesn’t violate the Constitution. ICE’s own policies call for “additional steps to ensure appropriate review and oversight of decisions to retain detainees in segregated housing for over 14 days.”
At least four people have died after being held in custody at an ICE detention facility in Adelanto, California. A recent lawsuit alleges that living conditions there are inhumane, and some compare the facility to "concentration camps."
Rotten food, disease, isolation. What we know about conditions at the Adelanto ICE detention center
At least four people have died after being held in custody at an ICE detention facility in Adelanto, California. A recent lawsuit alleges that living conditions there are inhumane, and some compare the facility to "concentration camps."
Disability Rights California, a federally mandated nonprofit that advocates for people with disabilities in the state, monitors conditions at immigrant detention centers.
Richard Diaz, a senior attorney at the nonprofit, was part of a team that conducted a site visit at Adelanto last summer. The team found a general lack of accommodations for people with disabilities. Diaz also spoke with a detainee who’d been placed in solitary confinement for over a month. “On top of that,” he told LAist, the detainee “had medical concerns and accommodation needs that weren't being met.”
Peeler noted that solitary confinement is also associated with sleep disruption, which “can lead to further mental health issues.”
Sleep disruption “is also really bad for one's stress response system,” she added. “You can have heightened levels of the stress hormone cortisol. This can lead to problems with hypertension or high blood pressure, and general underlying medical conditions being worsened.”
The federal government denies claims of substandard conditions at immigrant detention centers and declined LAist’s requests for interviews and comments. In statements issued after the recent deaths of detainees, ICE said it is “committed to ensuring that all those in custody reside in safe, secure and humane environments."
In a statement, a spokesperson for the GEO Group, a private prison operator that runs the Adelanto detention center, said: “[O]ur support services are monitored by ICE, including by on-site agency personnel, and other organizations within the Department of Homeland Security to ensure compliance with ICE’s detention standards and contract requirements regarding the treatment and services ICE detainees receive. In the event issues are identified, we quickly resolve all of ICE’s concerns.”
“The support services GEO provides include around-the-clock access to medical care, in-person and virtual legal and family visitation, general and legal library access, translation services, dietician-approved meals, religious and specialty diets, recreational amenities, and opportunities to practice their religious beliefs,” the spokesperson added.
What detainees have to say
People held at Adelanto paint a different picture.
LAist reviewed the detainee declarations filed as part of the January federal lawsuit seeking to improve conditions at the facility. Aside from people experiencing mental health crises and medical issues, multiple detainees at Adelanto described being placed in segregation as a form of punishment.
Andrei Karamychev is a Russian immigrant who came to the U.S. in 1999. In his testimony, Karamychev said that, after arriving at Adelanto last summer, he did not hear anything about his case for two months, “despite asking repeatedly to get information.”
“Many other people in my unit were also upset about not being told the reason for their detention,” he said. “We worked together to get attention to this issue by all yelling together, demanding to see our ICE officers.”
Eventually, Karamychev said, “a bunch of guards showed up and began to take out the people that spoke up, one by one.”
Six of the detainees involved were put in solitary confinement. After a few days in isolation, Karamychev said, “a lieutenant came in to meet with me and told me that I was going to spend two months in solitary because I had fought the officers.”
“This was a lie. I told him that I did not fight the officers, [that] I had just demanded nonviolently to see an ICE officer about my case,” Karamychev said. In response, the lieutenant told him: "We choose our truth."
Karamychev further detailed his confinement: “In solitary, I was under lockdown for about 23.5 hours a day. We had 30 minutes each day outside of our cells. During those thirty minutes, we could go outside for yard time in a cage that is about 10 feet by 10 feet, walk to the microwave to reheat meals, or look at a book.”
“When you are brought out to the mini yard, you are locked out there until the guards decide to let you back in,” he added. “The yard smells like urine because people had to pee out there, and it was not cleaned up. It is difficult because you want to have fresh air, but it smells like urine.”
Julius Omene Fredrick, an immigrant from Nigeria, was taken to Adelanto in January 2025. He has an ongoing application for a U visa, which is intended to give temporary immigration status to crime victims who have cooperated with law enforcement.
According to Fredrick, his unit had six showers for 80 people.
“There are three showers on each side of the room, with a walkway in the middle,” he said. “There are no privacy screens or curtains.”
Fredrick said he asked Adelanto guards for curtains “to give us some privacy.” Instead, he was placed in solitary confinement for seven days.
On another occasion, Fredrick said he was put in isolation for six days after complaining about the lack of access to the law library. Adelanto only allows four people from each 80-person unit to attend the library per day, he said. By Fredrick’s estimation, the library can fit “20 to 15 people.”
“We need access to the library so we can work on our immigration cases,” he explained. “Many of us do not have lawyers, so it is a real problem.”
Saddam Samaan Daoud Samaan, an immigrant from Jordan who had been living in Minnesota for nearly two decades before he was detained, said he was also put in solitary confinement after advocating for more access to the law library.
Throughout the detention center, Adelanto staff have put up posters about “voluntary departure,” Samaan added.
“The posters say that some people will be eligible for over $2,000 and a free flight if they choose to self-deport,” he said. “They even have sign-up sheets where you can write your name down to tell ICE you want to ‘voluntarily depart.’ I've seen them in the dayroom, the chow hall, and the solitary confinement unit. And it works. Being here breaks people.”
When detainees first arrive at Adelanto, they usually tell Samaan “they have support from their family and [and] plan to stick it out here as long as it takes.”
“Then, a month later,” he added, “they decide to sign away their case and leave the U.S. rather than stay at Adelanto any longer.”