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Key findings
- The head of the Orange County Democratic Party said she told Janet Conklin, a La Palma City Council member, to drop out of the O.C. assessor race and “get a lawyer, a criminal lawyer” after learning of allegations of campaign funds misuse.
- Conklin’s former campaign treasurer told LAist Conklin was “constantly trying” to use campaign funds for personal use. When asked about allegations that she’d misused campaign funds, Conklin told LAist she’d “not done anything wrong.”
- Four former staffers who spoke with LAist allege Conklin was sexually inappropriate in the workplace. Conklin denies the allegations.
- Two former staffers told LAist Conklin grabbed both of their hands and placed them on her breasts during a work meeting. Conklin called the allegations “ridiculous” and told LAist they never happened.
The Democratic candidate for Orange County assessor has lost her party’s endorsement as a result of complaints from her campaign staff that she repeatedly sought to use campaign contributions to pay for personal expenses, LAist has learned.
Such expenditures would violate state law, which allows candidates to tap campaign contributions only to pay campaign expenses.
The candidate, Janet Keo Conklin, denied trying to misuse campaign funds.
“ I have not done anything wrong,” she told LAist.
Multiple former campaign staffers who spoke with LAist also allege Conklin engaged in sexually inappropriate behavior in the workplace, including taking staffers’ hands and placing them on Conklin’s breasts.
Conklin denied the allegations in an interview with LAist. She acknowledged that during a conversation with a staffer who was working on Conklin’s cellphones — both a work phone and a personal phone — she alluded to receiving a nude photograph from a former client.
Conklin is a licensed real estate broker and La Palma City Council member. She is on the June ballot, where she faces Republican Party-endorsed incumbent Claude Parrish.
Parrish has had his own troubles.
Last year, LAist was the first to report on a workplace misconduct investigation commissioned by the county that found Parrish violated gender discrimination and retaliation policies in the assessor’s office and harassed a subordinate over a medical disability.
Parrish was found to have downplayed the employee’s chronic illness, shared her private medical information with coworkers, regularly commented on her diet and told her to stop taking her medicine and to “drink baking soda mixed with tap water to ‘fix’ her medical condition.” Citing the 2023 investigation’s findings, the county’s HR director sent a letter to Parrish late that year telling him to stop violating harassment policies.
Parrish told LAist he was not at fault.
The primary job of the assessor, an officially nonpartisan office, is to supervise appraisals of all taxable property in the county.
Florice Hoffman, the chair of the Orange County Democratic Party, said in an interview that party activists first told her about Conklin’s alleged improper campaign spending requests in February.
She said she and Lauren Johnson-Norris, the party’s vice chair, quickly met with Conklin and urged her to drop out of the race. Instead, she said, Conklin agreed to give up the endorsement, which the party had made weeks earlier.
Hoffman, who is a lawyer, recalled telling Conklin, “Our advice is you need to get a lawyer, a criminal lawyer.”
Johnson-Norris did not respond to LAist’s requests for comment.
When asked about Hoffman’s advice in an interview with LAist, Conklin said, “ Lawyers, they sometimes get a little too dramatic.”
She added: ”Lawyers, they get spooked easily over any allegation, seriously, so I'm not concerned. I have not done anything wrong.”
Endorsements removed from campaign website
When LAist began reporting this article, Conklin was endorsed by key figures in the Democratic establishment, including O.C. Supervisor Vicente Sarmiento and U.S. Rep. Derek Tran, according to her campaign website as of April 24.
Tran’s endorsement was removed from Conklin’s campaign website before the entire list of endorsements was eventually removed as well.
Sarmiento told LAist he reached out to Conklin’s campaign to rescind his endorsement on Saturday pending further investigation.
“I certainly don’t want to support anyone involved in any misconduct, especially after my experience with a former colleague who is serving five years in federal prison,” he said, alluding to former Orange County Supervisor Andrew Do serving time in federal prison for his role in a corruption scheme uncovered by LAist.
Tran did not respond to a request for comment.
LAist asked Conklin about losing Tran and the Democratic Party of O.C.’s endorsements.
" Endorsements come and go. If it doesn't come with money, so what?” Conklin said.
Details of the allegations
LAist interviewed eight of Conklin's current or former campaign staff, including her former campaign treasurer.
Cine Ivery, the former treasurer, said Conklin fired her after she requested receipts for a campaign credit card and rebuffed the candidate’s repeated requests to use campaign money to pay personal expenses, including rent for Conklin’s two-bedroom apartment in La Palma.
Ivery told LAist Conklin was “constantly trying” to use campaign funds for personal use.
“She was always trying to find a way: 'Can I pay my rent? Can I pay the house bill? Can I do this?'” Ivery recounted from meetings with the candidate.
Ivery recalled explaining federal campaign finance laws to Conklin in detail.
“You can't skate around. You can't pretend. You can't hide,” she said, recounting their back and forth.
Ivery showed LAist email exchanges with Conklin in which she asked Conklin, unsuccessfully, to produce receipts for about $1,100 in charges on a maxed-out $2,500 campaign credit card. She said Conklin fired her after these email exchanges.
Michael Trujillo, Conklin’s new campaign consultant, told LAist in an interview that allegations of misuse of campaign funds are “100% not true.”
“If they believe it to be true, they can file an FPPC complaint. They haven't, and they won't because it's not true,” he said.
Fair Political Practices Commission oversees campaign finance laws.
Over email, Trujillo told LAist Conklin terminated Ivery in January and scheduled her last day for Feb. 9.
Conklin told LAist in an interview it was staffers who lost the receipts for expenses they incurred. She added she has since brought in a new treasurer.
LAist reviewed the credit card statement, and the expenses without receipts were mainly incurred at restaurants. Former staffers, who asked to speak anonymously with LAist to protect their job prospects, told LAist those expenses were all incurred by Conklin personally.
In a written statement to LAist, Conklin’s campaign said Ivery “made the transition process unnecessarily difficult and combative.”
Ivery restricted the campaign’s access to fundraising and compliance platforms, according to the statement, and refused to transfer needed information to the campaign’s new treasurer.
The statement goes on to say that the campaign sought legal counsel and has considered filing a complaint with the Fair Political Practices Commission.
Ivery, the former treasurer, refused to transfer campaign funds until the receipts were provided for the outstanding credit card charges, according to the statement.
Conklin asked Ivery to retain $2,500 in campaign funds to pay off the credit card and transfer the rest of the money, according to the statement.
Ivery told LAist she could not use campaign funds to pay off the credit card charges without the receipts. Ultimately, Ivery said, she used her own personal funds to pay off the credit card charges as the credit card was issued through Ivery’s company. And, Ivery said, she transferred over the campaign materials to the new treasurer after making sure she followed federal campaign finance guidelines.
Trujillo, Conklin’s campaign consultant, told LAist, when candidates lose receipts on a campaign, they eat the charges. And, Trujillo said, campaign treasurers can pay off credit card charges with campaign funds without receipts.
Per FPPC guidelines, all expenditures above $25 require receipts.
“ It is literally the craziest thing in the world to try to figure out our credit card charges when the campaign's not even over,” Trujillo said. He said at the end of the campaign when they close out the books, they’ll chase every receipt. If a receipt is not found, the candidate will eat the charge with an in-kind donation to the campaign.
LAist checked the FPPC database Friday. No complaints appear for Ivery or Conklin.
Some of the former campaign staffers also allege that after they left the campaign, campaign payments were made to Conklin’s daughter, Natalie Khay, and to Shauna Harris, a friend of Conklin’s, who they said, did not work on the campaign. Both were reported as consultants on Form 460, a state filing required by people running for office on donations they receive and payments they make with campaign funds.
When asked about these transactions, Conklin told LAist her daughter did some work on the campaign last year and she finally paid her back when she raised money.
“ I took her for granted and I said, look, I don't have any money at this time if you can be patient, please just be patient, and allow me to raise enough money because we're grassroots,” she recalled telling her daughter.
When asked about the payments to Harris, her friend, Conklin first said she rented office space from her friend. Former staffers told LAist they were unaware of any campaign office space. They said they would work out of Conklin’s home office, cafes or over Zoom.
Trujillo, Conklin’s current campaign consultant, told LAist, it is normal for campaign staffers to work from home post-COVID.
The payment to Harris on the Form 460 filed with the Fair Political Practices Commission however was listed as a payment for a campaign consultant.
When asked about that, Conklin said, ”Well, she gives me advice, too.”
“ She is a silent partner. And if it's a problem with the filing, then we will adjust that. But she has been with me since last year,” she said. “She's been with me from the get go.”
Harris, Conklin said, provided “advice in the background” and “ she looks over the math; she looks over the numbers.”
Harris is a longtime public educator, according to her LinkedIn profile, working over 20 years at Los Angeles Unified School District. She currently runs a Mathnasium in Lakewood. The profile does not list any experience related to campaigns.
Khay and Harris did not respond to LAist’s requests for comment.
Former staffers allege sexually inappropriate behavior
Four former staffers allege Conklin engaged in sexually inappropriate behavior in the workplace. They all told LAist they left the campaign because of these allegations.
In one incident, two former staffers, who asked not to be named due to fears of hurting future job prospects, told LAist the candidate grabbed both of their hands and placed them on her breasts during a campaign meeting at a cafe in Newport Beach.
“She was telling us about how her breasts were not real and that she has, quote, 'she has no feeling in her nipples,' end quote,” one staffer recounted.
“ We hesitated because we didn't want to touch her at all in that aspect, but she proceeds to grab both of our hands and lays them on her breast,” he said.
She then told the female staffer to “give it a squeeze,” he said.
“We took our hands off because we were just in shock,” he said.
LAist spoke with three additional people who had been told of the incident and corroborated the details of the allegations they heard at the time.
Conklin denied the incident happened.
“No, no, no, no, no, no,” Conklin told LAist when asked about the allegation. “That's really ridiculous.”
Another former staffer alleged in a separate incident Conklin asked her to organize files on two cell phones, and in the process, she said Conklin joked to avoid “d*ck pictures” while going through the phones.
When LAist asked Conklin about the allegation, she told us she had a nude photograph on her phone that she received from a client during a prior job as a salesperson.
“He sent me a d*ck pic,” Conklin told LAist. ”That's the only thing that I alluded to, OK, is that story. But no, I wouldn't say anything inappropriate to a staffer because it's not a thing.”
Conklin said she believed the former staffers are “pulling things out of context to villainize me, and I'm not comfortable being staged as this person who is acting inappropriate.”
Conklin added that she viewed her staff as family and would sometimes share personal details with them.
“Trauma dumping is emotional bonding. That's how you bond with people when you're vulnerable,” she said.
LAist’s Ted Rohrlich contributed to this article.