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Ex-LA Councilman Admits Racketeering in Casino Chip Corruption Case

Former L.A. Councilman Jose Huizar to plead guilty to racketeering conspiracy and money laundering charges after accepting plea deal.

SymClub
Jul 22, 2024
2 min read
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José Huizar, pictured prior to his 2020 arrest on corruption charges. The former LA councilman has...
José Huizar, pictured prior to his 2020 arrest on corruption charges. The former LA councilman has agreed to a plea deal that should limit his prison sentence to 13 years.

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Ex-LA Councilman Admits Racketeering in Casino Chip Corruption Case

Former Los Angeles City Councilman José Huizar is expected to plead guilty Friday to federal charges related to a sprawling $1.5 million corruption scheme.

Arrested in June 2020, Huizar previously denied being the center of a bribery and money laundering conspiracy. That scheme offered favorable treatment to property developers seeking to build in downtown Los Angeles.

But Huizar’s plea agreement, in which he admits racketeering conspiracy and tax evasion charges, was signed Wednesday and filed in Los Angeles federal court on Thursday. Under the terms of the deal, prosecutors agreed to request a sentence of no more than 13 years in prison, while the defense will ask for no less than nine years.

Although unlikely, US District Judge John F. Walter could still choose to ignore sentencing recommendations and go for anything up to 26 years.

At the time of the infractions, Huizar was chairman of Los Angeles’ Planning and Land Use Management Committee. The committee oversaw large-scale commercial and residential development in the city, giving Huizar and his colleagues the power of life and death over major construction projects. He also represented Council District 14, which includes the downtown area.

The odds would have been stacked against him if the case had gone to trial, since prosecutors have already secured convictions against several of the major players in the conspiracy.

Shenzhen New World

Chief among these are Chinese property developer Shenzhen New World Group and its billionaire owner, Wei Huang, 57. They were found guilty in November of three counts of honest service wire fraud, four counts of interstate and foreign travel in aid of bribery, and one count of bribery.

In 2010, Shenzhen acquired the LA Grand Hotel, which it wanted to transform into a 77-floor mixed-use skyscraper. It would have been the tallest building on the West Coast.

To win his favor, Wei showered Huizar and his aide, George Esparza, with “cash, casino gambling chips, flights on private jets and commercial airlines, stays at luxury Las Vegas hotels and casinos, expensive meals, spa services, prostitution services, [and] political contributions,” according to court documents.

The FBI was alerted to this arrangement by staff at the Palazzo Las Vegas. They recognized Huizar and flagged him as a “politically exposed person,” who was suspiciously cashing out tens of thousands of dollars in casino chips that had been provided by Wei.

The Chinese billionaire didn’t appear at trial and is considered a fugitive by the US government.

Cash Bribe

In June 2022, a federal jury convicted Bel Air real estate developer David Lee of paying Huizar and Esparza $500K in cash in return for favorable treatment on a development project.

Meanwhile, one of their colleagues, Mitch Englander, pleaded guilty in 2020 to accepting kickbacks from businessmen, and has since been released from prison.

Esparza cooperated with federal authorities and pleaded guilty to a single charge of racketeering in July 2020.

The only case left to go to trial is that of former Deputy Mayor Raymond Chan. He’s accused of arranging “indirect bribe payments” to key city officials by securing employment contracts for the officials’ relatives.

He denies the charges and his trial is scheduled for February 21.

In connection to the corruption case, the Shenzhen New World Group and its owner, Wei Huang, were found guilty of bribery-related charges in November 2020.After pleading guilty to a single charge of racketeering in July 2020, George Esparza, a former aide to José Huizar, provided crucial information to federal authorities.

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