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Fallout from sex abuse settlement scandal ongoing
Los Angeles Times
|October 12, 2025
Los Angeles County's Board of Supervisors met for hours in closed session with attorneys Tuesday to ponder a legal quandary about as thorny as they come.
What do you do with a $4-billion sex abuse settlement when some plaintiffs say they were paid to sue?
On one hand, the supervisors emphasized, they want victims to get the compensation they're owed for abuse they suffered at the hands of county employees. That's why they green-lighted the largest sex abuse settlement in U.S. history this April.
But the allegations of paid plaintiffs, surfaced by The Times this month, have also raised concerns about potential misconduct. The supervisors stated the obvious Tuesday: They do not want taxpayer money set aside for victims going to people who were never in county facilities.
"The entire process angers and sickens me," said Supervisor Kathryn Barger, who first called for the investigation into the alleged payouts, at the meeting Tuesday. "We must ensure that nothing like this ever happens again."
A Times investigation this month found seven people who said they were paid by recruiters to sue L.A. County for sex abuse. Two of them said they were explicitly told to fabricate claims. All the people who said they were paid had lawsuits filed by Downtown LA Law Group, or DTLA, which has about 2,700 clients in the settlement.
DTLA has denied paying anyone to file a lawsuit and said no representative of the firm had been authorized to make payments. The Times could not reach any of the representatives who allegedly made the payments for comment.
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