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In $4-billion abuse case, some say they were paid to sue
Los Angeles Times
|October 03, 2025
Seven people told The Times they were recruited outside a benefits office by vendors and received cash to make claims
CARLIN STIEHL Los Angeles Times DOWNTOWN L.A. Law Group had numerous clients in county's recent $4-billion settlement for sex abuse.
Every day, some of L.A.’s poorest residents line up outside the county benefits office in South Central, weaving their way through a swarm of salesmen hawking deals that feel too good to be true.
Would you like $15 for a quick blood pressure exam? A free phone? Perhaps $2 for a COVID swab?
How about cash to sign up to sue L.A. County for sexual abuse at juvenile halls?
Over the last year, a Times investigation found a practice of paying for plaintiffs among a nebulous network of vendors, who usher people desperate for cash toward a law firm that could profit significantly from their business.
The Times spent two weeks outside the county social services office in South Los Angeles, where a constant flow of people applied for food stamps and cash aid, and spoke with seven people who said they were paid there within the last year to sue the county for sex abuse.
Most said they were abused inside the county’s juvenile halls, but had not planned to sue until they were flagged down on the sidewalk and offered cash. Two people said they were told to fabricate stories of abuse.
All the claims involving alleged payments were filed by Downtown L.A. Law Group, a pivotal player in the county’s recent $4-billion settlement for sex abuse inside its juvenile halls and foster homes—the largest such payout in U.S. history. Of the roughly 11,000 plaintiffs in the settlement, The Times found that nearly one-fourth were represented by the firm.
Marlon Bland, 31, said he got $200 — half in cash outside the county’s social services office and the other half when he went to meet with lawyers from Downtown L.A. Law Group, or DTLA. The receptionist there handed him a $100 check, he said. DTLA sued the county on his behalf on Aug. 23, 2024.
This story is from the October 03, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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