The Binge Cases: U R NEXT - Bonus episode: Where's my money?

Episode Date: May 20, 2022

Last year, as the final episodes of The Sellout aired, LA TACO got a tip from a listener: for years, Jose Huizar had been awarding flashy scholarships to college-bound students from Boyle Heights and ...East LA. But some of those students say they never got the scholarship money promised to them. Was Huizar really stiffing high school students from his own neighborhood? After months of investigating, we're ready to share what we found out. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:01 Hey, sellout fans, we're back. It's been a minute. We're back for just one episode with an investigation we've been working on since our season finale. It's about WESAD and how he messed with the future of dozens of students. You'll see. This is where it happened, right here. Every year, in the fall, two rival football teams from high schools in East LA and Boyle Heights face off in a big game, the East LA Classic. It's kind of a big deal.
Starting point is 00:00:35 It's like this big showdown. It happens at East L.A. College, and the whole community comes out. So both sides of the bleachers are filled. It's a huge game. It's where we kind of show up for our community. And yeah, it's a lot of fun. And every year, the Day of the East L.A. Classic, something else happens. Something special goes down for the students, a ceremony they've been waiting for.
Starting point is 00:01:03 I was super excited and also excited to like go down and on the field, you know, and have my name announced and like be congratulated. Okay, so it's halftime. And someone comes down onto the field. It's their local council member and none other than Jose Wiesad. Or sometimes one of his staffers. And not just him. He's got a whole bunch of students with him.
Starting point is 00:01:29 He lines them up and hands each of them an enormous check. Like, they just won the lottery. And to some students, it probably felt like they did win the lottery. Huge, like, checks in the middle of the field. You were able to see them from the stands. The students are the winners of the Jose Wiesad Excellence in Education Scholarship. It's this yearly award that was given out for at least a decade.
Starting point is 00:01:53 The students were awarded $500, sometimes $1,000, in scholarships for college. Here's Wiesad during an interview with a local Spanish news station at the game several years ago. These are becas that we give to the students to teach that not only we're doing good football American, but also that
Starting point is 00:02:14 the young and the young are doing very good in the class, with alt-califications. Basically, we sat as saying these scholarships are proof that students are working hard in the classroom and earning good grades.
Starting point is 00:02:31 College can be Really expensive. Depending on where you go, it can literally cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. So 1,000 might not sound like that much. But the money was a big deal to a lot of the students who want it. Many of their parents didn't have the money to help pay for their college education. They were funding it all through scholarships. Some of the students had specific plans for the money like these five textbooks,
Starting point is 00:02:57 or a computer, or money toward rent. Some of the students were undocumented, meaning it wouldn't be easy for them to get a side job to help pay the difference. Some of the kids were going to prestigious schools like Pomona and UC Berkeley. Some of them had imposter syndrome and felt like they'd gotten in by the skin of their teeth. So every dollar mattered. And we sat and knew how important the scholarships were to the kids, because he was once a kid from Bull Heights going to UC Berkeley.
Starting point is 00:03:27 And also, he was talking about it. Here's that new story again. That's Wissad talking, he was making this big show out of giving the money, handing out those enormous checks. And he's saying, I want to tell kids that college is accessible. Lots of times, parents think it's going to cost too much. But, Wiesad says, there are. But, Wissad says, there are.
Starting point is 00:04:01 are lots of scholarships, lots of help. So back to the football field. The students are holding their giant checks. They take a picture what we said. They get shuffled off the field. And I carried that thing home. I think my mom probably kept it in the apartment for like at least a couple months. And they wait and wait.
Starting point is 00:04:24 And at some point, they're like, hold on a second. So when did you first hear that you might not get the money? Where's my money? I was just like, wait, what? Like, that's my money? What do you mean? I'm not going to get it. From Niham Media and L.A. Taco.
Starting point is 00:04:49 This is smokescreen, The Sellout. The podcast about a politician, dog, the allegations of corruption, harassment, and pathological, pettiness. It's about the residents who fought gentrification, even as their neighborhoods were auctioned off to the highest bidder. I'm Mara Gassaneda. This is a bonus episode of The Sellar. out. Where's my money? Okay, so, we first heard about the Jose Wiesad Excellence in Education Scholarship in late 2021.
Starting point is 00:05:24 We got a tip to the LA Taco Instagram. We had a colleague read it. I'm wondering if you're aware of Wiesar's college scholarships at the East L.A. Classic each fall. To my knowledge, although recipients were celebrated with huge, individualized checks, they never actually received the funds. I don't know how widespread this was,
Starting point is 00:05:42 if some recipients receive the funds while others didn't. But I wanted to share this with you as well if there are plans to widen your research until Weezar's broken promises to his own community. We got the tip and we were like, okay, is that real? Is we said really saying that he's going to give kids money and then stiffing them?
Starting point is 00:06:01 So we started looking into it. Four of us from L.A. Taco and Neon Hum have spent the past four months looking into this. And I'm going to walk you through what we found. It's kind of messy. Kind of all over the place. We've talked to more than a dozen students who were awarded the scholarship, almost all of them Latinx, from Boal Heights or East LA. Most of them were funding their college educations through scholarships and loans.
Starting point is 00:06:25 And let me just say up front, some of the Jose Ouizad excellence and education students did get their money. Some got it right away, no problems. But lots of the students had a fight to get their money. They called and physically went to Huizade's office for months, even years. And students say there are whole graduating classes of students who never got their money at all. We spoke to four different students who never got the money awarded to them, who still haven't gotten it years later, like Abby. My name is Abby. I've been living in Boy Heights for my whole life, current college student.
Starting point is 00:07:06 I attend Pomona College. Abby graduated in 2018 from Roosevelt. She was a great student. So like a lot of kids who won the Jose Wiesad, Excellence in Education Scholarship, the money was important to her. I'm undocumented so I can't work in the traditional sense. I always knew I wanted to go to college,
Starting point is 00:07:27 and I also knew my parents could not afford it. And so I very much was doing everything I could, senior year to apply as many scholarships that they could, just to, like, lessen the burden on myself and, like, my parents. And so, yeah, Weezar was like a good amount of money, a thousand dollars is good. Saraje Gomez also went to Roosevelt. She graduated the year before Abby in 2017.
Starting point is 00:07:51 And she actually found out about the scholarship years before she could apply for it. Actually, since freshman year, so Jose Huizor did like an inauguration of the streetlight right in front of Roosevelt. And a student was chosen to be like the commencement. kind of, and I was chosen, and so I was able to deliver a speech and then get to meet him. And then he was like, oh, I have a scholarship. Like, you should apply to a senior year. Here's my colleague Liz Sanchez, who interviewed Sarai. What was your first impression of him?
Starting point is 00:08:28 Very nice guy, respected by the community, very involved. Yeah, he seemed like a very noble guy. So senior year, Sarai gets a scholarship. I literally started crying because it was my first scholarship. Like, oh my God, it's just so competitive. Everybody applies for it. There are no exceptions. And so I was very ecstatic.
Starting point is 00:08:49 I couldn't believe it. But I called my mom right in that instant. And I was like, Mom, I got it. You know, this is a scholarship that he told me about freshman year. I wanted to reconnect and tell him, like, hey, you know, you told me about this. I got selected. Sarajeet decided what she would spend it on, a new laptop. Because at that point, her family just had one lap.
Starting point is 00:09:10 laptop they would all share. Once you talk to enough students about the scholarship, you learn that there's kind of a rhythm to these stories. It starts with hope, ventilation, and a slow, creeping sense of dismay. But when the dismay set in for Sadai, that's when her mom got involved. And then I told my mom, she was like, yeah, yeah, like, I'll go talk to him. So Saraje's mom goes down to the college office. And so my mom was just...
Starting point is 00:09:40 persistent and my mom thought maybe because she only spoke Spanish like that she was being unclear and so one time she brought my brother my older brother along and it wasn't until then that Matta was like Mr. Raul Matta the Roosevelt College counselor was able to explain to him like what was going on and what the delay was about apparently and it wasn't until like October were sometime in the fall where both of them went in again. And then Mr. Mata was like, oh, yeah, like, the checks have arrived and you're able to get a hold of it now. But my mom said that he said it in a very bad attitude because he saw, like, them coming
Starting point is 00:10:29 again and was tired. I don't know. But he was kind of like, oh, here, here it is. By the way, we reached out to Mr. Mata for an interview. He ghosted me. Anyways, Saraje's family finally goes to pick up the check. But it's not even for the full thousand. Mr. Matta had told her that only half was going to be given,
Starting point is 00:10:51 and he said the other half was going to be awarded later on. So my mom was like, okay, we'll take what we can get. That was it for the fall. By this point, Sarai is already at college. Her tuition is covered by a scholarship, but she still has to pay her own way for stuff like books and transportation. She's still waiting on the other half of the money she was promised, and she keeps following up. December of 2017.
Starting point is 00:11:17 Winter break, Sarai and her mom go to his office. His office is in boy hides, like by the College Track Center, like just like a few blocks away from school. They talked to Isad's assistant. And she kind of said that there was hesitation because the office had been unable to process the funds. So they were kind of having trouble with that, but to not worry that they were going to be given to us. And then, a full year after graduation, she gets a letter from Waseda. So I received a letter on April 3rd, 2018, from Cuisar's office. She was like, you have earned this scholarship as an exemplary student.
Starting point is 00:12:00 And under no circumstance, will they be revoked from you? I think you in advance for your patience. but the money still doesn't come. I honestly, like, was very stressed at that point because we only had a year. Sari had heard that she only had a year to pick up a scholarship money. And it had been a year.
Starting point is 00:12:22 So she was like, it's too late. And after I went back, I came back to school in the fall of 2018, I kind of gave up. I was like, okay, I don't know if I'm ever going to see this money again. And my mom was like, don't give up hope. You know, I'm still going to keep going. And making sure that, like, you know, I get some answers.
Starting point is 00:12:46 And I, at that point, I just gave up. They never managed to get the other half of the money. $500 that we said had promised her. But then she found out that some students from her year hadn't gotten anything. I feel like sometimes we're, I don't know, in the Latino community, were a bit hesitant to talk about finances and money. And so I felt like there was a bit of hesitation from their part. And they said they hadn't received anything.
Starting point is 00:13:15 And this was when I received the first half. Here's the timeline we've been able to piece together from public documents and budgets and interviews. Sometime around Wiesad's selection to city council in 2005, he created the Jose Wiesad Excellence in Education Scholarship for students at Roosevelt High School and Garfield High School. They're about four miles apart in Bull Heights and East L.A. But almost right away there were problems with the scholarship. We talked to one student who graduated in 2009, just four years after Weissad was elected. She had to bug Weissad's office for months after graduating before they finally got the money to her university.
Starting point is 00:13:55 And you can see evidence in public documents that some students got their money years late. There's a line item in the city budget for March 2018 tagged as a payment for the Weissad Scholarship. When we dug up the log of how that money was spent, it lists checks going to years of Weisad Scholarship recipients all the way back to the class of 2015, getting paid out in 2018, which meant that money was three years late. So students were only getting the money in dribs and drabs, but up until 2018 or so, it seems like a lot of students were at least,
Starting point is 00:14:36 getting some money. Maybe just half, like Zara'i, but something. And then, at some point, the money just stopped coming. I vividly remember speaking to a class of 2017. Here's Abby again, who graduated in 2018. One of them saying, like, you're never seeing that money. Like, the winners from our class have never seen that money. And I was kind of like, what do you mean? Like, what are you talking about? I have not. heard anything about anyone getting it. I was actually going to reach out to a couple of students that I know and be like, hey, did y'all ever get it? But to be honest, I don't think anyone ever got that money. It's still not clear what happened. Why so many students waited so long to get
Starting point is 00:15:21 money that was promised to them. And why some students never got the money at all. Why year after year, he paraded students down on the football field while word was spreading around Roosevelt High School. Alam from other classes were like, yeah, like we've never gotten in our money. Like, you're never going to see it. When we first got the tip, we suspected fraud. We thought maybe somebody pocketed the money, but we have found no evidence of fraud. It seems like when money did come through the city, it usually made its way to the students.
Starting point is 00:15:56 And it doesn't seem like incompetence either. This was an office capable of coordinating hundreds of millions of dollars in real estate deals. They could figure out how to get a dozen students a year, a thousand bucks each. In the end, it felt more like the students didn't get their money because of indifference. Because no one cared enough to follow up, which in some ways is even more surprising than fraud. We Sad just not caring enough to make sure that there's a system to get money to the students on time. Imagine your office getting months and months of emails and phone calls from students who need the money that was promised to them. And just not following up.
Starting point is 00:16:44 We haven't been able to find anyone who got their money after the FBI raided WeSad in the fall of 2018. So maybe the money stopped coming after the raid. Maybe. But even if that's true, by that point, there was a decade of WESAD scholarship students struggling to get the money their council member had promised them. By the way, we reached out to the principals of Roosevelt and Garfield High Schools for comment. They never got back to us. We also reached out to Wissad's lawyers with a list of questions. This will probably be a surprise to no one, but they didn't get back to us.
Starting point is 00:17:24 Here's Abby again. Definitely shame, especially when you put up such a performative act at like going to the classic and like making these big checks made and then you don't pay students as like super performative to me. I don't know. I'm just like, how did he sleep at night being like, yeah, my name's on these checks. I'm giving scholarships to students and I'm pretty sure like he would mention that as like the things he does to better his community.
Starting point is 00:17:48 Shame on him, shame on him. I don't know how he's sleeping on night right now. The sellout is produced by Neonha Media in L.A. Taco. I'm your host, Mara Gassaniela. My co-reporters for this episode were Lexus Olivier Ray, Carla Green, and Liz Sanchez. Carla Green is our lead producer, and she wrote this episode. Our editor is Catherine St. Louis. Associate editor is Stephanie Serrano. Associate producer is Liz Sunches. Our executive producer is Jonathan Hirsch. Samantha Allison is our production manager. Our sound designer is Hansdale. She. Eduardo Arenas made our theme music.
Starting point is 00:18:30 other original music by Moni Mendoza. We also reported out a print version of the story written by Lexus Olivier Ray and Liz Sanchez. It's got lots of extra stuff we couldn't fit into this episode. Emails about students not getting their money, pictures, tweets to and from WeSAD about the scholarship. You should really check it out at La Tocco.com.
Starting point is 00:18:53 You can find us on Twitter for updates about WeSad and The Trial at LATOCO and Neon Hum Media. Wesad's trial has been pushed back to early. 2020, but one of his original co-defendants is going to start being tried amid June. Stay tuned for more on that. As always, thank you so much for listening. And if you love the show, tell a friend or give us a shout out on social media or Apple Podcast. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:19:18 We appreciate you.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.