The Binge Cases: U R NEXT - The Sellout | 4. Progress Over People
Episode Date: November 9, 2021When fancy new developments like The Gold Line expansion get proposed, residents of Boyle Heights wonder if it’s actually for them, or if these new new things are meant to attract future residents...... a.k.a. gentrifiers. A mechanic is harassed by the city of Los Angeles after he refuses to sell his land to make way for construction. And Huizar's re-election campaign against Rudy Martinez gets petty. A Neon Hum Media and Sony Music Entertainment production. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts to binge all episodes now or listen weekly wherever you get your podcasts. Find more great podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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When I was younger, I used to take the 60 bus from Pacific Boulevard to downtown L.A.
I remember looking out the window and watching the shops on Pacific Boulevard turn into factories in Vernon.
And then we'd finally get to the big old buildings in downtown, like the L.A. Central Library.
You can tell a lot about a city from inside a bus, because you're not driving. You're a passenger.
So you get to look at everything as it goes by. You're going slow.
But you can still cover a lot of ground, miles and miles of the city.
Nancy Messa remembers taking the bus downtown too.
I think that's the biggest thing around the 720, just really seeing more hotels, more bars, more police.
When she first noticed downtown changing, she watched it happen from the 720 bus.
Like just seeing along the 720th, just way rapid development, like every single day.
And just seeing how fast it moved, right?
Because the biggest, I think, shock for me was when hope.
Whole Foods came into downtown because my family legit lived in downtown and there were no grocery
stores anywhere in sight, I would take the bus back and there was a new hotel, right,
or a new lofts or a new bar.
So just constantly seeing like new, new, new, new, new, everything was fucking wild.
For a long time, a lot of developers really weren't all that interested in downtown.
It didn't seem to be gentrifying because in L.A., in the early two,
2000s, what was going to become a flood of interest in downtown was only a trickle.
A lot of downtown was still Skid Row, and around that time, there were also a lot of people
living downtown in hotels called SROs. Nancy's family lived in a hotel like that for a little while.
My family struggled a lot with housing growing up Damien.
So in the times where we couldn't afford to live in Boehite, we would rent out different
hotel rooms in downtown.
So many families lived in those hotels.
But it was super run down.
The elevator didn't work.
And later, actually, my mom participated in some actions
because all the families in that hotel room were evicted
to make way for luxury development, you know,
right around Staples Center.
For many years, downtown was not a glamorous place to live.
So Boyle Heights being so close by, right across the river,
it didn't feel like anything to worry about,
Until one day, it did.
A lot of folks in the neighborhood were really cautious about the gold line coming in, right?
In 2004, an extension for the gold line was approved.
It was going to run from downtown to East L.A.
It was framed as this really exciting thing.
Now it was going to be that much easier to get from Bull Heights into downtown.
A light rail car recently tested the track on the new Gold Line extension.
This summer, it will link Pasadena and Union Station with L.A.
East Side. Another much anticipated mode of public transportation is the soon-to-be
completed Eastside Gold Line extension. But before the train even leaves the depot,
transportation officials are going to. So in the long run, it might be good for people in
Bull Heights trying to get to downtown, you know, for work and things like that,
or to get to other parts of East LA. But in the short run, it was going to be a huge headache.
A couple different bus lines were going to be suspended or rerouted while the new Gold Line was under
construction for years.
Folks in Bull Heights are heavily bus riders, right?
But also, like, there's a lot of folks that, you know, rely, especially our elders and
young folks, rely on public transportation.
And then as Gold Line construction started happening, they cut off the route to the 30 and
the 31, which was basically the line that took folks from Bowhites into downtown to work.
And, you know, other major bus lines were cut or like, you know, scaled back.
So what we saw with the gold line was like, okay, so we're being offered this super high luxury form of transportation.
And during that time, our actual modes of transportation are being cut off.
The gold line was shiny and new.
It was progress.
It's the kind of thing politicians brag about in speeches.
But lots of residents of Bull Heads had this feeling that they were going to get pushed aside to make room for this future,
especially because the metro expansion happened around the same time that a change was coming to downtown L.A.
For the first time in decades, developers with deep pockets were looking at a piece of downtown right next to Boyle Heights.
It was coming to be known as the Arts District.
So the Gold Line expansion construction officially began in 2004.
About a year before Wased was elected.
But by the time it was set to open in 2009,
we sat had been in office for years, and he was fully on board, and was also literally on the
board of Metro. He was appointed by Villa Rigosa, the former City 14 city council member who left
the district to become mayor. Eastbound lanes have been open for some time, but this all happened
because we wanted to open it up for the gold line rail line to come through that would connect
the east side with the rest of Los Angeles. But more importantly than the better transportation
system that we're providing is the symbolic relationships that we are building between
Bowle Heights and downtown. Lots of good stuff happening in Bowell Heights. We're four, I'm sorry,
over $2 billion. This was still six years before that showdown with that mobile opera in
Hollenbeck Park, six years before the birthplace of Defend Boyle Heights. But some people, like
Nancy, were already starting to see the writing on the wall. By the time the new gold line opened,
there was talk about making another arts district in Boyle Heights.
along the river. It was talk coming from none other than we said.
For many years, people would say, what else is there to do in Voile Heights?
But today's announcement, Konsai's revitalized First Street,
where there's people walking on the streets,
looking at it as a destination point.
You have an organic grassroots artist movement going on
that is not only going to promote the arts,
the Chicano art, the Mexican art, but will also revitalize this corridor both for people who live near here
and for people who want to come visit Vaugh Heights.
There was this focus on the future and what could be, rather than looking at the people living there now.
And when the gold line came in, residents like Nancy could see the arts district creeping across the river along with it.
They could see into the future, and they were like, who is the gold line being expanded for?
The Latinx folks who live in Boyle Heights now?
Or is this actually for somebody else?
Is this prepping the neighborhood for other people to come in later?
Is this for them?
From Nihonha Media and L.A. Taco.
This is smokescreen, the sellout.
A podcast about a politician, dogs, 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 Maraaa Casneda. This is episode four, progress over people.
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You know that movie up with the grumpy old man who refuses to sell his house to developers
who are building skyscrapers like all around him? Eventually, a court decision comes down against the
man. So he ties like a million balloons to his house and just flies away. There are so many
movies and books about that kind of thing. All these stories about people who find themselves
in the way of some kind of progress with a capital P.
But when you're a real person facing that same situation in real life,
you can't just tie a bunch of balloons to your house and fly away.
You're stuck, and sometimes you get crushed.
My co-reporter Lexus Olivier Ray spent months chasing down a man who got crushed like that.
I'm on the border of Lincoln Heights and El Sereno in Los Angeles,
about half a block away from G-Spot Automotive.
I've been trying to track down the mechanic
that reportedly owns this shop for months now.
So now I'm here outside of his shop.
There's a couple of old-school lowriders
parked across the street near the shop.
It looks like they're open.
Hey, Lex.
Hey, Mariah.
So let's talk about Francisco.
Yeah, so his name is Francisco Gonzalez.
He runs a mechanic shop called G-Spot Automotive in El Serena, which is also on CD-14,
basically north and east of Boyle Heights.
Around 2005, he starts getting these visits from law enforcement.
They're from this task force on car theft.
It's called Trap.
And it's basically a coalition of a bunch of different kinds of cops, like the Sheriff's Department, LAPD, and CHP.
By the way, when I spoke to Francisco, his dad was also there.
So you'll be hearing tape from both of them.
12 cops at a time, rushing in with guns like were like criminals or something.
What the heck?
What are you guys doing, you know?
Basically, Francisco says the cops are coming every couple months,
checking that he didn't have stolen parts in his shop.
So why do they think he has stolen parts?
Right, that's what Francisco wants to know.
Well, I mean, I'm talking about every couple, every couple months, every three months,
every coming out.
No, it was more than that.
I think it was more than that.
They always had stupid reason that they came for that.
car one time and they threatened
they were going to... They said it was stolen.
We're going to find something here.
So after a couple of years of this,
Francisco gets an offer from the city.
They want to buy his land for $200,000.
So at that point, the cops
are coming by. All of a sudden,
the city wants to buy his land.
And Francisco is like,
are these two things connected?
Right. He's like, what's going on?
And the reason the city wants to buy his land
is because it's in the way of this big construction
project. The Soto Street Bridge demolition.
Exactly.
When we came to the bridge and we went through the curve, like I knew, okay, I'm almost home,
I'm home.
You know, I'm here.
That was a landmark for us growing up.
Like we knew, okay, we're home because we hit the bridge.
So this is Yoli Garcia.
She and her husband, Jorge, run the El Sereno Historical Society, which does preservation work
out there.
Here's Jorge.
And it was made to accommodate the four-track trolley system from the Pacific Electric
trolley system. They used to run down Level Street on Soto and Mission, but it was a dangerous
intersection because all the trolleys traffic that was expressed. So it was a very highly used
intersection. So the Garcia's feel like this is a historically important bridge. At one point,
Jorge calls it the gateway to El Serena. They heard there was some kind of plan for the bridge,
but had a hard time finding out what was actually going on. And then the demolition project
just kind of starts. They say they don't get a chance to weigh in.
Yes, a blueprint, yeah, but you also need money.
What?
Money.
Yes, money!
This is a video of Weezar talking at a ribbon cutting for the new intersection.
Wow, he's really proud of that Soto Street Bridge Demolition.
Yeah, seems like it.
Okay, so let's back up for a second.
Around 2009, before the demolition, Francisco heard the city want to buy his land because it's
in the way of the bridge demolition.
like 100 feet away from the intersection.
They're offering $200,000, and he was like...
What the heck is it becomes?
You know...
For the whole property?
They were going to take part of this building,
and they were going to go all in a big circle.
But it left me with nothing.
Basically, the city offers to buy Francisco's land for $200,000.
He says, no, my land is worth way more than that.
You've got to make me a better offer.
They don't.
And then around 2014, the construction just...
kind of goes ahead. And Francisco
starts to feel like the city
is punishing him for refusing to sell
his land. And we actually
spoke to other mechanics in CD-14
who had similar stories. They felt
they were being targeted by authorities
while the areas around them changed dramatically.
Right. Like Francisco,
who's just kind of caught in the middle of all this.
They tried to really make us
get out. They really
try to force us. Like this one
day that they were doing work right next
to Francisco's shop, right next to his car.
which is a low rider, he collects them.
They just started pouring cement right near my car.
They never said that on my yellow CRX.
Oh yeah, yeah.
There's still cement splashed on the side of the car.
I had a fresh paint job. They didn't give a shit, bro.
Yeah.
They did all kinds of stuff.
I got all kinds of pictures.
Of that day, they were using the jack camera next to my Mercedes.
There was rocks all over my windshield.
I'm like, bro, really?
And it was dust.
They're like, oh, we're gonna clean it up.
It's like, yeah, but there's rocks hitting my car.
What's wrong with you guys?
They weren't cool, bro.
Meanwhile, this whole time, Francisco says the cops are still coming by every couple months.
And Francisco is ultimately charged with a felony in 2014.
But it's not even for stolen parts.
It's for something else.
For workers' compensation fraud.
Eventually, the case is dismissed, though.
And we should just say, for context, the charges were coming out of a troubled unit of the DA's office.
There were lots of allegations of misconduct against prosecutors in that unit.
There was even a situation where a supervisor allegedly instructed her subordinate to offer a black defendant a worse plea deal for a similar crime as another defendant,
which the subordinate believed was an attempt to punish her for blowing the whistle about sexual harassment in that office.
For the record, the DA denies the allegation.
Anyway, this was the unit that was charging Francisco.
It took all the joy from working our cars out of us, man.
Like literally, we'd have to deal with this.
They'd scare the shit out of everybody.
Everybody interview everybody separately.
You have a car?
So there's a lot of different stuff going on.
The sheriff's department is coming by, the jack hammering.
And meanwhile, Francisco says the construction is really getting in the way of his business.
Customers can't access to shop easily.
And obviously for a mechanic, it's important that people can kind of, you know, drive in and out of the shop.
Right.
That makes sense.
And so it was around 2015 that Francisco went to ask Wissad for help, right?
Yeah, he did.
specifically to complain about the construction part of it.
But Weizard, I tried to get a hold of him,
I went down there, I filled out papers.
They said, no, just give us a big word,
or I'll make sure that he gets it.
They never showed their face.
They never showed their face.
So I'm like, what the...
The only thing they did do is put up a sign saying,
construction over there.
But, yeah, it was a mess.
It was a complete mess.
We actually found this one paragraph,
report from a Weezar staffer through public records requests.
The staffer said that Francisco complained about, quote, the frequent blocking of his driveway.
And then the staffer said that when he went to visit Francisco, he saw the unprofessional way these construction foremen speak to him in front of his customers.
The port says Francisco wants to sit down with someone from Weezar's office.
It's not obvious what happened after that, but Francisco says he never got that sit down.
So Francisco is really frustrated.
And by this point, he's actually already gone to the local news.
Gonzalez says this is the real reason they're after him.
They have a $14 million project going on in front of the shop.
This is from a local NBC story about Francisco, from when he finally decided to talk to the media.
Gonzalez claims the constant visits by police and inspectors is a consortent effort to push him out.
We also contacted the city about that.
They also had no comment.
The city could use eminent domain to acquire the property, and Gonzalez is not opposed to it, but it would require a reasonable offer.
He says they've only offered him about $200,000.
He believes it's worth close to a million dollars.
That's in line with our online research of the area.
Now, he says because it's worth that much, he thinks the city is going to use every other tactic to get his land.
So just kind of, you know, harass us till we break.
Francisco felt like the city of Los Angeles was trying to break him.
Like the bridge project, this future intersection, was more important than his very real present-day business that happened to be in the way.
Like the city of Los Angeles would do whatever it had to to get him out of the way of progress.
And this is what Francisco always says when he talks about this.
The city of Los Angeles did it.
He doesn't say Wiesar, but here's what we know.
Francisco was Wiesar's constituent.
The city tried to buy part of his land.
And he asked for more money, and then for years, he was harassed.
He tried a bunch of different avenues to get help.
The media, even Weezar himself, nothing worked.
My savings for a house, bro, and I wasted the whole everything just to stay open during those times.
It was so bad.
It was so bad.
So things still aren't going too well for Francisco, huh?
Business isn't what it used to be.
When I went there, Richard pointed out how the whole point of the construction project was supposed to,
to make the intersection safer.
But there's still this blind spot that makes it dangerous.
They were trying to get rid of blind spots, right?
Well, they created a blind spot right here.
And Francisco says that it's actually still dangerous to pull into his shop,
which, again, is a huge problem because he's a mechanic.
People need to pull their cars in and out of his shop so he can work on them.
There was an article in a Spanish-language newspaper about Francisco.
There's this one quote.
It's in Spanish, but here's what he says in English.
owning a mechanic garage has always been my American dream,
but the city of Los Angeles has turned my dream into a nightmare.
I don't want to say too much, but you don't know who to call anymore.
Who do you call? What do you do?
And that's like the whole problem when you can't trust people in power
who are supposed to be looking out for you.
Like who do you call?
What happened to Francisco wasn't just exhausting and unrelenting.
It also felt petty, like the city of Los Angeles was coming after him personally.
And around the time Francisco was being harassed, there was a man in CD-14 developing a reputation for pettiness, for keeping a list of his supporters and his haters.
I'll give you one guess who I'm talking about.
We'll be right back.
So, it's about two weeks into 2011, January 17th.
And the LA Times publishes a story.
It's about a series of lists put together by the staffers of Jose Ouizad.
Here's the headline.
we saw its staff graded civic leaders on their clout and support for him.
The scoring sheet, you get negative numbers or positive numbers
based on how they perceived you in supporting the council member.
This is Nick Pacheco, again, the former city council member for CD-14.
Whoever decided to do that was pretty stupid
because you shouldn't be deciding on whether a project gets done
based on who asks for it, because even an asshole can have a good idea, okay?
would grade you on how much you supported him that would have affected the service that you got.
This is Erica Kofian.
And this actually came out in the LA Times. If you Google it, you'll see it.
You can actually see one of these lists in that LA Times article about them.
It's a neat little spreadsheet with the title Community Power Analysis.
So the LA Times headline says the list are about civic leaders.
But there are all kinds of people and organizations on this list.
There's the owner of a local pizzeria.
There are at least five different principals of elementary schools.
There are members of the neighborhood watch.
There's even the local Rotary Club.
On one list, they even got a developer.
Remember 15 Group?
You know, the company that was allegedly trying to tear down Wyvernwood?
One of their executives is ranked as an active supporter of Wiesad.
The LA Times article says another city council member,
quote,
burst out laughing when she was shown a copy of the list.
Wow, this is complicated, she apparently said.
In the same article, Weissad says he had already told his staffers to stop making it.
There's a reason that L.A. Times got their hands on this list in 2011.
It came out as part of a contentious re-election campaign between Wissad and one of his old friends,
a man named Rudy Martinez.
Well, I mean, he's a reality.
TV star.
Erica Hocopian again.
Hocopian is a long-time political strategist.
He's worked on a lot of campaigns,
including this one for Rudy Martinez,
the restaurant owner and reality TV star.
Forget what the name of the show was,
but he was having to do with the rehabs.
So he was sort of like the Latino version of these rehab shows.
Come on, we've got to work.
My name is Rudy Martinez.
Born and raised in L.A.
I buy and sell houses.
I've been working my whole life to make the city I love even better.
This House.
And it was about pretty much what you'd expect.
They'd take properties in different cities and flip them for profit.
Martinez was the host for the segments out of L.A.
This is the scariest house I've ever seen.
When I'm not flipping houses, you might find me turning out fresh sushi at one of my restaurants.
I love you.
Have a good day.
So, picture this.
He's wearing sunglasses on his forehead right above his eyes.
He's driving a bulldozer.
He's walking and talking on his cell phone.
You get the whole picture.
Martinez is a businessman and a house flipper.
He was a bit of a celebrity on the east side for doing that.
In fact, him and Wies are a very good friends for a long time,
and his mom actually worked for a reason.
But, you know, Rudy's just a character, you know.
He does TV shows.
He owns a sushi place.
He owned a bar.
You know, he was just something out of a book, you know.
That's like the kid that came out of nothing.
you know, very poor and made something to himself.
But, you know, he had his quirks, he had his things, but it was hard not to like him.
Hocopian couldn't remember exactly why Rudy had decided to run against Wiesad.
Neither could anyone else we spoke to who remembers this campaign.
We tried many times and in many different ways to get a hold of the man himself.
We even tried calling Rudy's mom.
We never heard back.
Anyways, all Hacopin remembers is that.
Rudy and we said had some old drama.
So I don't know exactly what broke their relationship.
I believe it had something to do with the mother and something to,
there was work that Rudy did on his house.
So Hocopian came on board as a consultant for the Rudy Martinez campaign.
I thought we're going to be running some normal challenger campaign.
You know, there's a bad time for the city.
The economy was upside down.
It was, you know, right after, right in the heart of the recession.
So we're going to be running this classic rage against the machine campaign.
But that's how I was going to approach it naively and stupidly.
The campaign was petty right from the start, like shockingly petty.
Counselman Jose Wiesar, whose campaign manager had sent an email to staff saying that the campaign would...
This is a story that aired on a local public radio station, KPCC.
It's about Wased apologizing to Martinez, because the campaign manager for Wissad sent an email saying he'd put a, quote, political bullet through Martinez's head.
And that wasn't all.
And calling Martinez a disgusting human being that needs to be sent back from the vile bag of
tripe he emanated from.
That's a direct quote from the email from Jose Wiesar's campaign manager.
And here's Wieser last night.
I want to apologize to my opponent, Rudy Martinez.
I want to apologize to his campaign.
And I want to apologize to his mother.
And that's still not all.
A local blog called Mayor Sam reported that Wiesad kept trying to ban Martinez from being in
all these different parades.
in the district, first the Fourth of July parade, then the Veterans Day parade.
An article in LA Weekly at the time said that after Martinez told Weissad he was going to run up
against him, city workers suddenly showed up at his Highland Park restaurant to tell him that
his patio was too big, and he had to tear it down. Officials from the Department of Building
and Safety said the complaint didn't come from Weissad's office, but Martinez had his suspicions.
The LA Weekly article has a quote from a spokesman for the Martinez campaign. If you over
agree with Jose, we sad, you get what you want.
If you're against Jose, you get
fucked. But he was well
known that if you crossed them, he would
be payback. But once
the campaign got started,
that all faded into the background.
Hacopian got a lucky break.
Two, actually.
A lot of times,
you got a dig for dirt on your opponent.
But in this campaign, the dirt
came to them. And the
people dishing the dirt were Wissad
staffers themselves. Though we
Assad staffers were mad enough to be snitching to his opponent about things they'd witness in his office.
And they weren't just snitching to Hacopian.
That I hear that essentially Rudy is working with the FBI.
And there are Wiesar staffers that are helping us who are also talking to the FBI.
Hacopian is in this weird position.
He knows the FBI is looking into YSAD for something.
But he's not sure what.
He's trying to get these Ouizade staffers to talk to the press, and they seem to want to.
But they can't because the FBI is telling them not to.
Sometimes literally, like a reporter is waiting outside and the FBI is on the other line
and we're trying to convince this guy to talk.
And there was multiple people.
The only thing that we could get them to say is to go on the record with the LA Times
that there are Ouizar staffers who had been interviewed by the FBI.
Let's say it was a tug of war between me and the FBI and quite unsurprisingly, FBI won't.
There were lots of things that we sad staffers had told Hocopian that weren't public yet, that he wanted out.
Because he was trying to win a campaign, and he wanted to make WeSad look bad.
And not just bad, petty, vindictive, you know, a man who's got a shit list and updates it obsessively.
But some of the allegations were so.
serious. Payoffs from different people in the city, from developers, things of that nature.
Hacopian kept hearing things that sounded like something out of a movie.
Pickups where the person who actually picked it up. Guess it was money, but wasn't sure.
But if you go in someplace every month and you're picking up an envelope, it's obviously not legal
work. Documents from his office, pictures from his office. You know, he had, I think,
a godfather photo in his office that we got a photo of.
Here's the thing.
We don't actually know why the FBI was investigating Wiesad in 2011.
All Hacopian knows is what staffers were leaking to him.
And also apparently saying to the FBI, little tidbits that sound salacious, but it's not
really clear what they add up to.
By the way, we reached out to multiple staffers who were working in Wiesad's office around
the time.
to try to corroborate what Hacopian told us.
Nobody got back to us.
There was an L.A. Times article about the FBI investigation that came out at the time,
but it just said that Martinez was being interviewed by the feds
and that two ex-WESAD staffers also confirmed being interviewed for the investigation.
It didn't have any details of what they were looking into.
Things that involved Wiesar's personal behavior with the
staff, you know, taking toys for the Christmas thing and not giving it away and keeping it for
himself and using it as Christmas gifts.
Definitely not cool to steal toys from kids.
Financial payoffs for return on votes and other things.
Let's just say that when it came to women staffers' affairs and his wife and not knowing,
not knowing, all of this was compounded during the entirety of the campaign.
It's not really clear what to make of all this.
There's not an obvious thread he can grab onto.
Like, oh, okay, this is what the FBI was looking into.
By the way, we also asked Wiesad about this investigation when we sent a request for comment.
We never heard back.
The fact that Wiesad was under investigation by the FBI sounds shocking.
But is it?
Here's Scott Frazier, one of the hosts of L.A. podcast.
Remember, he's kind of like a Rolodex when it comes to L.A. politics.
Actually, it's not uncommon for the FBI to be investigating local LA city politics.
There are a lot of rules about what you can and can't do as a city council member.
There are actually lots of ways you can break the law.
Like if you don't file your ethics disclosures right, or you use city funds, or you use resources improperly,
there are lots of reasons the FBI might look into you or might look into you and decide,
eh, not enough there.
Here's Scott again.
I find that frequently I'm coming across descriptions of investigations that either don't seem to have panned out
or that later sort of morphed into a different investigation.
The FBI does eventually charge Jose Wiesad with a crime, but not for years, almost a decade after Martinez runs against him.
And it's not clear if the FBI investigation back then had anything to take.
deal with his eventual arrest, especially because a lot of the stuff that we said was eventually
charged with didn't seem to be happening yet back in 2010 and 2011.
Erica Copian again.
Part of this is the information I'm giving you is a time wait.
There's not a whole hell of lots of steel and boil heights.
You know, how much are you going to get a shakedown from dry cleaners?
5,000, 10,000.
The sort of the industrial scale criminality started after this campaign.
downtown that we district and do a district.
And if you look at almost all of the major cases,
they all involve big projects in downtown.
Next time on the sellout,
how Jose Wiesad reaches the pinnacle of his power
with a little help from his friends.
The sellout is produced by Neonha Media and L.A. Taco.
I'm your host, Mariah Castaneda.
My co-reportors are Lexus, Olivier Ray, and Carla Green.
Carla Green is our lead producer,
and she wrote the episode.
Our editor is Catherine St. Louis.
Rick Rumpetel is our consulting editor.
Associate editor is Stephanie Serrano.
Associate producer is Liz Sanchez.
Our executive producer is Jonathan Hirsch.
Samantha Allison is our production manager.
Fact checker is Sarah Ivory.
Our sound designer is Hansdale Sue.
Eduardo Arenas made our theme music.
Other original music by Moni Mendoza
with an additional track from Blue Dot Sessions.
Special thanks to Erica Lindo, Javier Cabral,
Tanner Robbins, Haley Faker, Natalie Wren,
Adrian Riskin, Sharon Risker, Navani Otero,
Janet Villafana, Vanessa and Jorge Cassignada,
and Ivan Fernandez.
If you want to know more about what you've heard on the show so far,
head over to LATaco.com to see a beautiful map
of some of the places we talk about,
made by Tommy Gallegos, as well as new reporting and interviews.
This week, you've got a deep dive into what happened with the Soto Street Bridge and Francisco's shop
from my very talented co-reporter, Lexus Olivier Ray.
Thanks for listening. See you next week.
