Monday, June 22, 2026

THE BILLIONAIRE CIRCUS COMES TO TOWN — AGAIN: LAUSD'S NEVER-ENDING SUPERINTENDENT SCANDAL PARADE


THE BILLIONAIRE CIRCUS COMES TO TOWN — AGAIN

LAUSD'S NEVER-ENDING SUPERINTENDENT SCANDAL PARADE

How America's second-largest school district became a $11 billion ATM for oligarchs, a testing ground for corporate "disruption," and a revolving door for executives who leave with either a golden parachute or a federal subpoena — sometimes both.

 Act One: The Resignation Nobody Should Be Surprised By

On the evening of June 21, 2026 — a Sunday, naturally, because nothing says "I'm not fleeing a federal investigation" quite like resigning on a weekend — Alberto Carvalho sent his resignation letter to the Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education.

"Placing students first has always guided my work," he wrote, in a letter that mentioned historic test score gains, record graduation rates, and equity-focused programs — and conspicuously did not mention the FBI agents who had raided his home, his office, and a Florida property tied to a contractor back in February.

Four months on paid administrative leave. A federal investigation still very much open. A $3 million AI chatbot that collapsed into bankruptcy before it could successfully advise a single ninth-grader on their homework. A civil lawsuit alleging $80 million in voter-approved arts funding was quietly redirected to cover operational costs.

And yet — he didn't want to be a distraction.

How thoughtful.

Act Two: The Playbook They Keep Running (And Running, And Running)



Here is the thing about the corporate education reform movement: it is not subtle. It has never been subtle. It is a $500 million, multi-decade, openly documented campaign to take the second-largest public school system in the United States and slowly, methodically convert it into a privatized marketplace — and it has been hiding in plain sight the entire time.

The formula is elegant in its cynicism:

Step 1 — Buy the Board. Pour millions through independent expenditure PACs, deceptively named front groups like the Parent Teacher Alliance (which had zero connection to any actual parents or teachers), and dark-money 501(c)(4) organizations. Turn what were once sleepy, low-budget school board races into the most expensive local elections in American history. In 2017, pro-privatization groups spent an estimated $144 per vote in a single LAUSD board race. For context, presidential campaigns spend less than $10 per vote. The billionaires were not buying a school board seat. They were buying an $11 billion public institution.

Step 2 — Install the Outsider. Once you own the board majority, bypass traditional educator pipelines and install a corporate executive, investment banker, or military commander as superintendent. Bonus points if they have no classroom experience whatsoever. The Eli Broad Superintendents Academy — founded on the explicit premise that you don't need to know how to teach children to manage a school system — spent two decades manufacturing exactly these candidates and seeding them into districts across California and the nation. They were called "Broadies," and Los Angeles got more than its share.

Step 3 — Disrupt, Destabilize, Defund. Run the "portfolio" model: treat neighborhood schools like underperforming stocks. Label them "failing" using standardized test metrics. Close them. Co-locate charter operators on their campuses. Drain enrollment, drain funding, and watch the traditional public school system buckle under its own artificially manufactured weight.

Step 4 — Collect the Scandal, Repeat.

Because here is the dirty little secret of the corporate disruption model: when you treat a public institution like a venture capital playground, you do not get innovation. You get the $1.3 billion iPad program that students hacked in 72 hours. You get the AI chatbot that went bankrupt and whose founder got federally indicted for wire fraud. You get FBI raids. You get resignation letters on Sunday nights.

Act Three: The Rogues' Gallery — A Superintendent Scandal Timeline


LAUSD has not had one corporate-style superintendent end their tenure in disgrace. It has had a collection of them, each one arriving with grand promises of "disruption" and departing under a cloud of federal scrutiny, catastrophic tech failures, or both.

John Deasy (2011–2014): The premier Broadie. Testified against his own district's teachers in court. Championed a $1.3 billion plan to hand every student an Apple iPad pre-loaded with Pearson software — a contract that, it emerged, was shaped by private communications between his inner circle and Apple and Pearson executives before the bidding process even closed. The FBI investigated. Deasy resigned. He then went to work for the Broad Academy. Of course he did.

Austin Beutner (2018–2021): An investment banker. No education background. Installed by a billionaire-funded board majority. Before he even took office, a confidential Broad-backed memo leaked — a plan called "Great Public Schools Now" — outlining a $490 million initiative to move half of LAUSD's students into charter schools. His structural decentralization agenda triggered the historic 2019 UTLA strike, in which teachers didn't just walk out over wages — they walked out over the soul of public education itself.

Alberto Carvalho (2022–2026): Arrived as a polished, nationally acclaimed superintendent. Departed four years later with an open federal investigation, a resigned letter drafted on a Sunday night, and a legacy that includes a bankrupt AI startup, an FBI raid on his home, and allegations that $80 million in voter-approved arts funding was quietly redirected. Acting Superintendent Andres Chait has now taken the wheel of a district staring down insolvency within two to three years.

Long live the superintendent. Long live the next superintendent.

Act Four: Where Were the Watchdogs?

This is the question that deserves to be asked loudly, repeatedly, and without the polite diplomatic hedging that usually softens it into irrelevance:

Where was the California Department of Education? Where were the state legislators who were supposed to provide oversight of an $11 billion public institution? Where were the attorneys general, the auditors, the elected officials whose entire job description includes protecting the public from exactly this kind of systemic looting?

The answer, unfortunately, is that many of them were bought too.

The same billionaire network that flooded LAUSD school board races with dark money also poured tens of millions into California State Assembly and Senate primaries through PACs like EdVoice and CCSA Advocates. Their explicit goal was to build a legislative firewall — a wall of friendly legislators who would block transparency laws, conflict-of-interest regulations, and charter accountability measures from ever reaching a floor vote.

They also spent heavily on the race for State Superintendent of Public Instruction, the very office that is supposed to be the public's last line of defense against exactly this kind of privatization campaign.

You would not spend hundreds of millions of dollars on this infrastructure if you were not getting a return on your investment. And the return has been extraordinary: two decades of charter expansion, weakened public school funding, and a parade of corporate executives cycling through the superintendent's office — each one leaving behind a trail of broken contracts, federal investigations, and a district perpetually teetering on the edge of financial collapse.

Act Five: It Was Never Just LAUSD

Los Angeles is the most visible battlefield, but the corporate privatization playbook has been run across California's core districts with the same ruthless consistency.

Oakland Unified endured three consecutive Broad-trained executives during a state receivership, leaving behind a district so financially destabilized that it has faced mass school closures, labor strikes, and structural deficits for nearly two decades. Sacramento City Unified became a laboratory for data-driven teacher evaluation models and bitter contractual warfare. San Diego Unified was handed to a former U.S. Attorney with a corporate restructuring mandate who met fierce resistance from the educators and parents he was supposed to serve.

The private non-profit network coordinating this campaign reads like a who's who of billionaire philanthropy: the California Charter Schools Association, pouring millions into local races; the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, funneling tech billionaire capital into market-based curriculum mandates; the Fisher Family Foundation, bankrolling the KIPP charter network's urban expansion; and Innovate Public Schools, a "community organizing" group that critics argue manufactures artificial parent demand for charters while systematically undermining the neighborhood schools those parents actually use.

And anchoring all of it: the Walton Family (Walmart heirs, Arkansas), Reed Hastings (Netflix, Silicon Valley), Michael Bloomberg (New York), and the late Eli Broad (Los Angeles) — a tight-knit oligarchy of out-of-district and out-of-state billionaires who decided that California's public schools were an underperforming asset in need of a hostile takeover.

The Takeaway: Democracy Is Not a Disruption Opportunity


There is an old saying — the one about doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. LAUSD has now cycled through multiple corporate-style superintendents, each one installed by a billionaire-funded board majority, each one implementing the same "portfolio" model, the same top-down restructuring, the same tech-centric procurement gambits — and each one departing under circumstances that range from deeply embarrassing to actively under federal investigation.

The Broad Center has since relocated its endowment to the Yale School of Management, which is a very elegant way of saying that the corporate disruption of American public education has now been formally embedded into an Ivy League business school curriculum. The pipeline continues. The Broadies keep coming.

Meanwhile, Acting Superintendent Andres Chait inherits a district facing insolvency within two to three years, two active federal investigations, a civil lawsuit over $80 million in misallocated arts funding, and a school board that must now decide whether to hire yet another outsider executive — or finally, after twenty years of spectacular, federally investigated, billion-dollar failures, try something genuinely radical:

Hiring an educator to run a school district.

The neighborhood public school — the institution that accepts every child, regardless of disability, language barrier, immigration status, or zip code — is not a failing stock to be shorted. It is the foundational infrastructure of democratic society. It is the one institution that belongs, by law and by right, to the community it serves.

When billionaires spend hundreds of millions of dollars to capture it, they are not "helping." They are not "disrupting" a broken system for the benefit of children.

They are robbing the public of the one institution that was never supposed to be for sale.

The FBI investigation into Alberto Carvalho remains open as of June 22, 2026. Acting Superintendent Andres Chait is now leading LAUSD. The Broad Center at Yale SOM continues to train the next generation of corporate school executives. The California Charter Schools Association's political arms are, presumably, already preparing for the next school board election cycle.

The circus rolls on.


Sources & Citations

🔴 Carvalho Resignation & FBI Investigation

  1. LA Times"Carvalho resigns as LAUSD superintendent amid federal investigation" 🔗 https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-06-21/carvalho-resigns-as-lausd-superintendent-amid-federal-investigation

  2. New York Times"Embattled Superintendent of Los Angeles School District Resigns" 🔗 https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/22/us/superintendent-lausd-alberto-carvalho-resigns.html

  3. CBS News Los Angeles"LAUSD Superintendent Alberto Carvalho resigns amid FBI investigation" 🔗 https://www.cbsnews.com/losangeles/news/lausd-superintendent-alberto-carvalho-resigns-amid-fbi-investigation/

  4. Education Week"Carvalho Resigns as L.A. Unified Superintendent Amid Federal Investigation" 🔗 https://www.edweek.org/leadership/carvalho-resigns-as-l-a-unified-superintendent-amid-federal-investigation/2026/06


🤖 AllHere AI Chatbot, FBI Raids & Procurement Fraud

  1. The 74 Million"AllHere Set Meeting With LAUSD Leaders Months Before Landing $6.2M Chatbot Deal" 🔗 https://www.the74million.org/article/allhere-set-meeting-with-lausd-leaders-months-before-landing-6-2m-chatbot-deal/

  2. LA Times"How LAUSD Supt. Carvalho's bet on AI went bust and led to FBI raid" 🔗 https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-02-27/lausd-ai-chatbot-superintendent-carvalho-fbi-raid

  3. Government Technology"AI Company Collected $1.6M from Miami-Dade Schools Before Bankruptcy" 🔗 https://www.govtech.com/education/k-12/ai-company-collected-1-6m-from-miami-dade-schools-before-bankruptcy


💰 Billionaire Dark Money & LAUSD School Board Elections

  1. EdSource"Charter groups and unions spend millions for control of LA Unified school board" 🔗 https://edsource.org/2017/charter-groups-and-unions-spend-millions-for-control-of-la-unified-school-board/578065

  2. LA Times"For decades, LAUSD battled over charter schools. This election cycle, that's all but disappeared" 🔗 https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-05-29/la-me-lausd-board-races-spending-drop

  3. The Progressive"The Tide May Be Turning on Billionaire Backers of Charter Schools" 🔗 https://progressive.org/public-schools-advocate/tide-turning-on-billionaire-charter-backers-181205/


🏫 The Broad Academy, "Broadies" & Corporate Education Reform

  1. Diane Ravitch's Blog / Peter Greene"What Did the Broad Academy Accomplish?" 🔗 https://dianeravitch.net/2022/09/17/peter-greene-what-did-the-broad-academy-accomplish/

  2. Capital & Main"Remembering Eli Broad's Charter School Crusade" 🔗 https://capitalandmain.com/remembering-eli-broads-charter-school-crusade-0507

  3. Stanford / EEPA Academic Study"The Case of Broad Superintendents" (peer-reviewed research on Broad Academy outcomes) 🔗 https://tom-dee.github.io/files/EEPA-Broad.pdf


📌 Notes on Source Currency

All links were verified active as of June 22, 2026. The LA Times, NYT, CBS News, and Education Week stories on the Carvalho resignation were published June 21–22, 2026 and reflect the most current reporting available. The Stanford/EEPA study and Capital & Main piece provide historical and academic context on the Broad Academy's documented impact.