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Herb Wesson remains barred from overseeing 10th District

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A temporary restraining order barring Herb Wesson from performing any official Los Angeles City Council duties in place of suspended Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas will remain in place for now. A judge stated he is “inclined” to issue a preliminary injunction on the matter.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Mitchell Beckloff heard arguments on the issue last week, but took the matter under submission, saying only that he’ll rule shortly. It was unclear when that might happen.

The Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) of Southern California has challenged the legality of Wesson’s appointment as a temporary replacement for Ridley-Thomas, saying he is termed out due to his previous time on the council. Wesson represented the 10th District from 2005 through 2020, serving as council president from 2012 to 2020. The group also challenges the legality of the council’s suspension of Ridley-Thomas, but the judge said he concluded the council did have such authority.

SCLC attorney John Sweeney said outside the courtroom after Wednesday’s hearing that he and his clients are hopeful the judge will finalize his oral tentative ruling and grant the preliminary injunction. He said the right of 10th District residents to have a say in who represents them overrides concerns about a temporary lapse in having someone filling the seat, and that decisions Wesson may make in the interim could affect the district indefinitely.

Ridley-Thomas—a former executive director of the SCLC–was suspended from the council last October, following his federal indictment on corruption charges.

The motion to appoint Wesson as a temporary replacement was unanimously approved by the council on Feb. 22. Wesson is supposed to hold the position through Dec. 31 unless Ridley-Thomas is acquitted or the charges against him are dropped.

Deputy City Attorney Jonathan Eisenman argued the appointment does not run afoul of term-limit rules because Wesson would serve less than half of the remainder of Ridley-Thomas’ term.

In February, a different judge, Mary Strobel, issued a temporary restraining order barring Wesson from serving on the council. But she later vacated that order and declined to issue a preliminary injunction, saying that procedurally, the SCLC needed to obtain permission from the state Attorney General’s Office to proceed with its legal challenge.

As a result, Wesson began serving on the council in mid-March. In June, however, the Attorney General’s Office cleared the way for the SCLC to proceed with its challenge, opining that there were legitimate questions about whether Wesson’s appointment was legal.

Last month, Strobel issued another temporary restraining order, barring Wesson from performing any council duties, although not specifically removing him from the office. Earlier this month, Strobel recused herself from the case, saying she worked on a city commission in 1999 that recommended changes to the City Charter—changes that are being referenced in the city’s opposition to the SCLC’s challenge to Wesson’s appointment.

That led to the case being transferred to Beckloff, who held his first hearing on the matter on Aug. 17.

Attorneys for the city have argued against the restraining order, saying in part that there was no urgency for such a ruling, as noted by the SCLC’s decision to wait roughly a month after the attorney general’s ruling to even seek an injunction. City attorneys also claimed that the restraining order would do nothing to address the SCLC’s primary allegation that the City Council had no authority to suspend Ridley-Thomas.

Ridley-Thomas and Marilyn Flynn, former dean of the USC School of Social Work, are charged in a 20-count indictment alleging a secret deal in which Ridley-Thomas—when he was a member of the county Board of Supervisors—allegedly agreed to steer county money to the university in return for admitting his son, Sebastian Ridley-Thomas, into graduate school with a full-tuition scholarship and a paid professorship.

Flynn allegedly arranged to funnel a $100,000 donation from Ridley-Thomas’ campaign funds through the university to a nonprofit to be operated by his son, a former assemblyman. The donation prompted an investigation by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles that remains open, prosecutors said.

In exchange, the indictment contends, Ridley-Thomas supported county contracts involving the School of Social Work, including lucrative deals to provide services to the county Department of Children and Family Services and Probation Department, as well as an amendment to a contract with the Department of Mental Health that would bring the school millions of dollars in new revenue.

Both defendants have strongly denied any wrongdoing and promised that evidence will clear their names.

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