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After a four-hour closed session on Thursday, the Los Angeles Unified School District board recessed without announcing a decision on whether Superintendent Alberto Carvalho may be placed on leave a day after the FBI raided his residence and the district’s downtown Los Angeles headquarters.
The session will continue on Friday at 12:30 p.m.
Carvalho’s employment was the single item addressed during the closed-door special board meeting. Only a few members of the community spoke during public comment, and the room remained largely empty and quiet.
Board members were not available for interviews, and Carvalho wasn’t seen.
“The District continues normal operations across all schools and offices. We are grateful to our dedicated employees, families, and students for their steady focus and commitment to our school communities,” the district board wrote in a statement released shortly after Thursday’s closed session ended.
The federal investigation involves financial matters related to Carvalho himself, rather than the district, the Los Angeles Times reported.
If the board decides to place Carvalho on leave, it remains unclear who the board might appoint as interim superintendent.
Several districts have picked associate superintendents to serve as interim after placing their superintendents on leave amid active investigations.
As of 8 p.m. Thursday, Carvalho has not made any public comment. Further information on Wednesday’s raids has not been released.
“We expect LAUSD to provide full transparency and clear communication to educators, school staff, and the public,” United Teachers Los Angeles, the district teachers union, said in a statement to EdSource.
“UTLA educators and our school communities have long raised concerns about LAUSD rapidly increasing spending on education tech and outside contractors, while investment in classrooms and educators has declined.”
A critical time for the district
LAUSD’s leadership shakeup comes at a critical time, as the district navigates budget challenges, potential strikes and the impacts of federal actions.
“We feel that this moment really calls for clear, strong leadership,” said Nicolle Fefferman, a longtime LAUSD educator and cofounder of the Facebook advocacy group Parents Supporting Teachers. “And we want our elected school board members to make certain that that is what they are prioritizing.”
Fall out with AllHere
Media reports so far have connected Wednesday’s raids with the company AllHere Education, which LAUSD entered into a $6.2 million professional services contract on July 1, 2023. Miami-Dade County Public Schools, where Carvalho previously served as superintendent, had also entered a contract agreement with the company in the fall of 2022.
Feds Charge Once-Lauded AllHere AI Founder in $10M Scheme to Defraud Investors
Los Angeles Unified initiated the rollout of its chatbot Ed, which was developed by AllHere, in March 2024. It was designed to serve as a “personal assistant” for students — capable of reminding them about assignments and exams, and informing them about cafeteria menus and bus schedules.
But three months later, the company’s founder and CEO Joanna Smith-Griffin left the company. Most employees were furloughed, and Smith-Griffin was arrested in November 2024 and charged with securities fraud, wire fraud and aggravated identity theft.
In July 2024, Carvalho announced a task force to conduct a review of what went wrong with the rollout. But its progress and outcomes don’t appear to have been publicly disclosed.
The home searched by the FBI in Southwest Ranches, Florida, in Broward County, is reportedly the residence of Debra Kerr, who is listed as an AllHere contractor in records related to the company’s bankruptcy case and who has ties with Carvalho from his time as superintendent in Florida. Her son, Richard Kerr, is a former employee of the now-defunct AI company who told The 74 in 2024 that he pitched LAUSD on AllHere.
Parents Supporting Teachers is calling for the district to place Carvalho on administrative leave.
“It’s always been this lingering worry and this example of a theme of the lack of transparency and accountability that we recognize in the district,” Fefferman said.
A storied past
In January 2025, the same parent group called for Carvalho’s removal following a “chaotic and dangerous scramble for families and staff” in the wake of the Palisades Fire.
Carvalho’s contract was renewed in October, maintaining a salary of $440,000.
After serving as superintendent of Miami-Dade County Public Schools for 14 years, Carvalho took over as LAUSD’s leader in 2022. His start at the district began as students returned to physical classrooms from virtual learning due to Covid-19. As a result of the pandemic, he has focused on reducing chronic absenteeism and curbing pandemic learning losses.
But despite LAUSD’s gains in standardized test scores and efforts to improve student attendance, his time as the district’s leader has been riddled with controversies — from alleged mishandling of arts funding to a series of cyberattacks and data breaches.
More recently, he has also received praise and backlash for condemning the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. And last month, the district was sued for allegedly discriminating against white students, which the U.S. Department of Justice recently sought to join.
“It is our hope that the investigation resolves quickly so that the school district can focus on its core mission of educating our children. While we understand the importance of full cooperation with any investigation, we also cannot overlook or undermine the work that Superintendent Carvalho has led to support our students, educators, and the district as a whole,” said Evelyn Aleman, the organizer of the parent group Our Voice/Nuestra Voz.
“Education is the foundation that builds stability and lifts families out of poverty— we must stay focused on that mission and our students’ success.”
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