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Mystery men arrive at $1.6M home of missing LAUSD boss Alberto Carvalho amid corruption probe

mystery-men-arrive-at-$1.6m-home-of-missing-lausd-boss-alberto-carvalho-amid-corruption-probe
Mystery men arrive at $1.6M home of missing LAUSD boss Alberto Carvalho amid corruption probe

Mystery guests were seen arriving at LA schools’ chief Alberto Carvalho’s house Monday amid an FBI probe into the LAUSD boss’ alleged fraud.

The individuals were seen at his $1.6 million family home in San Pedro, a day after a mystery delivery arrived in a whiskey box.

Two men in dark suits were seen climbing the stairs to the property, carrying black duffel bags.

They were then pictured outside the front door, but it was not clear if they were let inside the house, or whom the two men were representing.

Alberto Carvalho ascending steps while carrying a bag.

Two unidentified men were seen arriving atLAUSD chief Alberto Carvalho’s San Pedro home.

It is unclear if Carvalho—who hasn’t been seen publicly for weeks—is staying in the three-bedroom, two-bathroom home he bought in 2022.

The visit came hours after the LAUSD board met at 10 a.m. Monday to evaluate the interim superintendent who is standing in for Carvalho.

Alberto Carvalho carrying a box labeled

It comes a day after a mystery item was delivered to the house in a whiskey box. Rafael Fontoura for CA Post

Carvalho was placed on administrative leave last week, after rifle-toting FBI agents raided his house, taking out boxes of material.

The former Miami-Dade schools chief has a $63 million property portfolio, including three homes in the Miami area.

Further raids were carried out last week at the downtown Los Angeles headquarters of the LAUSD, and the Miami home of Debra Kerr, who is tied to the alleged fraud.

Two unidentified men standing on a porch.

The men approached the front door of the property, although it isn’t known if Carvalho was home at the time.

The investigation involves LAUSD’s dealings with AI company AllHere, where Kerr was a former consultant.

AllHere was paid $6 million to develop a chatbot for LA schools that was never completed, according to court doccuments.

The company’s founder, Joanna Smith-Griffin, was charged with fraud in 2024, just months after she joined Carvalho at an event to launch the deal.

Smith-Griffin, who was once named in the “Forbes Under 30” list for young entrepreneurs, allegedly spent $10 million of her investors’ money on her wedding and a home in North Carolina, federal prosecutors allege.

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