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Hydee Feldstein Soto

Hydee Feldstein Soto (born 1958) is an American attorney and politician who is the City Attorney of Los Angeles. She is a member of the Democratic Party.

Early life and career

Feldstein Soto was born in 1958 in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and moved to the mainland United States at age 17 to attend Swarthmore College and Columbia Law School, graduating from the latter in 1982. As an attorney, she served as a general counsel and worked in several private practices.

Los Angeles City Attorney

In 2021, Feldstein Soto announced her candidacy for Los Angeles City Attorney. She was endorsed by the Los Angeles Times. She prevailed in the general election, becoming the first female City Attorney in L.A. history, and the first Latina elected to citywide office in Los Angeles.

Tenure

On September 12, 2023, Feldstein Soto announced that the City Attorney's Office had filed a lawsuit against the owners and operator of a motel in South Los Angeles that has served as a "hub for prostitution" for several years.

At the start of Labor Day weekend, on September 1, 2023, Feldstein Soto joined council members Hugo Soto-Martínez and Tim McOsker to unveil new legislation to strengthen the enforcement of wage theft violations.

On August 15, 2023, Feldstein Soto announced her office had filed a lawsuit against a company, Nightfall Group, that offers luxury party houses for short term rentals saying that they violate city laws and create a public nuisance. Feldstein Soto said that police have been called more than 250 times in the last two years because of problems at houses that the business rents out in the Hollywood area. In September 2025, Feldstein Soto expanded enforcement against illegal short-term rentals and party houses in Hollywood, with violators facing increased fines.

In November 2025, Feldstein Soto joined a multi-city coalition of city attorneys working to safeguard Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits. In December 2025, the City Attorney's office received a $1.3 million grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety to prosecute impaired drivers.

In January 2026, Feldstein Soto announced a $7.7 million settlement in a statewide environmental protection suit against telecommunications company Verizon. In October 2025, her office settled a lawsuit against the owners of a nine-location tobacco retail chain for $350,000 in civil penalties after the stores were found to have sold flavored tobacco products, which were banned in California in 2002, we well as tobacco to minors in violation of state and city law.

Accusations of ethical breaches and retaliation

In June 2024, Michelle McGinnis, a former prosecutor in the City Attorney's office, filed a legal claim alleging that Feldstein Soto retaliated against her for reporting "legal and ethical violations." McGinnis claimed that Feldstein Soto based some of the office's decisions on prosecutions on "personal relationships" or "perceived political gain," including telling employees she wanted to stop prosecuting corporate defendants and singling out an individual protestor for prosecution. McGinnis reported that after objecting to these decisions, she was “subjected to a series of adverse employment actions and ultimately placed on administrative leave, removed from the office, and prohibited from further contact with office colleagues and employees." In July, another employee claimed that Feldstein Soto routinely read her employees' emails without their knowledge, and two more former employees filed retaliation claims. In August, Feldstein Soto requested $500,000 from the City of Los Angeles to fund a legal response to the claims. However, the City Council only authorized $50,000. On April 22, 2024, McGinnis was put on administrative leave. In January 2025, following an investigation by the city attorney's office, McGinnis was sent a notice of termination.

Gaza protest prosecutions

In March 2024, the Los Angeles Police Department raised concerns to the attorney's office that Feldstein Soto pushed the department to press charges against a specific individual without sufficient evidence, following a particular Los Angeles action in Gaza war protests. An internal city hall memo recounted that "for reasons unknown, the City Attorney expressed inordinate interest in the progress of a mass protest investigation, going so far as to suggest the identification of a specific individual for prosecution to the Chief of Police". In April 2025, a judge found evidence of "biased prosecution" by Feldstein Soto in her decision to seek charges for thirty-one pro-Palestine protesters who were arrested for blocking traffic in December 2023, despite such prosecutions being extraordinarily rare in Los Angeles.

Opposition to affordable housing

While running for office, Feldstein Soto opposed the construction of 140 units of affordable housing in Venice, an affluent neighborhood of L.A. In 2023, the Los Angeles Times reported that Feldstein Soto had instructed city agencies to not interact with the developers of the project on city-owned parking lot in Venice. The project had previously been approved by the City Council and survived multiple lawsuits, but Feldstein Soto's actions delayed its progress.

In July 2024, advocates for low-income housing sued the city of Los Angeles, accusing Feldstein Soto of violating fair housing laws by blocking the housing development in Venice. The Los Angeles Times editorial board criticized Feldstein Soto for derailing the housing development.

In 2025, Feldstein Soto sent a letter to a state senator expressing her opposition to Senate Bill 79 which allows six-story buildings near light rail stations and rapid bus stops. She argued that more housing would increase local tax burdens. In 2025 and 2026, Feldstein Soto's office filed lawsuits against multiple landlords for alleged illegal rent increases and fee violations targeting tenants displaced by the January 2025 wildfires.

Liability payouts

Between 2022, before Soto took office, and 2025, liability payments by the city of Los Angeles — which settle claims and lawsuits against the city for wrongdoing, including internal staff harassment, police use of force and injuries –– increased dramatically to a projected $320 million, more than three and a half times the budgeted $87 million. The Los Angeles Times reported that these legal settlements contributed significantly to the city's FY2025 budget crisis, and reported that Soto's office took a "combative stance" against plaintiffs that contributed to this increase in payouts. The Times cited multiple plaintiffs attorneys who asserted that Soto's office is taking more cases to trial, resulting in larger verdicts than if she settled. One attorney "said he recently went to trial in five cases and won all of them, for a total payout of more than $40 million," but said he "would have been happy to settle all five cases for a total of less than $10 million."

Gun safety

Feldstein Soto announced a settlement in her office's lawsuit against Polymer80, the nation's largest manufacturer of weapons parts kits and components, permanently prohibiting the company from selling its weapons parts kits its in California without first conducting background checks of buyers and serializing its products. In addition, the company and its founders were ordered to pay $5 million in civil penalties. The lawsuit had been filed in February 2021, almost two years before Feldstein Soto took office, and was prosecuted by staff who predated Feldstein Soto's election along with Everytown Law and Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan.

Child sexual abuse prosecutions

In April 2025, a jury convicted former UCLA preschool teacher Christopher Rodriguez on nine counts of child sexual abuse, including sexual battery and penetration with a foreign object, involving 3- and 4-year-old children at UCLA early care and education centers. According to an announcement by Feldstein Soto, Rodriguez faced up to seven and a half years in county jail and was required to register as a sex offender. In January 2026, Feldstein Soto secured a 12-and-a-half-year sentence against Jacinto Mendez for sexual abuse of an underaged female relative, which Feldstein Soto called "one of the longest sentences" her office had ever obtained.

Anti sex trafficking initiatives

In January 2026, Feldstein Soto and Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman announced the Western Avenue Initiative, a joint city-county effort to combat sex trafficking along Western Avenue between Olympic and Santa Monica Boulevard<nowiki/>s. The initiative shifted enforcement focus from prosecuting trafficking victims to targeting sex buyers, traffickers and profiteers, with the City Attorney's office partnering with the District Attorney to pursue state prison sentences for sex buyers. The effort followed earlier enforcement along the Figueroa Corridor in South Los Angeles, where the City Attorney's office reported arresting 72 sexual predators. Feldstein Soto and Hochman also co-sponsored Assembly Bill 535, called "the Victim and Witness Protection Act," which was signed into California law in 2025 and strengthened protections for survivors of domestic violence, human trafficking, and sex crimes against witness intimidation and retaliation. Feldstein Soto sponsored and California State Senator Susan Rubio authored California Senate Bill 680 to close a loophole in the law requiring mandatory sex registration for those who molest minors, which was signed into law in 2025 and became effective January 1, 2026.

Skid Row Housing Trust

In March 2023, Feldstein Soto asked a court to appoint Mark Adams as a receiver for the Skid Row Housing Trust, which holds a collection of 29 buildings home to 1,500 formerly unhoused people. Feldstein Soto described Adams as "the most experienced health and safety receiver we were able to locate in the state of California". A Los Angeles Times review of Adams's record showed that he had a history of overbilling local governments, failing to maintain the conditions of his properties and putting vulnerable tenants at risk of eviction and homelessness. In June 2023, after scrutiny from the Times and other city officials, Feldstein Soto's office reported to the Los Angeles City Council that Adams had misrepresented his fundraising ability, shown little progress in improving conditions for tenants, failed to provide required spending reports, and that his property management company had issued hundreds of illegal eviction notices to residents. In June, Los Angeles City Council authorized a $10 million emergency loan to stabilize the trust on the condition that Adams resign. Two weeks later, the Los Angeles Times revealed that Adams had hosted a fundraiser for Feldstein Soto during her 2022 election campaign.

Wildfire price gouging prosecution

In the weeks following the January 2025 Southern California wildfires, which impacted Los Angeles county, the City Attorney's office received approximately 900 price-gouging complaints and redeployed staff from every division to investigate allegations of landlords violating post-disaster pricing rules. On February 3, 2025, the office filed its first major enforcement action against Blueground US Inc, a New York-based venture capital-backed furnished apartment company accused of raising rents by 20 to 56 percent within days of the fires. In March 2025, Feldstein Soto filed a $62 million lawsuit against a group of property owners accused of operating an illegal short-term rental scheme that exploited residents displaced by the wildfires.

In July 2025, Feldstein Soto filed a lawsuit against vacation rental marketplace Airbnb, alleging the platform facilitated price gouging on more than 2,000 rental listings in violation of California's price gouging laws. The complaint alleged that Airbnb allowed hosts to increase prices beyond legally permitted limits during a declared state of emergency and permitted misleading listings. In February 2026, the City Attorney's office filed additional lawsuits against major landlords and housing providers for alleged illegal rent hikes and tenant fee violations in the aftermath of the wildfires, accusing them of ignoring the wildfire rent cap.

Police officer photographs and public records

Under Feldstein Soto's leadership, her office sued journalist Ben Camacho and the Stop LAPD Spying Coalition, a local advocacy organization, to return a flash drive containing photographs of LAPD officers. The City of Los Angeles had given Camacho the pictures in response to a public records request, and the Stop LAPD Spying Coalition subsequently published them on the website WatchTheWatchers.net as well as for download on the Internet Archive A coalition of media organizations denounced the lawsuit as limiting the freedom of the press. Constitutional scholar Erwin Chemerinsky commented that "the city is on very weak legal grounds". In June 2024, The city of Los Angeles agreed to pay $300,000 in a tentative settlement to Knock LA journalist Ben Camacho and the group Stop LAPD Spying Coalition for their legal fees.

Weakening of California Public Records Act

Following the LAPD picture release, Feldstein Soto suggested to several California state legislators to weaken the California Public Records Act of 1968 by exempting "images or data that may personally identify an individual". Feldstein Soto's office stated that the proposed legislation was intended to protect the safety of public employees, particularly law enforcement officers, whose personal identifying information had been inadvertently released. The ACLU described Feldstein Soto's proposal as a "gutting" of the California Public Records Act.

References