
LAUSD Superintendent Alberto Carvalho has an extensive real estate portfolio, with more than $5.5 million in properties across California and Florida, The California Post learned.
The revelation comes as the embattled schools chief is dealing with federal officials raiding his office, Los Angeles home, and a Miami property tied to the investigation. The raids are tied to allegations of fraud and corruption, a source told The Post.
Carvalho owns at least six homes in Florida’s Broward County and one in Los Angeles along with his wife, Maria. The schools head used to be Miami-Dade County Public Schools’ Superintendent for more than a decade before joining LAUSD in 2022.
His main 3-bed, 3-bath San Pedro home is worth about $1.6 million, according to Zillow. The multi-floor single-family home is around 2,000 square feet.
Carvalho’s most valuable home, according to Zillow, is his 5-bed, 4-bath Miami Shores home. It’s valued at $2.4 million and has 3,576 square feet of space. He also owns two Miami condos worth around $1.4 million combined, per Zillow.
The LAUSD schools head earns $440,000 per year, and signed a new four-year contract last year.
Three more homes in Fort Lauderdale come in at around $1.3 million combined.
Carvalho’s extensive real estate portfolio is revealed as he comes under fire from the federal government.
Federal officer searches were carried out at Carvalho’s San Pedro house, his office at LAUSD headquarters in downtown LA and at another location in Miami tied to the investigation. An affidavit filed concerning the search was under seal, officials said.
The investigation is reportedly tied to a failed AI company called AllHere, which created a chatbot program for LAUSD with Carvalho at the helm, the program was later pulled.
The home at the center of the Miami raid belongs to Debra Kerr, one of the leaders of AllHere.
“We have been informed of law enforcement activity at Los Angeles Unified School District headquarters and at the home of the Superintendent. The District is cooperating with the investigation and we do not have further information at this time,” the LAUSD said in a statement.
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