Freddy Escobar stood on the sidewalk exterior his former office waving a inexperienced thumb drive and a stack of papers that he stated would clear his identify.
The suspended president of the United Firefighters of Los Angeles Metropolis stated he couldn’t get into the workplace the place he’s labored since 2018. He stated the union’s mum or dad group had modified the locks to the constructing and the gate code to the parking storage.
He rang the doorbell to ship his proof, together with pictures of receipts, to counter allegations that he hadn’t documented a lot of his bank card purchases. However there was no reply.
“Wow,” he stated. As he turned to face information cameras, Escobar closed his eyes for a second. “A corporation that I might have died for just isn’t giving me a chance now to current to them what they’ve been on the lookout for.”
The dramatic scene unfolded Friday morning exterior the union’s workplace in Historic Filipinotown, 4 days after the Worldwide Assn. of Hearth Fighters suspended Escobar and two different union officers over monetary improprieties, together with “critical issues” with lacking receipts.
The IAFF additionally positioned UFLAC below conservatorship, a primary for any of the native firefighter unions overseen by the Washington, D.C.-based group, a spokesperson stated. The unprecedented transfer adopted Instances experiences in regards to the IAFF’s monetary audit in addition to huge extra time funds to Escobar and different union officers.
IAFF Basic President Edward Kelly disclosed the audit’s findings in a letter to UFLAC members Monday.
From July 2018 by way of November 2024, Escobar initiated 1,957 transactions on his UFLAC bank card, totaling $311,498, the letter stated. Greater than 70% of these transactions — amounting to $230,466 — had no supporting documentation.
“The auditors couldn’t verify the aim of those transactions,” Kelly wrote within the letter. He added that an extra 157 transactions — amounting to $35,397 — have been solely partially supported by required documentation.
“This implies there isn’t a technique to decide whether or not $265,862.34 in dues cash spent by President Escobar with out documentation was for respectable union expenditures,” the letter stated.
The audit discovered that two different UFLAC officers — former Secretary Adam Walker and former Treasurer Domingo Albarran Jr. — collectively had greater than $530,000 in bank card transactions with no receipts or partial documentation. Walker didn’t reply to a request for remark, and Albarran declined to remark.
In all, about $800,000 in bank card purchases weren’t correctly documented, the letter stated.
Vice Presidents Chuong Ho and Doug Coates have been suspended and accused of breaching their fiduciary duties in “failing to implement UFLAC coverage.” Neither responded to a request for remark.
Escobar arrived on the union workplace Friday morning to talk to reporters at a press convention he had referred to as to refute the allegations. He stated he was unaware he was being audited and was by no means requested to supply his receipts.
Underneath UFLAC coverage, receipts are required for all bank card expenditures, together with a proof of the expense, together with the names of these current and the enterprise purpose for the expenditure.
Escobar stated the data he was holding included all the things the IAFF stated was lacking. However he additionally stated he didn’t tally up the totals and didn’t know the way a lot cash he was accounting for. All of the receipts he was offering, he stated, had already been uploaded into the union’s expense system.
“No matter they are saying I don’t have, I’ve,” he stated.
He stated he compiled years of documentation, together with greater than 1,500 receipts, assembly minutes and explanations for his bills, which included transactions for gasoline, meals, inns and Uber rides. He stated none have been private bills.
Requested why he expensed Uber rides when he had a take-home automobile offered by the union, he stated the rides have been for members doing union enterprise.
Accounting issues had been flagged earlier by auditors for UFLAC, who in March 2024 highlighted “vital deficiencies” as a result of officers have been failing to correctly doc their expenditures.
Regardless of that warning, Escobar made 339 transactions in 2024 utilizing his UFLAC bank card — for a complete of $71,671 — with out submitting a single receipt, Kelly wrote.
Escobar stated the auditors by no means spoke to him.
“What’s a warning? It was an audit that stated that we may all the time do higher and that all the time happens — we may all the time do higher,” he stated.
Requested what may have been improved, since he stated he had all his receipts, he replied: “In all probability extra element. … Explanations, tremendous tuning.”
He referred to as on the IAFF “do the correct factor” and reinstate him as president. Within the meantime, he stated he’ll return to work as an LAFD captain at a hearth station in Boyle Heights.
In an announcement Friday, IAFF spokesperson Ryan Heffernan stated that since March 2024 and as just lately as final month, Escobar was “repeatedly urged — in written communication and face-to-face conferences — to meet his fiduciary duties to the members of Native 112 and submit correct documentation for all expenditures.”
“Regardless of this, the forensic audit, issued in Might 2025, confirmed critical deficiencies in Mr. Escobar’s expense reconciliation and record-keeping practices between 2018-2024,” the assertion stated.
Final month, a Instances investigation discovered that Escobar and different high union officers have for years been padding their paychecks with extra time whereas additionally accumulating five- to six-figure union stipends.
Escobar made about $540,000 in 2022, the newest yr for which data of each his metropolis and union earnings can be found. He greater than doubled his base wage of $184,034 with extra time payouts that yr, incomes greater than $424,500 from the town in pay and advantages, payroll knowledge present.
He collected an extra $115,962 stipend from the union, in line with its most up-to-date federal tax submitting. He reported working 48 hours per week on union and associated duties, whereas data offered by the town for that yr present he picked up a mean of roughly 30 hours of extra time per week on firefighting shifts — a complete of about 78 hours of labor every week.
On Friday, he disputed his complete earnings, saying “it’s quite a bit lower than that,” although he didn’t present proof.