After one in all her first visits to L.A. County’s juvenile corridor in Sylmar, Efty Sharony filed a report that stated she witnessed circumstances worse than something she’d seen in “over 20 years of expertise visiting each stage of carceral facility in California.”
Teenagers housed within the county’s Safe Youth Remedy Facility might be heard screaming all through the constructing, slamming their our bodies towards doorways, crying and howling, she wrote in a 2023 report back to the state’s Well being and Human Providers secretary on the time, Dr. Mark Ghaly.
Urine flowed from beneath cell doorways housing youths who had been held in isolation for greater than 18 hours throughout a lockdown, based on Sharony’s report. The unit, on the time, held dozens of youths who had been convicted of significant and violent crimes.
The circumstances at Barry J. Nidorf Juvenile Corridor had been precisely the sort of issues Sharony hoped to assist remedy as a part of a broader effort led by Gov. Gavin Newsom to make sure humane therapy amid a remaking of the state’s youth jail system. In her function because the ombudswoman for the state’s Workplace of Youth and Neighborhood Restoration, Sharony stated supervisors informed her she was imagined to be “the one tooth” the company had.
Weeks after Sharony sounded the alarm bells about Nidorf, an 18-year-old housed there died of a drug overdose. The California Board of State and Neighborhood Corrections ordered the corridor closed the identical day.
However as a substitute of encouraging her to maintain digging, Sharony alleges her bosses quickly informed her to cease investigating juvenile halls.
Three months later, she was fired and changed by an lawyer who had beforehand labored for the Newsom administration however had no prior expertise with juvenile justice, based on a whistleblower grievance Sharony filed final yr.
“It turned clear that Efrat’s superiors had been extra occupied with creating the phantasm of addressing the various crises within the state’s juvenile amenities moderately than doing something about it,” the grievance learn.
A spokeswoman for the state division of Well being and Human Providers declined to touch upon confidential personnel issues, however stated the company stays dedicated to selling “trauma responsive, culturally knowledgeable, gender honoring, and developmentally applicable providers for youth concerned within the juvenile justice system.”
That method, the assertion stated, contains giving the ombudsperson “full authority” and “sole course” to analyze complaints from detained youths.
“Making certain each grievance is completely investigated is vital to defending youth throughout the state and a major purpose of OYCR,” the spokeswoman stated.
Sharony’s lawyer, Matthew Umhofer, stated he has not obtained any response to the whistleblower grievance, which is a precursor to a lawsuit.
“Efty was fired in retaliation for doing her job. She was fired as a result of her findings in regards to the deplorable circumstances in juvenile amenities didn’t align with the state’s political narrative. That’s unlawful,” he stated. “We’ve given the state each alternative to proper the improper right here, but when they don’t, we’re ready to combat for Efty in courtroom.”
Sharony’s allegations that state officers have little urge for food to repair power points in L.A.’s juvenile halls echo different current issues about flagging efforts to enhance the county’s crumbling youth amenities.
Confronted with questions on his workplace’s failure to implement a four-year-old courtroom settlement mandating reforms within the halls, Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta stated earlier this month that he’s contemplating inserting them in “receivership,” primarily wresting native management of the amenities away from the L.A. County Probation Division.
The California Board of State and Neighborhood Corrections additionally ordered one other L.A. facility, Los Padrinos Juvenile Corridor, shut down final yr, however the Probation Division ignored the order for months with out consequence. A choose lastly intervened final month, and roughly 100 youths shall be relocated from Los Padrinos to different amenities underneath a plan made public by the Probation Division earlier this month.
Sharony’s firing infuriated native officers who’ve watched the scenario on the halls deteriorate for years.
Sen. Caroline Menjivar (D-Panorama Metropolis), who authored a invoice to revoke probation departments from overseeing how juveniles are housed, stated Sharony’s firing was a colossal mistake.
“I used to be furious that they fired somebody that was passionate, who had expertise on this house, they usually introduced in anyone from the within,” Menjivar stated. “How are you going to have accountability once you rent anyone who’s already on the staff?”

Efty Sharony, the previous ombudswoman for the state Workplace of Youth and Neighborhood Restoration, a task wherein she investigated circumstances at L.A. juvenile halls.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Occasions)
Sharony — who beforehand labored as an adjunct professor at Loyola Legislation College’s Juvenile Innocence & Truthful Sentencing Clinic and oversaw prisoner reentry packages underneath former L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti — stated she believed the ombudswoman’s put up would permit her to be a part of the state’s reimagining of the juvenile justice system.
Newsom introduced his intentions in 2019 to close down the state’s youth jail system, which previously housed juveniles convicted of significant crimes equivalent to homicide till they turned 25. The Workplace of Youth and Neighborhood Restoration was created by the Legislature in 2021 partially to supervise circumstances on the native juvenile halls that may obtain the state’s youngest prisoners.
Sharony stated her oversight function allowed her to drop in on juvenile amenities with simply 48 hours discover to conduct spot checks and evaluation circumstances recognized in a grievance. It didn’t take lengthy, she claims, for these visits to ruffle feathers.
When she left enterprise playing cards with youths at a Contra Costa facility whereas investigating issues about entry to psychological well being providers, Sharony stated the division chief known as her supervisors inside the Workplace of Youth and Neighborhood Restoration to complain.
After she documented the squalid circumstances at Nidorf, native officers once more allegedly tried to go over her head and voice frustrations, stated Sharony. Within the whistleblower grievance, Sharony stated “her colleagues vocally prioritized political relationships over the timeliness of their investigations.”
The HHS spokeswoman declined to touch upon Sharony’s particular allegations.
A spokesperson for the Contra Costa County Probation Division stated that they had “by no means filed a grievance with OYCR and wouldn’t characterize any of our conversations with OYCR as a grievance.”
“Our relationship and interactions with OYCR are in line with how we interact with any state company or oversight physique,” the division stated in an announcement. “We work inside the processes and insurance policies established to take care of a constructive {and professional} relationship.”
Sharony stated in her whistleblower grievance that her reviews out of Los Angeles went ignored by state officers.
“She was left at nighttime, confused about why she was all of a sudden faraway from conversations relating to the intense findings of her preliminary investigation,” the grievance learn.
An HHS spokeswoman stated the Workplace of Youth and Neighborhood Restoration didn’t have the authority to analyze whether or not a Safe Youth Remedy Facility complicated was in compliance with state laws. Sharony stated in an interview that didn’t preclude them from acknowledging issues about circumstances there.
In an e-mail connected to the whistleblower grievance, Sharony’s bosses stated they had been pausing her in-person visits “as we make remaining changes to our Insurance policies & Procedures and proceed to rent and onboard new workers. It’s anticipated that subject visits will resume within the subsequent few weeks.”
However then, in June 2023, Sharony was fired. She stated she was by no means given a cause for her termination.
She was changed by Alisa Hart, a former deputy authorized secretary in Newsom’s workplace who helped work on the state’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and had beforehand labored with the state Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation. She additionally beforehand labored as a workers lawyer with the professional bono civil rights agency Public Counsel. Sharony contends Hart’s lack of expertise working within the juvenile justice system made her much less certified for the ombudswoman’s put up.
A spokeswoman for the Workplace of Youth and Neighborhood Restoration stated the company “hires probably the most certified candidate when filling a vacant place,” however declined to reply particular questions on Hart aside from to level to her biography on a state web site. A spokeswoman for Newsom stated the governor had no hand in her hiring.
Kate Lamb, the HHS spokeswoman, stated the ombudswoman’s workplace obtained 49 complaints from Nidorf and Los Padrinos juvenile halls final yr. Investigations into 22 of these complaints haven’t been accomplished, Lamb stated.

An aerial view of Los Padrinos Juvenile Corridor in Downey.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Occasions)
In 2023, when Sharony labored within the ombudswoman function for half of the yr, the workplace obtained twice as many complaints and all have since been closed out, based on Lamb. A few of these complaints had been dealt with after Sharony had exited the company.
Those that frequent L.A.’s juvenile halls stated Sharony’s elimination is only one indication that state officers aren’t taking the county’s youth justice disaster critically.
“The primary ombudsperson was somebody who was extensively identified and revered as a veteran stakeholder within the juvenile system right here in L.A.,” stated Jerod Gunsberg, a veteran prison protection lawyer who represents juveniles. “Then after that, the ombudsperson is faraway from her place, and we’ve by no means heard something once more right here in L.A.”