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He was hired to lead LA public schools. Now he has quit after the FBI raided his home.

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He was hired to lead LA public schools. Now he has quit after the FBI raided his home.

Superintendent Alberto Carvalho resigned months after federal agents searched his house and school offices over a failed three-million-dollar AI contract.

Parents trust school leaders with their children's future and millions in public tax dollars. When federal agents show up at a school boss's door, that trust is shattered.

WHAT HAPPENED

Alberto Carvalho, the head of Los Angeles schools, resigned on Sunday night. This comes four months after the FBI searched his home and district offices.

The school board had already suspended Carvalho in February. The FBI is looking into a failed deal with an education technology company called AllHere.

L.A. schools paid $3 million to AllHere for an AI chatbot named "Ed" to help students. The company collapsed into bankruptcy just months later, and its founder was charged with federal fraud.

What the money/evidence shows

  • L.A. schools spent $3 million on an AI chatbot named "Ed" in 2024.
  • The district dropped the company, AllHere, three months after launching the bot.
  • AllHere went bankrupt, and its founder was charged with wire fraud and identity theft.
  • FBI agents searched Carvalho's home, district offices, and a Florida home of a former AllHere worker.
  • Carvalho led the district for four years before stepping down.

THE BIGGER QUESTION

This case raises a major question about how public schools spend our money. Why are school districts rushing to buy expensive tech tools before they are proven to work?

L.A. schools threw millions at a startup that vanished almost overnight. This leaves taxpayers with the bill and students with nothing.

THE OTHER SIDE

Carvalho says he did nothing wrong. His spokesperson stated he always acted in the best interests of students and did not help choose the technology company.

This defense seems fair for now, as the government has not yet shared any direct evidence showing he broke the law.

WHAT HAPPENS NOW

Acting Superintendent Andrés Chait will continue to run the school district for now. The school board is searching for a new leader who can bring stability back to the classroom.

Families are left wondering if the school system can focus on teaching while dealing with a federal probe.

WHAT WE STILL DON'T KNOW

  1. Did school officials ignore warning signs before paying $3 million to a failing startup?
  2. What exactly was the FBI looking for when they searched the superintendent's home?
  3. Will federal prosecutors file criminal charges against anyone else in the school district?

SOURCE NOTE

Information for this story came from KABC-TV, the Los Angeles Times, and federal court records. All charges are allegations - Alberto Carvalho is presumed innocent until proven guilty.

Transparency notes

Published: Jun 22, 2026. No major post-publication update has been logged.

Spot an error or missing context? Email hi@kindjoe.com and we will review and correct if needed.

Sources

External source links were not provided in this article body. Our editors reference publicly available materials and update stories as new verified information arrives.

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