A
native of the Eastside of Los Angeles, Rocky Delgadillo
became the highest-ranking Latino
to win citywide office in more than 100 years when he was elected Los Angeles
City Attorney
on June 5, 2001.
Running unopposed, he was re-elected in March 2005 to a second four-year
term.
Upon first taking office, Delgadillo began implementing innovative
programs to achieve his
vision of a better and safer Los Angeles. His top priorities
include fighting crime, improving
quality of life in our neighborhoods and reducing the city's
civil liabilities. Many of the crimes
the City Attorney's Office prosecutes are gang- and narcotics-related.
Delgadillo has enforced
and increased the number of gang injunctions to take on
notorious gangs that terrorize
neighborhoods.
In his first term, Delgadillo more than tripled the number of gang
injunctions in the city to 34
covering 50 gangs, contributing to a steep decline in crime
in the affected areas. At the same
time, effective legal work by his team helped bring to
a close the Rampart scandal at a
substantial savings. When the case broke in 2000, it was
projected that some 120 cases
could cost Los Angeles as much as $125 million in liability
payments. Four years later,
Delgadillo's team had negotiated settlements totaling $70
million in more than 200 cases, a
projected $55 million savings over the next several years.
He urged the city to apply to the
hiring and training of new police officers.
Liability savings under Delgadillo extended beyond the Rampart scandal.
General liability
payouts in Delgadillo's first term fell by 60 percent,
to $33 million.
Delgadillo's efforts went well beyond fiscal responsibility. Education
and after-school activities
help deter teens from joining gangs. That's why Delgadillo
created Operation Bright Future, a
tough anti-truancy program that targets sixth-graders with
excessive absences. Operation
Bright Future teaches parents about the importance of education
and ultimately holds parents
legally responsible for making sure their kids go to school.
Recently, the Office of the Los Angeles City Attorney has launched a law
enforcement investigation into potentially unfair business practices by
health plans and health insurers, particularly with respect to their
improper denial of claims for coverage made by consumers, or their
cancellation of consumers' coverage altogether. Additional information
regarding this investigation can be found at
www.ProtectingTheInsured.org.
Delgadillo's signature program is the Neighborhood Prosecutor Program.
For the first time in
the city's history, prosecutors work in the neighborhoods,
get to know residents on a firstname
basis, and attack quality-of-life crimes where they occur.
Neighborhood Prosecutors
work with residents, elected officials and city agencies
to drastically cut illegal dumping,
graffiti and illegal street racing, to name a few of the
problems. The program won a city
Productivity Award in 2002 for its first-year achievements.
Delgadillo also has focused on fighting child abuse; elder and dependent
adult abuse;
immigration fraud; and environmental crimes, particularly
in populated urban centers. In
addition to his success as a prosecutor, Delgadillo has
helped make neighborhoods safer by
slashing the city's liability costs by 45 percent and freeing
up nearly $18 million to help pay for
police and other crucial city services.
Before his election, Delgadillo was the Deputy Mayor of Los Angeles
for Economic
Development, where he worked to attract new jobs for the
neighborhoods that needed them
the most. He created an efficient, neighborhood-friendly
approach to business development
and helped bring more than $20 billion in private investment
to the city in four years.
Prior to joining the mayor's office, Delgadillo was Director of Business
Development for
Rebuild LA, a nonprofit formed to bring investment into
Los Angeles neighborhoods ravaged
during the 1992 civil unrest, and served as a senior attorney
at O'Melveny & Myers.
Delgadillo attended public schools, including Franklin High School
in Highland Park. He
earned a scholarship to Harvard University, where he graduated
with honors, and received
his law degree from Columbia Law School. In 1982, Rocky
Delgadillo won the Robert F.
Kennedy Award from Harvard University. The Kennedy Award
is given annually to a member
of the varsity football team who demonstrates a strong
desire, determination, and willingness
to work hard as a valuable member of the team earning the
respect and admiration of his
teammates and coaches. The LA County Democratic Party bestowed
its annual John F.
Kennedy Award to Rocky Delgadillo in 2002.
Delgadillo and his wife, Michelle, live in Los Angeles' Windsor Village
neighborhood with their
sons, Christian and Preston.