SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — A high-ranking elected official in Southern California’s Orange County has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bribery in a far-reaching scheme that misused COVID-19 relief funds that should have been used to feed the elderly.
Andrew Do, a county supervisor who recently resigned his post, entered the plea in federal court in Santa Ana, California, on Thursday under an agreement with federal prosecutors.
Do, 61, apologized to his family and people who depended on him in a statement he read in court.
“I have great sorrow for my actions,” he said.
Authorities said Do took more than half a million dollars in bribes while helping ensure federal COVID-relief funds were channeled to an organization that claimed to be feeding elderly and disabled people. The group, Viet America Society, where Do’s daughter, Rhiannon Do, was listed as an officer, didn’t spend most of the money it received for the meals on providing them, authorities said, adding some of the funds were spent on real estate.
The case comes in a long-running investigation into Viet America Society and as Orange County — which is home to more than 3 million people between Los Angeles and San Diego — filed a civil lawsuit saying the group misused federal funds.
Federal officials said only 15% of more than $9 million funneled to the group went to provide meals. Authorities said the group also received $1 million for a local Vietnam War memorial, which has yet to be completed.
In the investigation, authorities seized more than $2 million. Officials declined to immediately say how the rest of the money received by the group was used.
“This is an ongoing investigation,” Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer told reporters after Thursday's court hearing. Spitzer said authorities were committed to recovering assets obtained in connection with the scheme and returning misused funds to the federal government.
Andrew Do came to the country as a Vietnamese refugee and grew up in Orange County before attending college and law school. He went on to become a prosecutor and city councilmember and later won a seat on Orange County’s five-person board of supervisors representing a cluster of communities, including surf-friendly Huntington Beach. He is scheduled to be sentenced on March 31.
Authorities have said Rhiannon Do is cooperating with the investigation under an agreement with prosecutors and won’t be charged.
Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer speaks with reporters on Thursday, Oct. 31, 2024, outside federal court in Santa Ana, Calif., after recently-resigned county supervisor Andrew Do pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bribery in a corruption probe. (AP Photo/Amy Taxin)
CORRECTS NUMBER FILE - U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada, left, OC District Attorney Todd Spitzer, center, and FBI Special Agent Ted Docks, speak at a press conference on Oct. 22, 2024, in Santa Ana, Calif., announcing that O.C. Supervisor Andrew Do agreed to plead guilty to accepting more than $550,000 in bribes and voting in favor of more than $9 million in COVID funds to a charity affiliated with one of his daughters. (Mindy Schauer/The Orange County Register via AP, File)
FILE - Supervisor Andrew Do, right, listens to Supervisor Todd Spitzer, left, during questioning of Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas in front of the Orange County Board of Supervisors meeting in Santa Ana on June 27, 2017. (Sam Gangwer/The Orange County Register via AP, File)
LAS VEGAS (AP) — A grand jury in Nevada has again indicted Nathan Chasing Horse on charges that he sexually abused Indigenous women and girls for decades, reviving a sweeping criminal case against the former “Dances with Wolves” actor.
The 21-count indictment unsealed Thursday in Clark County District Court, which includes Las Vegas, again charges the 48-year-old with sexual assault, lewdness and kidnapping. It also adds felony charges of producing and possessing child sexual abuse materials.
It comes after the Nevada Supreme Court in September ordered the dismissal of Chasing Horse's original indictment, while leaving open the possibility for charges to be refiled. The court sided with Chasing Horse, saying in its scathing order that prosecutors had abused the grand jury process.
Clark County District Attorney Steve Wolfson quickly vowed to seek another indictment.
The initial 18-count indictment charged Chasing Horse with more than a dozen felonies. He had pleaded not guilty.
His lawyer, Kristy Holston, had also argued that the case should be dismissed because, the former actor said, the sexual encounters were consensual. One of his accusers was younger than 16, the age of consent in Nevada, when the abuse began, according to the indictment.
Neither Wolfson nor Holston immediately responded Thursday to phone or emailed requests for comment.
Best known for portraying the character Smiles A Lot in the 1990 movie “Dances with Wolves,” Chasing Horse was born on the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota, which is home to the Sicangu Sioux, one of the seven tribes of the Lakota nation.
After starring in the Oscar-winning film, authorities have said, he propped himself up as a self-proclaimed Lakota medicine man while traveling around North America to perform healing ceremonies.
He is accused of using that position to gain the trust of vulnerable Indigenous women and girls, lead a cult and take underage wives.
Chasing Horse’s arrest last January reverberated around Indian Country and helped law enforcement in the U.S. and Canada corroborate long-standing allegations against him, leading to more criminal charges, including on the Fort Peck Indian Reservation in Montana. Tribal leaders had banished Chasing Horse in 2015 from the reservation amid allegations of human trafficking.
He has remained jailed in Las Vegas since his arrest.
When the Nevada Supreme Court ordered the dismissal of Chasing Horse's indictment, the judges said they were not weighing in on his guilt or innocence, calling the allegations against him serious. But the court said that prosecutors improperly provided the grand jury with a definition of grooming without expert testimony, and faulted them for withholding from the grand jury inconsistent statements made by one of his accusers.
Chasing Horse's legal issues have been unfolding at the same time lawmakers and prosecutors around the U.S. are funneling more resources into cases involving Native women, including human trafficking and murders.
FILE - Nathan Chasing Horse sits in Las Vegas court, April 3, 2023. (AP Photo/Ty O'Neil, File)