Hydee Feldstein Soto
Hydee Feldstein Soto is an American attorney and politician, who is the incumbent Los [Angeles City Attorney|City Attorney] of Los Angeles. She is a member of the Democratic Party.
Early life and career
Feldstein Soto was born in 1958 in San Juan, Puerto Rico and moved to the mainland United States at age 17 to attend Swarthmore College and Columbia Law School, graduating from the latter in 1982. As an attorney, she served as a general counsel and worked in several private practices.Los Angeles City Attorney
In 2021, Feldstein Soto announced her candidacy for Los Angeles City Attorney. She was endorsed by the Los Angeles Times. She prevailed in the general election, becoming the first female City Attorney in L.A. history, and the first Latina elected to citywide office in Los Angeles.Tenure
On September 12, 2023, Feldstein Soto announced that the City Attorney's Office had filed a lawsuit against the owners and operator of a motel in South Los Angeles that has served as a “hub for prostitution” for several years.At the start of Labor Day Weekend, on September 1, 2023, Feldstein Soto joined Councilmembers Hugo Soto-Martínez and Tim McOsker to unveil new legislation to strengthen the enforcement of wage theft violations.
On August 15, 2023, Feldstein Soto announced her office had filed a lawsuit against a company, Nightfall Group, that offers luxury party houses for short term rentals saying that they violate city laws and create a public nuisance. Feldstein Soto said that police have been called more than 250 times in the last two years because of problems at houses that the business rents out in the Hollywood area.
Accusations of ethical breaches and retaliation
In June 2024, Michelle McGinnis, a veteran prosecutor in the City Attorney's office, filed a legal claim alleging that Feldstein Soto retaliated against her for reporting "legal and ethical violations." McGinnis claimed that Feldstein Soto based some of the office's decisions on prosecutions on "personal relationships" or "perceived political gain," including telling employees she wanted to stop prosecuting corporate defendants and singling out an individual protestor for prosecution. McGinnis reported that after objecting to these decisions, she was “subjected to a series of adverse employment actions and ultimately placed on administrative leave, removed from the office, and prohibited from further contact with office colleagues and employees." In July, another employee claimed that Feldstein Soto routinely read her employees' emails without their knowledge, and two more former employees filed retaliation claims. In August, Feldstein Soto requested $500,000 from the City of Los Angeles to fund a legal response to the claims. However, the City Council only authorized $50,000.Prosecution of nonviolent protestors
In March 2024, the Los Angeles Police Department raised concerns to the attorney's office that Feldstein Soto pushed the department to press charges against a specific individual without sufficient evidence, following a particular Los Angeles action in Gaza war protests. An internal city hall memo recounted that "for reasons unknown, the City Attorney expressed inordinate interest in the progress of a mass protest investigation, going so far as to suggest the identification of a specific individual for prosecution to the Chief of Police". In April 2025, a judge found evidence of "biased prosecution" by Feldstein Soto in her decision to seek charges for thirty-one pro-Palestine protesters who were arrested for blocking traffic in December 2023, despite such prosecutions being extraordinarily rare in Los Angeles.
Opposition to Affordable housing
While running for office, Feldstein Soto opposed the construction of 140 units of affordable housing in Venice, an affluent neighborhood of L.A. In 2023, the Los Angeles Times reported that Feldstein Soto had instructed city agencies to not interact with the developers of the project on city-owned parking lot in Venice. The project had previously been approved by the City Council and survived multiple lawsuits, but Feldstein Soto's actions delayed its progress.In July 2024, advocates for low-income housing sued the city of Los Angeles, accusing Feldstein Soto of violating fair housing laws by blocking the housing development in Venice. The Los Angeles Times editorial board criticized Feldstein Soto for derailing the housing development.
In 2025, Feldstein Soto sent a letter to a state senator expressing her opposition to Senate Bill 79 which allows six-story buildings near light rail stations and rapid bus stops. She argued that more housing would increase local tax burdens.