California Attorney General Rob Bonta has filed a lawsuit challenging the Trump Administration’s executive order aimed at ending birthright citizenship for children born in the U.S. to non-citizen parents.
Tenant advocacy groups, landlord associations and elected officials are condemning rent gouging after tens of thousands of people were displaced in deadly fires this month.
California Attorney General Rob Bonta warned that price gouging beyond ... News outlet LAist found that one property in Bel Air was listed on Zillow for $29,500 per month as of January 11.
Rental housing prices in L.A. are spiking as historic fires burn in Southern California, forcing thousands of residents who’ve lost homes to scramble to find a new place to live.
Properties are on the market for thousands of dollars more than they were before the deadly wildfires broke out.
City officials are ramping up efforts to curb rent gouging following devastating firestorms that destroyed over 12000 homes displacing tens of thousands
City officials are ramping up efforts to curb rent gouging following devastating firestorms that destroyed over 12,000 homes, displacing tens of thousands
Nick Kostos and Femi Abebefe discuss the teams they believe can actually win the Super Bowl in February. Rep. Richard Neal joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss working with President Trump and the incoming administration, future of Trump tax cuts, importance of fiscal responsibility, and more.
California Attorney General Rob Bonta leads the state's fight against Pres. Trump's executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship.
California Attorney General Rob Bonta announced the state would join a lawsuit in the wake of an executive order by President Trump seeking to end birthright citizenship.
I'll see you in court," said California Attorney General Rob Bonta as the state and city of San Francisco are suing Trump for his effort to end birthright citizenship.
Because California is in a state of emergency, laws targeting price-gouging, including a ban on landlords raising rents by more than 10 percent of pre-emergency levels, should be in effect. But that hasn't deterred some landlords from apparently raising their rents by far more than that,