Nicole Einbinder

California schools gave diplomas to kids in China. A probe sparked by Business Insider slams the arrangement.

California education officials have released a blistering audit in response to a Business Insider investigation into a local school district and its ties to a private boarding school in China — finding “sufficient evidence” of “fraud, misappropriation of funds, or other illegal fiscal practices.”

Riverside County Superintendent of Schools Edwin Gomez said the 1,000-plus-page report “identified serious concerns that merit further review by the appropriate authorities” and that the district attorney, among other authorities, had been notified.

The audit, carried out by a law firm and authorized by the Riverside County Superintendent of Schools, looked at the relationship between the Val Verde Unified School District and Pegasus California School, more than 6,000 miles away in Qingdao, China, and the involvement of former government officials.

Pegasus was seen as a way for Chinese students to access California’s public education system; the report noted that it guaranteed students acceptance to a top 100 American university or their money back.

Val Verde adopted Pegasus as a “sister school” in 2016, and formally approved a pilot program a year later in which the district issued diplomas to Pegasus graduates. Pegasus was also added to the district’s list of schools on its website.


The facade of the Val Verde Unified School District

An audit into Val Verde’s ties to Pegasus has been sent to prosecutors. 

Christopher Vu for Business Insider



The audit found that Val Verde improperly issued those diplomas and concluded there was no evidence that Pegasus students had satisfied course requirements and proficiency standards.

Val Verde teachers were encouraged to teach at the Chinese school, living in furnished apartments with benefits and the promise they could return to their US jobs, the report said. It also cited evidence of Val Verde teachers’ salaries being “improperly increased upon their return from the unpaid leaves of absence.”

Auditors also focused attention on former education officials who established the district’s relationship with Pegasus and promoted it with leading California universities. They included Tom Torlakson, who at the time was the state superintendent of public instruction; David Long, the former California secretary of education and a former Riverside County superintendent of schools, who was also a paid consultant to Val Verde; and Michael McCormick, Val Verde’s then-superintendent.

Over the course of their investigation, the auditors said, they found, among other claims, possible evidence of fraud, bribery, conflicts of interest, breaches of fiduciary duty, or violations of the Political Reform Act by various officials.

“There appears to be a pattern of favors, official acts, promises, and payments leading to the [state’s] endorsement of Pegasus and VVUSD’s approval of the diploma pilot program,” the report said.

Gomez said that in addition to notifying prosecutors, he flagged the report for Val Verde’s governing board, the state controller, and the state superintendent of public instruction. The California Department of Education said it’s reviewing the report. “The CDE will not stand for any misuse of public funds and supports any investigation into this matter. California diplomas are for California students,” the agency told Business Insider.

In a statement, a Val Verde spokesperson said that the district “fully complied” with the audit process and is “focused on providing transparency and continuing to serve our students, families, and community.”


Tom Torlakson

Tom Torlakson 

Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images



Torlakson and McCormick did not immediately respond to Business Insider’s requests for comment. Long referred Business Insider to an interview he gave to the Riverside Press-Enterprise. He told the publication that the audit “contains a multiplicity of complete false accusations.”

The auditors said they also requested interviews with the trio, who they said either failed to respond or were unavailable.

Business Insider probe prompts scrutiny

The relationship between the school district, officials, and Pegasus was the focus of a June 2021 investigation by Business Insider, which revealed that the officials worked closely with businessman Steven Ma, the CEO of a college consulting company called ThinkTank Learning, to establish the Chinese school.

In an email, Ma told Business insider, “I strongly disagree with any suggestion that I engaged in wrongdoing” and said Pegasus was “a legitimate educational program aimed at expanding cross-cultural learning.”

Pegasus students paid thousands of dollars to attend the school, enjoying perks including access to Val Verde diplomas and resources, and a leg up in the cutthroat University of California admission process. McCormick said that all Pegasus graduates had guaranteed admittance to the University of California, Riverside.

In response to BI’s investigation, a California Department of Education spokesperson said in 2021 that the department had referred the matter to the state attorney general, describing the allegations as “serious.”

According to the audit, following BI’s investigation, the school district and other agencies began investigating and “many deficiencies were discovered” — among them that school district board members did not initially disclose that they received complimentary travel to China, and that Val Verde teachers who taught at Pegasus improperly received school district benefits.

Val Verde took corrective action — but not until “they discovered the error as a result of the audit spurred by the Business Insider article,” the report said.

The California Department of Justice and Riverside County District Attorney’s office did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Political contributions and conflicts of interest?

The audit isn’t the first probe into Val Verde and Pegasus. Following Business Insider’s 2021 investigation, for instance, the California Department of Education referred potential conflicts of interest to the state’s Fair Political Practices Commission, which enforces the Political Reform Act, to investigate, according to records.

Those records show that an attorney for Torlakson wrote to the commission that “many of the alleged facts in the media inquiry are categorically and provably false.” Soon after, the commission notified Torlakson’s attorney that they would not be pursuing the matter further. The Fair Political Practices Commission did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The auditors also said that Ma, through ThinkTank, made $13,600 in political contributions to Torlakson’s 2014 campaign to be elected as superintendent, citing it as “evidence of potential bribes and/ or kickbacks.”

Ma told Business Insider that “any political contributions referenced were lawful, publicly disclosed, and not connected to any official actions. I have never participated in or been aware of any bribery, kickbacks, or improper arrangements.”


A diploma for Pegasus California School graduates

A copy of the Pegasus California School diploma shows that it was issued by the Val Verde Unified School District. 

Verde Unified School District via records request; Samantha Lee/Business Insider



In the report released Wednesday, auditors said they found evidence that Long’s actions may have violated the Political Reform Act, concluding he “intertwined his relationships with Pegasus and VVUSD instead of keeping them separate and apart as required, and failed to fully inform the VVUSD Board of the scope of his relationship with Pegasus.”

Auditors also wrote that Long, the former state education secretary, failed in his duty to keep his interest in Pegasus apart from his role as a consultant to Val Verde. “Long directly influenced the establishment of Pegasus, orchestrated travel and promotional efforts, and advised VVUSD on Pegasus-related policy decisions,” they wrote. “While Long used his VVUSD connections and influence to promote Pegasus, Long was benefiting from his relationship with Pegasus.”




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A peek inside the Fed’s renovations that are now at the center of a DOJ probe

  • The Federal Reserve’s renovation project was expected to cost $1.9 billion. It now has a $2.5 billion price tag.
  • Lead paint and asbestos discoveries contributed to increased renovation expenses and delays.
  • Fed chairman Jerome Powell said a new DOJ probe is part of ongoing pressure from the Trump administration.

The Federal Reserve’s planned five-year renovation project is causing quite the stir in Washington.

Renovations began around 2022 on two Federal Reserve offices, the Marriner S. Eccles Building and the Federal Reserve Bank of East Building, which were first assembled in the 1930s, according to plans reviewed by the National Capital Planning Commission in 2021.

As workers gutted the aging structures, they uncovered lead paint and asbestos, pushing the cost of the renovations rose from $1.9 billion to $2.5 billion, as Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell described in a letter defending the renovation’s budget last year.

President Donald Trump has blamed the overruns on mismanagement and allegations of luxury additions. On Sunday, Kevin Hassett, director of the administration’s National Economic Council, told ABC’s This Week that the project became “the most expensive project in D.C. history.”

Later that day, Powell revealed the central bank now faces a potential Department of Justice investigation, and he’s facing a potential criminal indictment over the cost increases.

“No one — certainly not the chair of the Federal Reserve — is above the law,” Powell responded in a two-minute social media video. “But this unprecedented action should be seen in the broader context of the administration’s threats and ongoing pressure.”

As questions swirl around the renovations, Business Insider gathered images of the construction, floor plans for the renovations, and design mock-ups.

The Eccles and FRB-East buildings have been wrapped in scaffolding and cranes since 2022.

The Federal Reserve has been renovating its two buildings since 2022. The project is expected to wrap up by late 2027.

Heather Diehl/Getty Images

Construction workers broke ground on the renovations in 2022 on the 93- and 88-year-old buildings.

The Fed said the building has not had a modernization project in decades. A series of decades-old electrical, heating, plumbing, and air ventilation systems ran through the historic building.

The project was necessary to “address a critical backlog of upgrades, to respond to changes in building codes and regulatory requirements, and to meet requirements for information technology, building security, environmental sustainability, and energy efficiency,” according to plans produced by the Fed and released to the public in 2021.

Documents show the Fed’s proposed floor plans for both buildings.


A floor plan of both Federal Reserve buildings

The Federal Reserve’s modernization plans were mapped out in an exhaustive 87-page document, released in 2021. The document includes floor plans, mock-ups, and explanations of landscaping decisions.


Federal Reserve Board and Fortus


The Federal Reserve published floor plans for the expansion project in 2021. The plans plot out details like where new windows would be erected, why new shrubbery would be planted in specific areas on the lawn, how it would make offices more wheelchair accessible, and where historic marble will be reused.

Since the release of the plans, construction workers have uncovered asbestos and lead paint, resulting in higher-than-expected material requirements. Inflation has also increased the price of those goods.

A mock-up of the exterior, including plans to add some glass structures.


A mock-up of the exterior of the Fed building.

The Fed’s renovation plans include new glasswork that will surround the historic, stone elements of the building.


Federal Reserve Board and Fortus


The modernization project would expand some sections of the Fed buildings, including areas with new glass-covered atriums.

The Eccles building’s courtyard will be converted into an atrium.


A mock-up view from the second floor in the Eccles Atrium

The main building’s atrium is intended to mix “historically significant spaces and work space to balance preservation and modern office needs.”


Federal Reserve Board and Fortus


The courtyard at the center of the central bank’s main building would become a glass-enclosed atrium. The renovation would also include new accessible ramps, and the existing wooden oak doors would be stained a medium brown.

Both historic buildings’ interiors were finished with hand-carved wood in the 1930s. The woodwork will remain intact after the renovation.


Inside the renovated Eccles Building Level 4 Lounge

The renovation is designed to preserve historic architectural elements while updating the decades-old structure underneath. Here is an example of a fourth-floor lounge featuring salvaged woodwork and a marble floor.


Federal Reserve Board and Fortus


Much of the project is dedicated to balancing “preservation and modern office needs,” according to the plans. Several office spaces plan to reuse marble and wood from the original buildings.

The Eccles building’s center wing skylight would be moved to the fourth floor to let the light stream in.


A peaked natural light shaft with bronze beams lets light strem into the fourth floor.

The natural light shaft, which was constructed in 1977, is also getting an update that the Fed said would introduce more natural light to the fourth floor.


Federal Reserve Board and Fortus


A natural light shaft, shown above, has sat on the top of the building since 1977. The renovation would relocate the glass casing to the fourth floor, allowing more light to enter nearby offices.

The core architectural details of each building are important to preserve, the Fed said. It can help project financial power.


A statue of a bald eagle perched on top of the Eccles building.

The project is meant to update the building’s office capacity while maintaining its key architectural details, like the bald eagle perched atop the entrance.

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

The Eccles building was designed to project stability during the Great Depression, with marble halls and bronze fixtures meant to inspire public confidence in the banking system. Those original details are being carefully restored, the Fed said in the plans.

White House officials have alleged the renovations include new VIP dining rooms and elevators, a vegetated roof, and millions of dollars in new marble. The Fed has denied those allegations in press releases.

The Eccles building has been in disrepair, the Fed says.


Ornate wood that was hand-crafted during the building's construction in the 1930s shows water damage

The Fed’s ornate architecture has endured nearly nine decades of wear, including water damage on the historic wood moldings, shown above.

ANDREW HARNIK/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Water damage has been an issue for the historic buildings, according to images produced by Getty photographers in a July 2025 walk-through of the construction. Pictures of the historic building’s lobby show extensive damage to ornate wood carvings.

Asbestos and lead paint have been a costly issue. Inflation hasn’t helped either.


Tarp is wrapped over sections of the Fed building where asbestos was found

Workers have been clearing asbestos from the building for much of the past decade. This picture, taken in 2017, shows a construction site inside the Eccles building where workers found the dangerous material.


Federal Reserve


The Fed said it needed to make renovations to make its offices “safe, healthy, and effective places to work,” according to the Federal Reserve’s plans. For years, workers have uncovered asbestos throughout the historic buildings — a material now banned in most construction in the US.

As the project continues, more materials have had to be replaced than expected. Construction-sector inflation has made the overruns steeper.

Trump has seen the renovation project up close.


President Donald Trump and Chair Jerome Powell toured the Fed building in July 2025.

President Donald Trump and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell tour the Eccles Building during its renovation.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images/Reuters

In July 2025, Trump toured the renovation project with Powell and Republican Sen. Tim Scott.

During a brief interview with reporters, Trump and Powell sparred over the cost of recent construction projects in the building.

The building is expected to be completed in late 2027.


A mock-up of the exterior lighting on the Eccles Building

Plans include new lighting to highlight the building’s historic features.


Federal Reserve Board and Fortus


This year, Fed press releases suggested construction workers would leave the building in the fall of 2027. Employees who have been working at temporary offices are expected to move in during the first quarter of 2028, if plans proceed accordingly.

Once staffers return to the office, the Fed said its new campus would save money.

“Over time, the Board has needed to lease space in several commercial office buildings to support its operations,” the Fed said in a July 2025 press release. “This project allows the Board to consolidate its operations and reduce expenses on leased space elsewhere.”




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Shein faces Texas probe into materials, labor, and data privacy

Texas has launched a probe into Shein, accusing it of selling unsafe, toxic products to US consumers.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said in a Monday news release that his office was investigating the fast-fashion giant for potential violations of Texas law, “related to unethical labor practices and the sale of unsafe consumer products.”

Paxton referenced Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s “Make America Healthy Again” campaign in the release, saying that safe and non-toxic products were a key ingredient in the movement.

“Any company that cuts corners on labor standards or product safety, especially those operating in foreign nations like China, will be held accountable,” Paxton said in the release.

Shein is headquartered in Singapore and sources many of its products from China.

“Texans deserve to know that the companies they buy from are ethical, safe, transparent, and not exploiting workers or selling harmful products. I will not allow cheap, dangerous, foreign goods to flood America and jeopardize our health,” Paxton said.

The release said that the investigation will also examine Shein’s data collection and privacy practices.

Representatives for Shein did not respond to a request for comment about the Texas investigation from Business Insider.

This is the latest setback that Shein is facing in the US, its largest market.

Since the start of President Donald Trump’s second term, his administration has cracked down on the de minimis trade loophole, which previously allowed low-cost parcels to enter the country tax-free. Shein said in April that it would raise prices to account for higher operating expenses, a result of changes in trade laws.

Paxton, who is running for Senate in 2026, is not the first government official globally to launch a probe into Shein.

South Korean health officials raised concerns several times last year about Shein’s products containing toxic substances above legal limits. In response to the probes, Shein told Singaporean outlet The Straits Times in June 2024 that it had removed the offending products from its catalogue.

In May, the European Commission said it had investigated Shein’s practices and found that the company had breached EU law by offering fake discounts, using deceptive product labels, and making misleading sustainability claims.

Shein also came under fire in France in early November for selling childlike sex dolls and illegal weapons on its third-party marketplace in the country, per a Reuters report. France suspended the marketplace shortly after.

The European Commission said on Wednesday that it had sent a request to Shein to provide evidence that it would not expose minors to inappropriate content and that it would prevent the circulation of illegal products.

A Shein spokesperson told Politico that the company had received the request and was “working to promptly address it.”




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