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Crime & Justice

Pratt Accuses NGOs of Stealing $100 Million in Fire Aid Donations

All-In Podcast · Spencer Pratt on Fixing LA: Wildfires, Homelessness, Corruption & the Fight to Take It Back · May 10, 2026
Pratt Accuses NGOs of Stealing $100 Million in Fire Aid Donations
All-In Podcast
All-In Podcast
Spencer Pratt on Fixing LA: Wildfires, Homelessness, Corruption & the Fight to Take It Back
"FireAid, $100 million raised. Every single person I talked to messaging me, no one's getting this money. In their own legal letter, they say several, several of these NGOs gave directly to fire victims. The list for the $100 million is 200-plus. Google several, several. It's under 10."
Spencer Pratt claims the FireAid concert raised $100 million for fire victims, but none of the survivors he's spoken with have received funds. He says he asked senators to investigate, and FireAid's own legal defense admits fewer than 10 of over 200 listed NGOs gave directly to victims. Pratt argues this exemplifies systemic NGO corruption in LA where organizations pocket taxpayer and donor money without delivering services.

About this episode

In this episode of the All In Podcast, host Jason Calacanis interviews Spencer Pratt, the reality TV personality now running for mayor of Los Angeles. The interview comes days after Pratt's widely praised debate performance against incumbent Mayor Karen Bass and fellow challenger Councilwoman Nithya Raman. Pratt, whose Pacific Palisades home burned down in the January 2025 fires along with his parents' house, has transformed personal tragedy into a populist political campaign centered on accountability, corruption, and basic governance. He reveals explosive allegations including that LADWP CEO Janice Quiñones drained two fire reservoirs before the known dry season, that Mayor Bass never called for fixed-wing air support during the fire because she was in Africa while her deputy mayor was on house arrest, and that LAFD whistleblowers told him firefighters were ordered to abandon a smoldering fire on January 1st that later became the Palisades inferno. Pratt accuses the city's NGO network of systematically stealing taxpayer money, claiming the $100 million FireAid concert resulted in almost no direct aid to victims. He details his enforcement-first strategy to clear encampments, restore public safety, audit every city department and NGO, and rebuild LA as "the number one city in the world." Pratt describes assembling a team of billionaires, CEOs, and specialists willing to work for minimal pay, including Peter Chernin advising on Hollywood revitalization and an anonymous billionaire pledging $500 million to make LA fun again. The conversation covers his plans for transportation, housing, small business deregulation, fire prevention using private pool water, and his belief that enforcing existing laws will solve 90% of LA's problems. Pratt positions himself as a non-politician fighting evil, citing Cincinnatus as his model, and warns that if Bass or Raman win, the city is finished.

Key takeaways

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