
This article may contain commentary
which reflects the author’s opinion.
California Attorney General Rob Bonta received a letter last year warning that an East Bay businessman under federal investigation possessed a recording of him âin a compromising position,â according to documents obtained by the Bay Area News Group. The May 2024 letter was sent by Oakland political operative Mario Juarez, who claimed businessman Andy Duong â later indicted in a sprawling corruption probe â had secretly recorded Bonta and could use the footage for blackmail.
Juarez alleged that Duong âroutinely engages in entertaining elected and other officials to extract recordings without their knowledge to later use in blackmail circumstances.â
The revelation comes after campaign filings showed Bonta spent nearly $468,000 in legal fees while cooperating with federal investigators examining alleged bribery and influence-peddling involving Duong, his father David Duong, and former Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao.
Bontaâs senior adviser, Dan Newman, confirmed that the attorney generalâs office received the letter and shared it with law enforcement, but denied any connection between the correspondence and Bontaâs legal expenses.
âThey were not related,â Newman said, explaining that the legal spending covered attorneys who âhelped provide information that could be useful to the federal investigation.â
Newman told the Los Angeles Times that Bonta was contacted by investigators because he was considered âa possible victim,â not a suspect. The attorney general himself has dismissed the letterâs allegations as false. âThe reference to any video is absolutely not true. Itâs false and there is no video,â Bonta told KQED in an interview Thursday.
Bonta said his legal team began working with federal authorities roughly 14 months ago to compile materials ahead of questioning. âThey helped gather all the information the federal government was interested in,â he said.
Duongâs attorneys, meanwhile, denied the accusation outright. âAndy Duong vigorously denies the baseless allegations in this letter,â his legal team said in a statement, calling Juarezâs claims âfabricatedâ and citing âsignificant credibility issues.â
Juarez, a former Oakland City Council candidate, has been identified in federal filings as âCo-Conspirator 1,â a key informant in the corruption case that led to multiple indictments this year. Prosecutors allege that Thao and her partner Andre Jones accepted bribes and campaign assistance from the Duongs in exchange for help securing lucrative city contracts for their recycling and housing businesses.
Court documents describe Juarez as an intermediary who funneled payments to Jones and helped distribute political mailers attacking Thaoâs opponents during the 2022 mayoral election. One message cited in the indictments shows Juarez texting Andy Duong after the vote: âWe may go to jail ⌠but we are $100 million dollars richer.â
Bontaâs connection to Duong appears to have been largely social. The two were frequently pictured together on Duongâs Instagram account between 2018 and 2022, appearing at sporting events, political gatherings, and charity functions. Duong once referred to Bonta as âmy brotherâ in a 2021 post featuring photos of the pair with boxer Manny Pacquiao.
The letter to Bonta followed a violent rupture between Juarez and the Duongs in May 2024. According to police reports, Juarez alleged that he was assaulted by the family at their Oakland showroom, while the Duongs accused him of holding them hostage and demanding money. Days later, Juarez reported a drive-by shooting at his home in the cityâs Fruitvale district, though police have not identified suspects or established a motive.
Juarezâs May 9 letter also accused the Duongs of paying more than $80,000 to Jones for âfictitious workâ and making illegal campaign contributions. He claimed he went to Bonta out of fear that the Duong familyâs connections to Oakland police leadership might shield them from scrutiny.
Bontaâs office responded weeks later through its Public Inquiry Unit, advising Juarez to contact local authorities âwho are primarily responsibleâ for law enforcement matters.
In court, attorneys for Thao, Jones, and the Duongs have joined efforts to discredit Juarezâs testimony ahead of a trial tentatively set for October 2026.
Despite the swirl of allegations, Bonta â who has served as Californiaâs top law enforcement officer since 2021 â maintains he was not a target of the probe. âThe AGâs involvement is over,â Newman said Wednesday.
