Courts/Rulings & Lawsuits

Federal judge bars the LAPD's use of some 'less-lethal' weapons at protests

A federal judge banned Los Angeles Police Department officers from using some so-called less-lethal launchers at protests, after finding that the department violated previous court restrictions by using such projectile weapons to disperse crowds at last summer's mass demonstrations against immigration enforcement.

Los Angeles Times

Supreme Court appears likely to strike down California law banning guns in stores and restaurants

Do licensed gun owners have a right to carry a loaded weapon into stores, restaurants and other private places that are open to the public? California and Hawaii are among five states with new laws that forbid carrying firearms onto private property without the consent of an owner or manager. But the Trump administration joined gun-rights advocates on Tuesday in urging the Supreme Court to strike down the laws as unconstitutional under the 2nd Amendment.

Los Angeles Times

Judicial watchdog files misconduct charges against LA County judge

The California Commission on Judicial Performance has filed formal disciplinary charges against Los Angeles County Judge Robert S. Draper, alleging willful misconduct, persistent failure to perform duties and conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice. The commission’s Tuesday announcement cited repeated failures to cooperate with investigations, inappropriate and offensive comments, improper ex parts communications and disclosure of confidential materials. 

Daily Journal

Judge may not compel P.D. to handle Habeas corpus petition 

A public defender’s office cannot be compelled to represent an indigent inmate in pursuing a habeas corpus petition, Div. Two of the Fourth District Court of Appeal held yesterday, issuing a writ of mandate directing that an order compelling legal services be vacated. Justice Frank J. Menetrez authored the majority opinion, in which Justice Douglas P. Miller joined. Presiding Justice Manuel A. Ramirez concurred in the result.

Metropolitan News-Enterprise

Ninth Circuit holds that texts are “calls” under the TCPA but embedded videos are not recorded messages

On January 13, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit issued a decision in Howard v. Republican National Committee (RNC) offering two important interpretations of the applicability of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) to certain text message communications: 1. Text messages are “calls” under the TCPA. 2. A text message that merely includes a video file with a prerecorded voice - requiring the recipient to press play - does not constitute “initiating” a “call using an artificial or prerecorded voice.”

Consumer Financial Services Law Monitor

Republican National Committee strikes out at Ninth Circuit in case against Google

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, on Friday, declined to revive a lawsuit filed by the Republican National Committee against Google, in which the RNC accused the tech giant of discrimination by diverting its fundraising emails into recipients’ spam folders. A three-judge panel agreed with the trial court that the RNC had no standing to sue Google.

Courthouse News Service

Calabasas landfill to continue receiving fire debris after judge rejects city's efforts

A judge Tuesday rejected a year-old effort by the city of Calabasas to prevent disposal of debris from the Palisades Fire at a landfill in the city, ruling that hazardous materials are being removed before debris is deposited at the facility. Lawyers for the city maintained in their petition filed a year ago that the Calabasas Landfill is only certified to accept non-hazardous waste.

City News Service

Lawyer sanctioned for filing ‘totally’ meritless writ petition

Div. Three of the Fourth District Court of Appeal has sanctioned an attorney $25,000 for filing a writ petition containing allegations of impropriety by an Orange Superior Court judge without any factual support for the claims, rejecting an attempt to characterize the action as advocacy in support of a client who purportedly “earnestly” believed the allegations to be true.

Metropolitan News-Enterprise

Prosecutors

Meet the only L.A. landlord criminally charged with harassing her tenants

The tenants of this 43-unit apartment building in downtown Los Angeles have typical complaints about their landlord Nela Petrusan. They claim she has not fixed plumbing issues; that she has turned off their hot water; that she allowed a roach infestation to fester and that she has failed to make repairs in an expedient manner. They also have other - less typical - complaints.

Los Angeles Times

Two men face decades in prison for multiple 7-Eleven armed robberies, prosecutors say

Two men linked to at least three 7-Eleven robberies across the San Fernando Valley were charged with the crime, facing the possibility of spending decades behind bars, the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office told NBC4 Investigates exclusively Friday. The suspects were identified as 23-year-old Lorenzo Byrd and 29-year-old Samuel Mandefro, who have been charged with four counts of second-degree robbery. 

NBC4

Man charged with murder in attack on Beverly Hills street

A man was charged with murder Wednesday in an attack on a Beverly Hills street earlier this month that left a man dead, county prosecutors told NBC4 Investigates. Christopher Bernard Cornelius was charged with one count of murder in the assault on Wilshire Boulevard near San Vicente Boulevard. Authorities alleged that Cornelius used a deadly weapon and committed the murder while engaged in the commission of the crime of robbery.

NBC4

‘Our children are not for sale’: Long Beach man charged with human trafficking felonies

A Long Beach man with a prior kidnapping conviction is facing multiple felony charges after authorities say he was caught selling a teenage girl for sex at an Anaheim motel. Michael Terrell Armstrong, 33, was arrested Jan. 8 by the Orange County Human Trafficking Task Force after investigators received a tip from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children about a missing 17-year-old girl believed to be a victim of sex trafficking.

KTLA

Immigration officials allow suspect in $100 million Southern California jewelry heist to self deport, avoiding trial

Federal immigration authorities allowed a suspect in a $100 million jewelry heist believed to be the largest in U.S. history to deport himself to South America in December, a move that stunned and upset prosecutors who were planning to try the case and send him to prison. Jeson Nelon Presilla Flores was one of seven people charged last year with stalking an armored truck to a rural freeway rest stop north of Los Angeles and stealing millions worth of diamonds, emeralds, gold, rubies and designer watches in 2022.

Associated Press

California prosecutors push back on ICE immunity claims

California prosecutors are expressing alarm at the Trump administration’s response to the fatal shooting of a Minneapolis woman by an immigration agent, pointing to statements that the agent has absolute immunity from prosecution and to the decision to exclude Minnesota investigators from the inquiry into the incident.

LAist

Anaheim man arrested on federal criminal complaint charging him with making death threats against Vice President Vance

An Orange County man was arrested today on a federal criminal complaint alleging that he posted on Instagram death threats against Vice President JD Vance during his visit to Disneyland Resort last year. Marco Antonio Aguayo, 22, of Anaheim, is charged with threats against the President and successors to the Presidency.

U.S. Attorney’s Office Press Release

FPPC General Counsel gives opening testimony in Price preliminary hearing

The general counsel of the Fair Political Practices Commission testified today that L.A. City Councilman Curren Price had a number of ways of knowing if a conflict of interest existed when he voted on matters during council meetings. David Bainbridge was the opening witness in what is expected to be a multi-day preliminary hearing that will decide whether Price, 75, should stand trial in a public corruption case.

City News Service

Policy/Legal/Politics

LA Times' suit over mayor's auto-deleting texts likely to advance

A Superior Court judge on Friday said he was leaning toward allowing a public records lawsuit filed by the Los Angeles Times against the city of LA over the mayor’s text messages to go forward to discovery and then a trial. At issue: Is a text message a public record? And is the city obligated to read through every employee’s text messages before deciding which ones should be kept?

Courthouse News Service

Mike Hestrin: Proposition 36 is working but the state must fund treatment

With the overwhelming passage of Proposition 36 in November 2024, California voters sent a clear message to state lawmakers: it is time to end the public safety and public health crises of untreated addiction and rampant retail theft. Proposition 36 enacted a transformative approach targeting these issues, mandating treatment programs for those suffering from addiction and increasing penalties for repeat theft offenders and those peddling deadly drugs like fentanyl. 

Commentary/Daily Bulletin

90-year-old man facing eviction from retirement community over unknown fees

An elderly man is at risk of eviction from a retirement community for not paying fees he was not even aware of. 90-year-old Song Maeng has lived in an apartment at Kingsley Manor Retirement Community in Hollywood since 2024. At the end of last year, he received an eviction notice for nonpayment of around $14,000 in fees. Fees his attorney says he was not aware of. 

Fox11

LAPD captain deleted texts in Black Lives Matter lawsuit, judge finds

After the LAPD response to a 2020 protest outside the mayor's mansion led to an excessive force lawsuit, attorneys representing the Police Department insisted they had turned over all relevant evidence. But then lawyers for the plaintiffs - activists from Black Lives Matter-L.A. - found footage recorded on the officers' body-worn cameras showed them tapping out messages on their phones, apparently sending texts to other LAPD officials that were never handed over.

Los Angeles Times

State Bar investigating law firm at center of L.A. County’s $4-billion sex abuse settlement

The State Bar of California has opened an investigation into a prominent Los Angeles law firm that represents thousands of sex abuse victims in a record $4-billion settlement, according to court filings made public Wednesday. The investigation into Downtown LA Law Group, which is also the subject of a criminal probe into allegations plaintiffs were paid to sue, was detailed in a Jan. 20 court motion filed by attorneys for L.A. County.

Los Angeles Times

Corruption case looms over Curren Price's legacy - and the race to replace him

Curren Price's political career appears destined to end before his criminal trial. Prosecutors first charged the L.A. City Council member in 2023 with embezzlement, perjury and having a conflict of interest in votes on City Council matters in which his wife stood to benefit. A long-delayed preliminary hearing began this week, where more evidence against Price will be put forth and a judge must decide if prosecutors have enough evidence to proceed.

Los Angeles Times

Suit against LAUSD alleges ‘overt discrimination’ against white students

A long-running effort to help disadvantaged students of color in Los Angeles schools is under legal challenge by a group that claims the nation's second-largest school system is discriminating against white students. The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in federal court, targets efforts to bring resources to underserved schools going back decades and rooted in battles over forced and voluntary integration.

Los Angeles Times

Officer plaintiff in consolidated suit over alleged arrest quotas speaks out

The lead plaintiff in a consolidated lawsuit brought by six Los Angeles police officers who allege they experienced retaliation after they spoke out about commanders’ allegedly enforcing illegal quotas for gang contact and gun-related arrests and seizures is challenging the city’s efforts to dismiss their case.

MyNewsLA

I’m being prosecuted for the opposite of insider trading

The crime of insider trading consists in taking advantage of other investors by buying or selling stock based on material, nonpublic information that could affect its value. I’m being prosecuted for doing the opposite of that. I publicly expressed a sincerely held opinion and later traded on it. Under the Justice Department’s theory, that’s a crime because I made so many people aware of my opinion.

Commentary/Wall Street Journal

How the Supreme Court made it hard to sue ICE agent in Renee Good case

At first glance, it might seem straightforward. An ICE agent fatally shot Renee Nicole Good, and her family has now hired a prominent law firm to seek justice. In many other contexts, you might expect a lawsuit within months and a jury trial - if the officer doesn't settle - within a couple years. But cases involving federal agents follow a different, far narrower path - one shaped by decades of Supreme Court decisions as well as choices by Congress that have closed more and more courthouse doors to civil lawsuits seeking justice.

USA Today

SoCal Edison sues LA County, several agencies over Eaton Fire responsibility

Southern California Edison filed a lawsuit against LA County and several other agencies alleging that their failures contributed to the death and destruction from the Eaton Fire. SoCal Edison and its parent company, Edison International (EIX), are being sued by thousands of residents who allege faulty power lines sparked the blaze that killed 19 people.

NBC4

Pasadena hospital treated protester whose jaw was shattered by LAPD projectile, lawsuit says

A man who was hospitalized in Pasadena after an LAPD officer allegedly shot him in the face with a foam projectile during a downtown demonstration has filed a civil rights lawsuit in Los Angeles Superior Court seeking damages for his injuries, according to the complaint. Plaintiff Atlachinolli Tezcacoatl was among hundreds attending an early summer 2025 rally protesting the Trump administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration, the suit states.

City News Service

City urges dismissal of Councilman Curren Price’s case

A lawsuit by a former senior field deputy to City Councilman Curren Price, in which she claims she was wrongfully fired in 2024 for being a whistleblower, should be dismissed because she was terminated for legitimate, non-retaliatory reasons, the City Attorney’s Office argues in new court papers. Angie Reyes Reyes-English’s Los Angeles Superior Court whistleblower suit maintains the plaintiff was considered a “snitch” who gave prosecutors information about the councilman and alleged pay-for-play schemes. 

MyNewsLA

Southern California

LA County workers shocked and outraged by CEO’s $2M payment, union leaders say

Leaders of the two largest L.A. County employee unions say many of their members have been shocked and outraged to learn county CEO Fesia Davenport negotiated a $2 million payout to herself, after they say she told workers there was no money to give them raises. It comes as the CEO remains on a months-long leave, and an attorney challenges the legality of the payout - alleging it violates the state Constitution’s ban on gifts of public funds.

LAist

Celebrity PR firm helped LAFD shape messaging after Palisades fire

In the months after the Palisades fire, the Los Angeles Fire Department Foundation raked in millions of dollars in charitable donations to pay for training and equipment for firefighters, as LAFD leaders publicly complained about not having enough money to keep the city safe. But some of the funds were quietly spent on something that had little to do with firefighting: a celebrity public relations firm to help LAFD leaders shape their messaging after a disaster in which their missteps figured prominently, The Times has learned.

Los Angeles Times

Will UCLA be forced to stay at the Rose Bowl? Legal scholars weigh in on the case

If legal scholars were setting a betting line on Rose Bowl v. UCLA, it might be a pick’em. It’s possible that a judge or arbitrator in the high-stakes breach-of-contract case awards monetary damages to the Rose Bowl and the City of Pasadena based on a prediction of lost revenue over the length of a lease that runs through June 2044, freeing the Bruins to abandon their longtime football home for SoFi Stadium.

Los Angeles Times

Castaic Sports Complex renamed in honor of fallen Deputy Ryan Clinkunbroomer

On Friday, members of the Los Angeles County community came together at the Castaic Sports Complex in remembrance of Deputy Ryan Clinkunbroomer, who was tragically killed on duty nearly three years ago. Deputy Ryan M. Clinkunbroomer of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department (LASD) was killed on September 16, 2023, in an ambush shooting at the intersection of Sierra Highway and Avenue Q in the city of Palmdale.

KHTS

A walk through promising, problem-plagued MacArthur Park with its council member

I’m standing in the northern section of MacArthur Park with City Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez, and the modern-day struggles of the historic space are all around us. People lie on the sidewalk or stand hunched over and motionless. Others lounge on spotty lawns near overflowing trash cans. Graffiti besmirch trees. Police and firefighter sirens wail in the distance.

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles must start investing in its future - not just paying for its failures

Los Angeles has always been a city of promise. People come here from around the world because this is a place where dreams are built, industries are born, and opportunity is supposed to be within reach for anyone willing to work for it. But today, too many Angelenos feel like the City has lost its way. The truth is uncomfortable but simple: Los Angeles is not suffering from a lack of money.

CityWatch 

In pricey Santa Monica neighborhood, a battle rages over supportive housing 

It was a scene that left residents of this pricey, palm-lined Santa Monica neighborhood flabbergasted. Without warning, some 50 strangers had suddenly arrived in vans and were occupying a vacant building on Ocean Avenue the night before Thanksgiving. Some of them smoked cigarettes, others had dogs running around unleashed, and at least one fight broke out during the boisterous move-in.

Los Angeles Times

LAPD wants nearly $100M to police the Olympics. Who's going to pay for it?

The Los Angeles Police Department is requesting nearly $100 million in city funds for vehicles and equipment for the Olympic and Paralympic Games, more than two years out from the world's largest sporting event coming to L.A. LAPD wants to buy around 500 vehicles and "mobile units," including 300 patrol vehicles, vans and an armored SUV worth half a million dollars.

LAist

LA leaders approve $3 million to help LAPD continue to hire

The Los Angeles City Council voted on Wednesday to approve spending roughly $3 million so that the hiring and training of new police officers isn’t interrupted. Initial funding ran out last month and LA Mayor Karen Bass warned that a slowdown could cause the department to shrink to unsustainable levels. Wednesday’s vote authorizes more money for the year to allow the LAPD to hire dozens of new officers.

NBC4

Secret high-cost executive increases at LADWP expansion should alarm ratepayers

This management change is costing Los Angeles hundreds of millions while the city faces historic budget shortfalls, and during a period when residents are struggling with high utility bills. Further, this reckless expansion is occurring at a time when the Power System faces some $13.5 billion in historic long-term debt and over $1.3 billion in unpaid bills. Instead of fiscal restraint, LADWP leadership is worsening financial instability and risking insolvency.

CityWatch

Public Safety

Outrage as LA Metro deploys social workers to fight rampant crime: ‘Holistic approach to public safety’

Forget handcuffs and batons. In a move that has critics outraged, the Los Angeles Metro has officially launched its “care-based services division,” a new department that adds a “holistic” army of social workers to tackle the safety of the transit system alongside armed law enforcement.

New York Post

Fatally wounded man takes gunman's weapon, shoots him in Winnetka drug deal gone wrong, LAPD says

Two men shot each other with the same gun during a drug deal that went awry Saturday afternoon in the San Fernando Valley, authorities said. The incident unfolded about 4 p.m. in the 20400 block of Sherman Way, between Oso and Mason avenues in Winnetka, a spokesperson for the Los Angeles Police Department said. According to police, a 31-year-old man was buying drugs from a 36-year-old man, who robbed and shot the younger man.

ABC7

LAPD defends hands-off approach to massive ATV ‘ride-outs'

A group of riders on all-terrain vehicles, e-bikes, and motorcycles recently took over the streets of downtown Los Angeles in a "ride-out." While the convoy was seen blowing through red lights and performing stunts, the Los Angeles Police Department has defended its decision not to intervene. What we know: Ride-outs involve large convoys of bikers gathering to ride through popular areas like Figueroa Street near the Coliseum and the streets surrounding City Hall. 

Fox11

California/National

Uber - a target of car crash lawsuits - pushes for law to limit California lawyer fees

The long-simmering fight between some of L.A.’s best-known billboard attorneys and Uber, one of their most frequent targets, is poised to spill out of the courtroom and onto the November ballot. The ride-share giant is gathering signatures for an initiative that, if passed by voters, would cap how much attorneys can earn in vehicle collision cases.

Los Angeles Times

L.A. County DA Hochman says employee was "wrongfully detained" by ICE

Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman says that federal agents wrongfully detained a member of his office on Friday. "I am writing to inform you of a disturbing incident involving one of our colleagues," said a memo Hochman shared with his staff, which was first reported by the LA Times and CBS LA has since obtained from a source inside the LA County DA's Office. "A member of our Office was wrongfully detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)."

CBS LA

Pair of inmates identified as ‘suspected assailants’ in deadly California prison attack: officials 

Two inmates described as “suspected assailants” are being investigated in connection with a fatal attack at a facility in Central California, officials say. The California Department of Corrections issued a media release late Saturday stating an investigation had been launched into the alleged homicide of an incarcerated person at Pleasant Valley State Prison (PVSP) in Coalinga, which is located in Fresno County.  

KTLA

Carlsbad homeowner fighting multimillion-dollar fine over beach access, pickleball court

Carlsbad homeowner John Levy’s lawsuit against the Coastal Commission disputes penalties over two locked gates, native vegetation, a wedding site and pickleball court. It also challenges the commission’s authority to exact multi-million dollar fines without judicial review. The commission, which protects public access and environmental quality in the Coastal Zone, a strip of land that follows California’s shoreline, accused Levy of blocking public access to the beach, removing shorebird habitat and illegally installing the pickleball court.

CalMatters

California calls on Elon Musk’s xAI to halt creation of sexual deepfakes

California Attorney General Rob Bonta sent a cease and desist letter to xAI ordering the Elon Musk company to stop creating and distributing nonconsensual sexual images. In the letter, Bonta cited “numerous examples of xAI taking ordinary, clothed images of women and children” and allowing users “to depict the people in suggestive and sexually explicit scenarios and ‘undress’ them, all without the subjects’ knowledge or consent.”

CalMatters

Lawsuit challenges Eric Swalwell’s residency as he runs for California governor

Democratic Congressman and gubernatorial candidate Eric Swalwell is facing a lawsuit that could threaten his bid for California governor, with a conservative filmmaker alleging the lawmaker does not actually live in the state. The lawsuit, filed Friday by Joel Gilbert, claims Swalwell has not lived in California for years and instead maintains his primary residence at a home in Washington, D.C. Gilbert is calling on Swalwell to end his campaign.

ABC10

Federal immigration agents keep shooting at drivers. We tracked 15 cases since July.

Last August, federal immigration agents in unmarked cars pulled over Francisco Longoria as he drove through a majority Hispanic neighborhood in San Bernardino, California, with his teenage son in the passenger seat. Cellphone and surveillance videos show masked agents surrounding the pickup truck, at least one with a gun drawn. When Longoria refused to roll down his window, one agent smashed the driver-side glass and reached inside. 

MS Now

Convictions/Pleas/Sentences/Parole

Burglar, shot by homeowner when breaking into Valley Village home, sentenced to prison

Two men were sentenced to more than a decade behind bars for a 2024 attempted burglary of a Valley Village home, the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office exclusively told NBC4 Investigates Thursday. The homeowner was inside the home on July 8, 2024 when the men broke into the house on Addison Street near Colfax Avenue. The property owner fired his weapon, injuring one of the burglars, Chuks Chukwudi.

NBC4

4 Chilean nationals plead guilty to $3 million Southern California jewelry heist

Four members of a burglary crew pleaded guilty to their roles in a $3 million jewelry store heist in Ventura County. The group pleaded guilty to burglarizing a jewelry store and a coffee shop in Simi Valley in late May 2025. Earlier that month, they made plans to target 5 Star Jewelry & Watch repair, a family-owned business on Cochran Street.

KTLA

Registered sex offender in Southern California pleads guilty to possessing child sexual abuse material

A registered sex offender in Ventura County pleaded guilty to possessing child sexual abuse material, a crime for which he has been convicted several times in the past. Gary Steven Daniel II, 47, of Oxnard, pleaded guilty on Jan. 15 in two cases involving the possession of child sexual abuse material (CSAM), according to the Ventura County District Attorney’s Office.

KTLA

Trump’s double pardon underscores sweeping use of clemency

President Donald Trump has leaned into his presidential clemency powers much more aggressively in his second term - in fact, he’s pardoned one woman twice. Trump granted a slew of pardons on Friday, including one for Adriana Camberos, who was convicted for a second time after Trump commuted her sentence during his first term.

CNN

Articles of Interest

Why former KFI AM reporter Chris Little launched ‘Death of News’ podcast

Longtime listeners to KFI (640 AM) know the name Chris Little. The former news reporter-turned news director was with the station for 33 years before being let go in an iHeart Media mass layoff in late 2024; he was let go along with half of the station’s news department. Little made KFI news what it was: quick, concise, and extremely popular. KFI was the station many from Southern California tuned to in an emergency, instead of even all-news competitor KNX.

Southern California Radio Waves

Leonard Jacoby, pioneer of legal advertising on billboards and TV, dies at 83

Leonard Jacoby, half of a law firm duo that pioneered advertising for lawyers and revolutionized their industry, died at 83. He died Monday in New York from complications of cardiac arrest, according to his wife, Nancy Jacoby. Jacoby & Meyers, the firm he co-founded, is now a mainstay on billboards across the nation. They were among the first to offer legal services to the middle class, soliciting clients through a then-novel advertising blitz that would become the blueprint for thousands of law firms.

Los Angeles Times

Opting out: How Californians can use state's new tool to block hundreds of data brokers

The California Privacy Protection Agency kicked off 2026 by launching a tool that state residents can use to make data brokers delete and stop selling their personal information. The system, known as the Delete Request and Opt-out Platform, or DROP, has been in the works for years, mandated by a 2023 law known as the Delete Act. Under it and previous laws, data brokers must register with the state and enable consumers to tell brokers to stop tracking them and selling their information.

CalMatters

Alabama jury finds well-known plaintiff lawyer liable for $120 million in damages for RICO violations

On January 15, 2026, a jury in the Northern District of Alabama awarded Drummond Company $120 million in damages against Terrence Collingsworth in a consolidated RICO and defamation trial. After the RICO damages are trebled, it is anticipated that the total judgments will be $256 million. The jury found that the former Conrad & Scherer, LLP partner engaged in witness bribery, witness tampering, obstruction of justice, money laundering, wire fraud, and extortion, as well as making false statements. 

Gibson Dunn

Amazon held to account for billing parents for in-app purchases made by their kids

A federal judge has ruled that Amazon is liable for sending out bills to parents of children who made in-app purchases without permission. Amounting to millions of dollars, the bills have now been deemed unauthorized, and Amazon faces having to pay back a large percentage of the money. The case has echoes of similar legal action brought against Google and Apple for purchases made by children in the App Store and Google Play.

Beta News

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