Financial Oversight: When Audits Fail and Funds Disappear
How grand juries across 54 counties document chronic gaps in public financial accountability
Generated 2026-07-12 from grand jury data through that date.
Key Findings at a Glance
Financial oversight is a core function of the California grand jury. Of the 6,018 findings that mention audits, 1,342 identify specific failures: missed audits, inadequate controls, non-compliance, and willful disregard of audit recommendations. Across 54 counties, 7,215 recommendations call for strengthened financial accountability. An additional 166 findings document embezzlement or misappropriation of public funds.
The Pattern of Audit Failures
Audit failure findings have been a persistent feature of grand jury oversight. The trend reflects not a sudden crisis but a chronic, systemic weakness in how local government manages public money.
Rates based on digitized reports; coverage incomplete before 2005.
Findings by Era
| Era | Findings | Rate/100 | Counties | Avg/Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000-2010 | 566 | 6.8 | 39 | 51 |
| 2011-2017 | 357 | 4.5 | 38 | 51 |
| 2018-present | 372 | 5.2 | 43 | 46 |
The consistency across eras suggests that audit failures are structural, not situational. The same types of findings — overdue audits, missing records, non-compliance with reporting requirements — appear decade after decade.
What Grand Juries Are Finding
The 1,342 audit failure findings fall into recurring categories:
- Overdue audits: Special districts, small agencies, and even county departments go years without required audits. Some have not been audited in a decade or more.
- Missing records: Staff fail to maintain financial records, making audits impossible and financial decisions uninformed.
- Willful non-compliance: Auditors and officials who knowingly fail to comply with Government Code requirements, relying on the absence of enforcement.
- Procurement failures: Purchasing departments bypass competitive bidding, violate spending thresholds, and fail to maintain required documentation.
- Audit recommendations ignored: The same audit deficiencies appear year after year because prior recommendations were acknowledged but not implemented.
Fiscal Mismanagement & Fraud
166 findings document embezzlement, misappropriation, or significant fiscal mismanagement. While rare compared to routine audit failures, these findings reveal what happens when oversight breaks down completely:
- Post-fraud inaction: After embezzlement is discovered, agencies sometimes fail to implement the controls that would prevent recurrence. Grand juries find the same vulnerabilities years later.
- Fund misuse: Designated funds (student body accounts, special tax revenues, grant funds) are used for unauthorized purposes, sometimes affecting hundreds of accounts.
- Insurance gaps: When embezzlement is discovered, agencies learn their insurance doesn't cover the loss because they lacked adequate internal controls — a catch-22 of negligence.
Top Counties by Audit Failure Findings
| County | Audit Failures | |
|---|---|---|
| Riverside | 82 | |
| San Joaquin | 58 | |
| Sacramento | 49 | |
| Madera | 44 | |
| Santa Cruz | 44 | |
| Del Norte | 36 | |
| Ventura | 34 | |
| Mendocino | 33 | |
| Plumas | 29 | |
| Los Angeles | 28 |
High counts may reflect either systemic problems or particularly thorough jury investigations into financial management.
What Grand Juries Recommend
The 7,215 audit-related recommendations focus on independence, regularity, and enforcement:
- Independent audits: Require annual independent audits of all agencies receiving public funds, completed within 6 months of fiscal year end
- Internal audit capacity: Create and fund independent internal auditor positions with investigative authority
- Performance audits: Go beyond financial compliance to evaluate whether programs are achieving their intended outcomes
- Recommendation tracking: Implement formal systems to track the implementation of audit recommendations
- Whistleblower protections: Strengthen channels for reporting financial irregularities without fear of retaliation
Then and Now: Decades of the Same Gaps
Financial oversight failures have been documented since the earliest years in our dataset:
Nevada County's 1997 finding — that an agency failed to implement "low-cost recommendations" from four consecutive annual audits — captures the fundamental problem: audits identify issues, recommendations are issued, agencies agree to them, and nothing changes. This pattern persists 28 years later.
Counties Reporting
Audit failure findings have been documented in 54 counties:
State Oversight Context
California's state-level oversight bodies — catalogued at caoversight.org — have also examined this topic. The 133 reports below, from County Auditor-Controller, Legislative Analyst's Office, and State Controller's Office, provide the broader policy context within which county grand juries operate.
County Auditor-Controller (38 reports)
- FY 2024-25 Los Angeles County Capital Asset Leasing Corporation (2026)
- FY 24-25 Single Audit Report (2026)
- FY 2024-25 The Los Angeles Regional Interoperable Communications System Authority (2026) — T H E L O S A N G E L E S R E G I O N A L I N T E R O P E R A B L E C O M M U N I C AT I O N S S Y S T E M A U T H O R I T Y FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND INDEPENDENT AUDITOR’S REPORT For the Year Ended June 30, 2025 2 3 5 5 C r e n s h a w B l v d .
- FY 2024-25 High Desert Corridor Joint Powers Agency (2026) — H I G H D E S E R T C O R R I D O R J O I N T P O W E R S A G E N C Y Financial Statements With Independent Auditor’s Report For the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 2025 2 3 5 5 C r e n s h a w B l v d .
- FY 2024-25 Los Angeles Grand Avenue Authority Financial Audit Final Report (2026)
- ... and 33 additional reports
Legislative Analyst's Office (1 report)
State Controller's Office (94 reports)
- San Jose State University Payroll Audit (2025) — SAN JOSÉ STATE UNIVERSITY Audit Report PAYROLL AUDIT March 1, 2017, through February 29, 2020 M M.
- California Health Benefit Exchange Payroll Audit (2025) — CALIFORNIA HEALTH BENEFIT EXCHANGE Audit Report PAYROLL AUDIT July 1, 2018, through June 30, 2021 M M.
- San Diego State University Payroll Audit (2025) — SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY Audit Report PAYROLL AUDIT March 1, 2017, through February 29, 2020 M M.
- Franchise Tax Board Payroll Audit (2025) — FRANCHISE TAX BOARD Audit Report PAYROLL AUDIT March 1, 2017, through February 29, 2020 M M.
- California State University, Sacramento Payroll Audit (2025) — CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, SACRAMENTO Audit Report PAYROLL AUDIT March 1, 2017, through February 29, 2020 M M.
- ... and 89 additional reports
These state oversight reports examine many of the same issues from a statewide policy perspective, complementing the county-level ground truth documented by civil grand juries.
Methodology
This report analyzes 1,342 audit failure findings from 2262 reports across 54 counties. Findings were identified by co-occurrence of "audit" with failure-indicating terms (fail, deficient, inadequate, overdue, etc.). Embezzlement/fraud findings (166) matched on "embezzlement" or "misappropriation." Total audit mentions (6,018) include all findings containing "audit" regardless of tone.
All data is sourced from publicly available grand jury final reports. Quotes were editorially curated for specificity and county diversity.
View source reports behind this analysis
This report was generated during our development preview. For a copy of a completed report, contact [email protected].