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THE BOTTOM LINE - Los Angeles is heading toward the 2028 Olympic Games with a dangerous illusion and the city’s top cop just shattered it.
At a City Hall budget hearing, LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell delivered a warning that should stop every Angeleno in their tracks:
Los Angeles does not have the officers, equipment, or funding to secure the Olympic Games.
Not “needs improvement.”
Not “still planning.”
Not ready.
Despite years of promises, planning committees, and public optimism, McDonnell revealed a fundamental truth: there is no dedicated LAPD funding stream for Olympic security. What exists is a shared pool stretched across multiple agencies police, fire, and federal partners largely restricted to overtime.
That is not a strategy.
That is a risk.
The scale of the challenge is enormous. The city will need approximately 6,700 officers deployed across multiple Olympic venues, along with 700 to 800 additional patrol vehicles and critical equipment. These are not optional resources. They are baseline requirements and today, they are not fully funded, not fully staffed, and not fully secured.
And this is unfolding under the leadership of Mayor Karen Bass, as City Hall continues to present budgets that appear balanced on paper but rely on temporary fixes, shifting assumptions, and deferred realities.
Public safety cannot be treated as a line item that gets patched together later. It must be built, funded, and ready well before the world arrives.
The timing makes this even more alarming.
We are not operating in a stable global environment. From rising geopolitical tensions to increasing domestic threats, major metropolitan areas face growing security challenges. Yet Los Angeles is preparing to host one of the largest international events in the world without a fully funded, clearly defined public safety plan.
Inside the Council chamber, the response exposed a deeper problem not just a funding gap, but a leadership gap.
Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez questioned whether large-scale police deployment is even necessary, suggesting alternatives like replacing patrol vehicles with school buses.
That is not innovation.
That is a fundamental misunderstanding of the threat environment.
Meanwhile, Budget Committee Chair Katy Yaroslavsky expressed frustration over conflicting messages about federal support, highlighting a lack of clarity about who is responsible for what.
That confusion is not a minor issue it is the core problem.
Because when accountability is unclear, preparation suffers.
LAPD officials pushed back forcefully, emphasizing that it is dangerously inaccurate to assume federal agencies will handle local security responsibilities. Yes, the Games are designated as a National Special Security Event. Yes, roughly $1 billion in federal funding has been approved.
But coordination is not capacity.
And designation is not deployment.
The burden will still fall heavily on local law enforcement and right now, that foundation is not where it needs to be.
This is the reality Los Angeles must confront:
You cannot secure a global event of this magnitude with shared budgets, delayed funding, and unclear command structures.
You cannot improvise public safety at the last minute.
You cannot substitute planning with optimism.
The warning has been issued clearly and publicly.
The question now is whether city leaders will take it seriously or continue projecting confidence while the underlying gaps grow wider.
Because if this issue is not addressed now decisively, transparently, and with real investment the story of the 2028 Olympics will not be about celebration or global unity.
It will be about a city that saw the risks, heard the warning, and failed to act in time.
And this time, the world will be watching.
(Mihran Kalaydjian brings over two decades of experience in public affairs, government relations, legislative policy, and strategic communications. A respected community leader and education advocate, he is deeply engaged in civic activism and has spearheaded numerous academic initiatives across local political forums. Mihran is a regular contributor to CityWatchLA.com, where he writes on education, civic engagement, and policy issues.)
