STATE OF CALIFORNIA | Business, Consumer Services and Housing Agency
GAVIN NEWSOM, GOVERNOR
Civil Rights Department
2218 Kausen Drive, Suite 100 | Elk Grove | CA | 95758
800-884-1684 (voice) | 800-700-2320 (TTY) | California’s Relay Service at 711
www.calcivilrights.ca.gov | contact.center@calcivilrights.ca.gov
KEVIN KISH, DIRECTOR
January 4, 2023
Contact: Renée Rondinone (916) 206-3882
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
publicaffairs@calcivilrights.ca.gov
CRD Files First Lawsuit to Enforce Protections For Housing Choice Voucher Holders
Lawsuit alleges Sacramento landlords engaged in hate violence, discrimination, and retaliation based
on Section 8 source of income, race, and disability
Sacramento - The Civil Rights Department (CRD) has filed a lawsuit against two Sacramento
landlords, Carlos and Linda Torres, for unlawfully discriminating against a tenant based on the tenant’s
source of income and race, and for retaliating, harassing, and threatening violence when the tenant
attempted to assert her rights.
The suit alleges the landlords served the tenant with an eviction notice stating they no longer wanted to
rent to federal Housing Choice (Section 8) voucher holders, after the tenant informed them she would
no longer continue to make side payments that were inconsistent with the requirements of the voucher
program. When she told the landlords that it is unlawful to refuse to rent to tenants because of their
source of income, they harassed and retaliated against her, threatened to evict her by illegal means,
threatened violence, and unlawfully locked her out of her home. As a result, she was unable to access
essential belongings including medical equipment, family heirlooms, and photographs. The tenant was
also unable to fully access and enjoy the property because of the landlords’ repeated denials of her
request for reasonable modification to accommodate her disability.
“Throughout the State, rental housing costs are climbing further out of reach for many Californians,”
said CRD Director Kevin Kish. “Source-of-income discrimination by housing providers exacerbates this
trend and is unlawful. No one should be threatened for asserting their rights to be free from housing
discrimination, regardless of race, disability, or the lawful source of income they use to pay their rent.”
The suit, filed in Sacramento County Superior Court (case number 34-2022-00331695), alleges
violations of the Ralph Civil Rights Act, the Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA), and the Unruh
Civil Rights Act. Together, these laws prohibit housing discrimination, harassment, retaliation, and
violence based on protected characteristics including race, color, source of income, and disability.
CRD is seeking statutory, compensatory, and punitive damages for the tenant who complained about
the policy, as well as injunctive relief.
In, 2019, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Senate Bill 329 (Mitchell) into law, expanding the definition
of “source of income” in the FEHA to include tenants who rely on rental assistance payments, including
through the Section 8Housing Choice voucher program. The law protects the approximately 300,000
low-income Californians who rely on rental assistance payments through voucher programs to secure
stable housing. Since the law went into effect in 2020, CRD has provided informational webinars and
materials to help landlords and tenants understand their rights and obligations under the law, reviewed
thousands of housing advertisements to remove unlawful statements such as “No Section 8,” launched
a fair housing testing program finding widespread discrimination against Section 8voucher holders,
and resolved dozens of source-of-income complaints. This is the first lawsuit filed by the State to
enforce the law’s protections in court.
The case is brought by Senior FEH Counsel Azadeh Hosseinian.
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The CRD is the state agency charged with enforcing California’s civil rights laws. The mission of the CRD
is to protect the people of California from unlawful discrimination in employment, housing and public
accommodations and from hate violence and human trafficking. For more information, visit CRD’s
website at calcivilrights.ca.gov.