Henning stepped down prematurely in November 1991 The three incumbent members on the council voted for Heine in a special meeting as mayor (incoming councilmember Louis Byrd did not take part)[3][4][5]
[12] Pedroza moved to Lynwood in 1979 with his family.[13] In 1984, he graduated from Lynwood High School and then graduated from Webster Career College in Long Beach.[13]
Pedroza was elected to the Lynwood City Council in November 2001 and was the city's mayor in 2003.[13] On September 25, 2007, he was ousted from the City Council in a recall election which also resulted in the removal of mayor Louis Byrd and fellow council members Leticia Vasquez and Alfreddie Johnson Jr.[14][15][16][17] Mayor Pro Tem Maria Teresa Santillan, the only council member to not face a recall vote, served as mayor in the interim.
Rodriguez was elected to the Lynwood City Council in 2001. In 2003, eight members of his family were charged with voter fraud after registering at a fictitious address to vote for his re-election.[18] In December 2004, he was appointed mayor by the City Council. In the December 2005 election he lost re-election to the City Council. He was re-elected to the council in 2007 after a recall election[19][20] in September 2007 where mayor Louis Byrd and council members Fernando Pedroza, Leticia Vasquez, and Alfreddie Johnson Jr were all removed from office.[21][22]
Leticia Vasquez
2005–2006
Vasquez was born and raised in Lynwood, the daughter of immigrants from Mexico.[23] She graduated with a B.A. in criminal justice and a M.A. in public policy & administration from California State University, Long Beach and with a M.A. in education from Pepperdine University.[24]
Vasquez was elected to the Lynwood City Council in November 2003 and made history as the first Latina to serve as mayor of the city when she was appointed by the City Council in December 2005.[25][26][27] In December 2006, she was succeeded as mayor by Louis Byrd.[28] In September 2007, she was ousted from the City Council in a recall election which also resulted in the removal of mayor Louis Byrd and fellow council members Fernando Pedroza and Alfreddie Johnson Jr.[29][30] Mayor Pro Tem Maria Teresa Santillan, the only council member to not face a recall vote, served as interim mayor.
While mayor, Vazquez faced criticism for not more aggressively representing Latino interests in a town that was roughly 80% Latino with a declining, although influential, Black population.[31] In 2003, she had nominated Louis Byrd for mayor over the Latino candidate.[32]
On June 5, 2012, Vasquez was elected to the Central Basin Municipal Water District[33] and is a professor of political science at El Camino College in Compton, California.[24]
Louis Byrd (2nd term)
2006–2007
Maria Teresa Santillan
2007–2010
Santillan was elected to the Lynwood City Council in 2003 after winning a recall election which ousted Paul Richards, a 17-year councilmember, 7-term mayor, and the 2nd African-American mayor of the city (Richard's remaining term ran through December 1, 2005).[34][35] She was the first Latina to serve on the City Council.[36] In November 2005, she was re-elected to a 4-year term on the City Council[37] and in December 2005, she was named Mayor Pro Tem.[36] In September 2007, she was the only council member to not face a recall election which resulted in the ouster of mayor Louis Byrd and council members Fernando Pedroza, Alfreddie Johnson Jr. and Leticia Vasquez[38] over corruption allegations.[39] In December 2007, she was appointed by the 5-member City Council to serve as mayor succeeding Louis Byrd.[35][40] She was reappointed as mayor in 2008.[35][36] She was subsequently re-elected to the City Council in 2009[41] and 2013.[42] She later served as mayor again from 2016 to 2017.[43]