Caruso was a real-estate lawyer in the corporate finance department at Finley Kumble.[12] In 1987, he founded Caruso, a company that develops, owns and manages properties. He initially purchased parking lots that his father agreed to lease for Dollar Rent-A-Car which he sold when the property rose in value.[13] In 1990, he quit law to develop his retail and residential properties full-time.[14][15]
In 2015, Caruso funded a voter initiative to bypass local planning laws and the California Environmental Quality Act in order to build an outdoor mall in Carlsbad, California.[19] That initiative passed but a subsequent referendum overturned it and required a public vote – Measure A. The measure failed and the mall construction was blocked.[20] All together, Caruso spent $12 million in less than a year on getting the project approved.[20] This spending included television ads, mailers, and consulting services.[20]
In 2016, the Los Angeles Times reported that Caruso, his affiliates and family, had given more than $476,000 to L.A. city officials over the past five years; during this time Los Angeles City Hall approved numerous building projects.[21]
Caruso's company was accused of suppressing free speech over the rejection of an advertisement for a documentary about the Armenian Genocide at the Americana at Brand in 2015 and in 2017. Americana later reversed its advert decision.[22][23][24][25]
Caruso floated the idea of running for mayor of Los Angeles for the 2009 and 2013 elections,[36] though he ultimately did not run.[37][38]
In 2019, he expressed interest in running in the 2022 election. He announced his candidacy on February 11, 2022, the day before the filing deadline.[39] Caruso spent more than $41 million on his primary campaign, including $39 million of his own money on digital, radio, and television advertising.[40] Caruso finished second in the June election to Karen Bass, and faced her in a runoff election on November 8, which Bass won.[41][42]
Philanthropy
Caruso Family Foundation
Caruso founded the Caruso Family Foundation, which focuses on organizations that improve the lives of children in need of healthcare and education.[43][44]
Caruso and his wife, Tina, established the Caruso Loan Forgiveness Fund which covers the law school loan payments for ten years for low-income and other underserved students.[50]
In October 2019, he donated $50 million to Pepperdine School of Law, which was renamed in his honor. The gift is directed to historically underrepresented students as well as to students pursuing public interest law.[51]
The Caruso Catholic Center and Our Savior Parish Church on the USC campus was endowed by and named after Caruso following his contribution of $9 million.[54][55]
In 2018, Caruso was elected chairman of USC's board of trustees. On February 15, 2022, he announced that he would be resigning from the position.[56]
As the chairman of USC's board of trustees, Caruso was criticized for his handling of the George Tyndall USC sexual abuse scandal, in which a USC gynecologist spent 30 years molesting hundreds of patients, despite complaints dating back to 1991.[57][58][59][60] In May 2018, Caruso promised an independent investigation and an accompanying public report, but no report on the investigation has been made public.[61][62]
Recognition
In 1995, Caruso was named Alumnus of the Year by Pepperdine School of Law.[14] He was named by the Los Angeles Business Journal as "Developer of the Year" and its 2012 Ernst & Young LLP Master Entrepreneur of the Year.[63][44][43]
Caruso and his wife, Tina, have four children: Alex, Gregory, Justin, and Gianna.[3] They live in the affluent Brentwood section of Los Angeles.[68] All four children have attended the University of Southern California, which their father attended and to which he has donated millions of dollars.[69] Caruso is a devout Catholic.[70]
^Morris Newman (November 10, 1998). "Commercial Real Estate: Developer Turns Shopping Malls Into Center of Attention". Los Angeles Times. ProQuest421342867.
^Schmidt, Ingrid (March 13, 2019). "Lori Loughlin's Daughter Vacationed on Billionaire USC Official's Yacht". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved March 14, 2019. Born with hearing loss, Gigi Caruso was treated by doctors at USC's Keck School of Medicine. In 2015, Rick and Tina Caruso donated $25 million to the school to endow and name it the USC Tina and Rick Caruso Department of Otolaryngology — Head and Neck Surgery, known for research and treatment of ear, nose and throat diseases.