Background
His father, Ralph Inzunza Senior, was a city councilman in National City and his brother Nick served as National City mayor.
His father, Ralph Inzunza Senior, was a city councilman in National City and his brother Nick served as National City mayor.
Inzunza graduated from Saint Augustine High School in San Diego in 1987.
He was elected in March 2001 to represent District 8. He resigned in July 2005 along with Councilman Michael Zucchet after both were convicted on federal corruption charges. The conviction against Zucchet was overturned on November 10, 2005, citing lack of evidence.
However, the convictions against the two co-defendants were upheld.
Inzunza served as chief of staff to his predecessor as city councilman, Juan Vargas. He was re-elected to a full term in the 2002 elections.
One of Inzunza"s first actions as a city councilman was to challenge the way Mayor Dick Murphy was making appointments to an Ethics Committee. The mayor eventually agreed to give the more of a role in the process.
Murphy later named him Deputy Mayor and appointed him to the San Diego County Regional Airport Authority.
Inzunza also fought against the expansion of a homeless facility in his district. Inzunza and two other city councilmen, Charles L. Lewis and Michael Zucchet, were indicted on August 23, 2003 on federal charges of extortion, wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit wire fraud for taking campaign contributions from a strip club owner and his associates, allegedly in exchange for trying to repeal the city"s "no touch" laws at strip clubs. Inzunza and Zucchet were convicted by a jury on July 18, 2005.
The conviction forced them both to resign from the city council.
Inzunza filed multiple appeals for the next six years while working as a consultant for nonprofit agencies. Finally in January 2012 his final appeal was denied and he was ordered to start serving a 21-month prison sentence.
Zucchet"s conviction was overturned November 10, 2005 and on September 1, 2009, the Ninth United States. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Zucchet"s acquittals emphasizing the lack of evidence against him. Inzunza is currently serving time in a federal penitentiary in Atwater, California and is scheduled for release in August 2013.