Daily News (Los Angeles)

Officials: Florida flies asylum-seekers to Sacramento

- By Trân Nguyen and Olga R. Rodriguez

The state of Florida picked up asylumseek­ers on the Texas border Monday and took them by private jet to California's capital city at taxpayer expense for the second time in four days, California officials said, prompting allegation­s that migrants were misled and catching shelters and aid workers by surprise.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and other state officials were mum, as they were initially last year when they flew 49 Venezuelan migrants to the upscale Massachuse­tts enclave of Martha's Vineyard, luring them onto private jets from a shelter in San Antonio.

As California Attorney General Rob Bonta investigat­ed the migrants' transporta­tion, local officials and faith-based groups sought to provide housing, food and other resources to the more than three dozen new arrivals. Most are from Colombia and Venezuela, and California had not been their intended destinatio­n.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom, meanwhile, lashed out at DeSantis as a “small, pathetic man” and suggested the state could pursue kidnapping charges.

And as the migrants arrived in California, a Texas sheriff's office announced Monday it has recommende­d criminal charges over the two flights to Martha's Vineyard last year.

Johnny Garcia, a spokesman for the Bexar County Sheriff's Office, said that at this time the office is not naming suspects. It's not clear whether the local district attorney will pursue the charges, which include misdemeano­r and felony counts of unlawful restraint, according to the sheriff's office.

The Republican governors of Texas and Arizona have previously sent thousands of migrants on buses to New York, Chicago and Washington, D.C., but the rare charter flights by DeSantis mark an escalation in tactics. The two groups sent to Sacramento never went through Florida. Instead, they were approached in El Paso by people with Florida-linked paperwork, sent to New Mexico, then put on private flights to California's capital, California officials and advocates said.

Bonta, who met with some of the migrants who arrived Friday, said they told him they were approached by two women who spoke broken Spanish and promised them jobs. The women traveled with them by land from El Paso to Deming, New Mexico where two men then accompanie­d them on the flight to Sacramento. The same men were on the flight Monday, Bonta said.

“To see leaders and government­s of other states and the state of Florida, Governor Ron DeSantis, acting with cruelty and inhumanity and moral bankruptcy and being petty and small and hurtful and harmful to those vulnerable asylum seekers is bloodboili­ng,” Bonta said in a Monday interview.

DeSantis, who is seeking the Republican nomination to run for president, has been a fierce critic of federal immigratio­n policy under President Joe Biden and has heavily publicized Florida's role in past instances in which migrants were transporte­d to Democratic-led states.

He has made the migrant relocation program one of his signature political priorities, using the state legislativ­e process to direct millions of dollars to it and working with multiple contractor­s to carry out the flights. Vertol Systems Co., which was paid by Florida to fly migrants to Martha's Vineyard, appears to be behind the flights to Sacramento, Bonta said, adding that the migrants were carrying “an official document from the state of Florida” that mentions the company. The company didn't respond to an email seeking comment.

Some of the migrants who arrived Friday told Bonta they met on their nearly three-month journey to the United States and decided to stick together to keep each other safe as they slept on the streets in several countries, he said. The group came from Colombia and Venezuela and all were adults, though one woman had just turned 18 on the journey, he said.

Of the new arrivals on Monday, 16 came from Venezuela, two from Colombia, one from Mexico and one from Nicaragua, he said. All were between the ages of 21 and 30, he said.

They remained at the airport for a couple of hours and were fed before being transporte­d to a “religious institutio­n,” said Kim Nava, a Sacramento County spokeswoma­n.

“Our county social workers are en route and are going to assess all those folks, make sure they have the services and support that they need,” Nava said.

The first group of migrants was dropped off at the Roman Catholic Church diocese's headquarte­rs in Sacramento. U.S. immigratio­n officials had already processed them in Texas and given them court dates for their asylum cases, and none had planned to arrive in California, said Eddie Carmona, campaign director at PICO California, a faith-based group helping the migrants in Sacramento.

Asylum seekers can change the location of their court appearance­s, but many are reluctant to try and instead prefer sticking with a firm date, at least for their initial appearance­s. They figure it is a guarantee, even if horribly inconvenie­nt.

The office of New Mexico Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham had no specifics as to why the immigrants were taken from Texas to New Mexico before being flown to California.

“Gov. Lujan Grisham stresses, yet again, the urgent need for comprehens­ive, thoughtful federal immigratio­n reform which is rooted in a humanitari­an response that keeps border communitie­s in mind,” the governor's spokespers­on, Caroline Sweeney, said Monday.

Last year, DeSantis directed Republican lawmakers in Florida to create a program in his office dedicated to migrant relocation­s. It specified that the state could transport migrants from locations anywhere in the country. The law was designed to get around questions about the legality of transporti­ng people on a flight that originated in Texas.

Florida's alleged role in the arrival of the two groups in Sacramento is sure to escalate the political feud between DeSantis and Newsom, who have offered conflictin­g visions on immigratio­n, abortion and a host of other issues.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? California Attorney General Rob Bonta speaks at a news conference at the Capitol in Sacramento in 2022. Bonta says the state of Florida appears to have arranged for a group of South American migrants to be dropped off outside a Sacramento church. Bonta said Saturday that the people had documents purporting to be from the Florida state government.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS California Attorney General Rob Bonta speaks at a news conference at the Capitol in Sacramento in 2022. Bonta says the state of Florida appears to have arranged for a group of South American migrants to be dropped off outside a Sacramento church. Bonta said Saturday that the people had documents purporting to be from the Florida state government.

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