El Dorado News-Times

2nd flight carrying migrants lands in Sacramento

California officials say Florida arranged travel

- BY TRÂN NGUYỄN AND OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Another plane carrying migrants arrived in Sacramento on Monday, marking the second flight in recent days that California officials allege was coordinate­d by Florida.

The flight carrying roughly 20 migrants that arrived Monday follows the arrival Friday of 16 migrants from Colombia and Venezuela, who were taken from Texas to New Mexico before they were put on a chartered plane to California’s capital. It’s not clear what countries the latest group of arrivals are from, but their travel appears to have been arranged by the same company, said Tara Gallegos, a spokespers­on for California Attorney General Rob Bonta.

Bonta says he’s investigat­ing whether any crimes were committed.

The first group of migrants was dropped off at the Roman Catholic Church diocese’s headquarte­rs in Sacramento.

They carried documents that said they were transporte­d through a program run by Florida’s Division of Emergency Management and carried out by contractor Vertol Systems Co., Gallegos said. She said she couldn’t share the documents because they are part of an active investigat­ion.

Spokespeop­le for the Florida Division of Emergency Management and Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis have not confirmed Florida’s involvemen­t, and Vertol Systems didn’t respond to requests for comment.

“While we continue to collect evidence, I want to say this very clearly: State-sanctioned kidnapping is not a public policy choice, it is immoral and disgusting,” Bonta said in a statement.

The migrants entered the U.S. through Texas. Eddie Carmona, campaign director at PICO California, a faith-based group that helps migrants, said U.S. immigratio­n officials had already processed the young women and men and given them court dates for their asylum cases when “individual­s representi­ng a private contractor” approached them outside a migrant center in El Paso, Texas, and offered to help them get jobs and get them to their final destinatio­ns.

“They were lied to and intentiona­lly deceived,” Carmona said, adding that the migrants had no idea where they were after being dropped off in Sacramento.

He said they have court dates in cities throughout the country, not only in Texas, and that none of them meant to end up in California.

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.

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.

Florida paid Vertol Systems $1.56 million last year to fly migrants from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard, Massachuse­tts, and for a possible second flight to Delaware that never took place. 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 are an escalation in tactics.

The flight, if proven to have been arranged by Florida, would intensify a prolonged political feud between DeSantis and California’s Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom. The two have offered conflictin­g visions on immigratio­n, abortion and a host of other issues.

Newsom said in a statement that he also met with the newly arrived migrants and that officials were working to ensure that they are “treated with respect and dignity” through this process.

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