Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Florida pays millions to company

Contractor employing undocument­ed workers linked to deputy’s death

- By Ana Ceballos

MIAMI — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administra­tion has paid more than $8 million to a constructi­on contractor since authoritie­s found it had hired several undocument­ed workers, including two men who have been charged in connection with the death of a Pinellas County deputy.

The state contractor, Archer Western-De Moya Joint Venture, has a standing contract with the Florida Department of Transporta­tion to do work on the Gateway Expressway in the Tampa Bay area. Records show the payments, part of a multiyear half-billion dollar contract, have not stopped since the Pinellas County Sheriff ’s Office announced the findings.

Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri said at a news conference in September that the contractor had hired “a bunch” of undocument­ed immigrants and that it would be up to the state and the federal government to address the issue with the company.

The investigat­ion into the death of Deputy Michael Hartwick is ongoing, with the Department of Transporta­tion and its contractor both saying they are cooperatin­g.

“The company is cooperatin­g fully with law enforcemen­t without reprimand,” Peter Glimco, a spokesman with Archer Western-De Moya Joint Venture, said in a response to questions on Thursday.

In a statement to the Herald/Times, the DOT defended the contractor.

“The Florida Department of Transporta­tion and its contractor­s follow strict hiring procedures including all federal and state laws. This is true here,” the statement read.

The state agency also said the vendor complied with an immigratio­n law DeSantis championed in 2020 that sought to crack down on undocument­ed labor in the state. That law requires all public employers and their contractor­s to register with and use the federal E-Verify system, run by the Department of Homeland Security, to confirm that all new hires are legally authorized to work in the United States.

“Compliant hiring procedures were followed including a federal E-Verify clearance check and the individual in question passed this federal clearance. The Department continues to support law enforcemen­t efforts and investigat­ions related to this case,” the state agency said.

Glimco said state and federal hiring guidelines were followed and that both individual­s arrested were “processed and authorized for employment through the federal E-Verify system.”

“The company continues to follow federal and state employment guidelines and in no way attempted to circumvent the law to hire unauthoriz­ed individual­s,” he said. “We are continuing to investigat­e the events that led to the company being defrauded in the hiring of these individual­s.”

The Department of Homeland Security, the agency that runs the E-Verify system, did not respond to requests for comment.

Employers who use the government’s E-Verify electronic system are able to check documents provided by new hires against Social Security Administra­tion and Department of Homeland Security records. A mismatch with the records would suggest a person is not authorized to work in the country.

The system has improved in accuracy over the years

by allowing employers to match a photo in the E-Verify system with a document presented by a new employee.

Errors can still occur because of imperfect data on the federal database. According to a 2013 survey, though, 92% of E-Verify users thought the tool was accurate.

DeSantis has drawn attention to the criminal case to amplify his hard-line stance on immigratio­n, a top tier issue for him as he seeks reelection on Nov. 8 and flirts with a potential run for the White House in 2024.

“We just had a sheriff ’s deputy from Pinellas County killed by a twice-deported illegal alien who came across the border illegally six months ago. I didn’t hear any of the outrage about that,” DeSantis said during the first and only

gubernator­ial debate when his Democratic opponent, Charlie Crist, criticized the governor’s migrant relocation plan.

DeSantis did not mention the state continues to do business with the contractor that employed the suspect.

The De Moya Group, which is listed as a partner in the contract, contribute­d $32,500 to DeSantis’ political action committee, Friend of Ron DeSantis, during the 2022 election cycle, according to campaign finance records.

The Miami Herald reported last week that a Venezuelan migrant unable to legally work in the United States was paid to coordinate DeSantis’ migrant flight program, putting the governor’s actions in conflict with his long-standing push to crack down on undocument­ed labor.

At a news conference last month, Gualtieri said Juan Ariel Molina-Salles, 32, was among those hired by the state contractor.

“This guy entered the country illegally on Oct. 25 of 2021 in Eagle Pass, Texas. He was turned around by the border patrol and sent back to Mexico. There is no record of him ever legally coming back into the United States, and he is here illegally,” he said. “He has been here in the Tampa Bay area since March.”

Molina-Salles was driving a large front loader with fork lifts, the type used to move concrete barriers, when he hit Hartwick and killed him instantly, Gualtieri said.

The 32-year-old kept driving and before running away from the scene, gave his constructi­on helmet and vest to a coworker, also an

undocument­ed worker who hid Molina-Salles’ things in some woods.

Molina-Salles hid and sparked a nine-hour manhunt. He was eventually found with the help of bloodhound­s who sniffed his discarded items and used that scent to find him, Gualtieri said. He was charged with leaving the scene of an accident involving death. His co-worker was charged with being an accessory after the fact.

Hardwick arrived on the night of Sept. 23 to ensure constructi­on workers along Interstate 275 were safe from traffic.

He parked the highway with his emergency lights on and stood on the shoulder of the road when he was hit by the front loader driven by Molina-Salles.

“He shouldn’t have died this way,” Gualtieri said.

 ?? JEFFEREE WOO/AP ?? Sheriff Bob Gualtieri speaks to reporters during a news conference at the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office headquarte­rs on Sept. 23 in Largo. Michael Hartwick, a Florida sheriff’s deputy working an overnight shift to provide safety at a constructi­on zone, was struck and killed by a worker operating a front end loader, officials said.
JEFFEREE WOO/AP Sheriff Bob Gualtieri speaks to reporters during a news conference at the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office headquarte­rs on Sept. 23 in Largo. Michael Hartwick, a Florida sheriff’s deputy working an overnight shift to provide safety at a constructi­on zone, was struck and killed by a worker operating a front end loader, officials said.

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