South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Millions in migrant flight money unreported

DeSantis administra­tion paid contractor $1.4M over quoted price

- By Nicholas Nehamas and Sarah Blaskey

Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administra­tion has so far paid more than $1.5 million to a politicall­y connected contractor for a program to fly migrants from Texas to northeaste­rn states, but the private jets chartered by the contractor cost only a fraction of that sum.

Newly released public records show the contractor, Vertol Systems of Destin, was quoted a price of about $153,000 for two charter plane trips from San Antonio to the Massachuse­tts island of Martha’s Vineyard. That leaves about $1.4 million in Florida taxpayer funds unaccounte­d for.

DeSantis, who is mulling a bid for president after his overwhelmi­ng re-election as governor, attracted national attention with the September migrant flights, saying he was highlighti­ng the crisis at the southern border. But the controvers­ial program has so far generated a local criminal investigat­ion, a federal inquiry and several lawsuits, including one from migrants who say they were tricked into boarding the flights with false promises of jobs and aid at the flights’ destinatio­n.

The quote for the Martha’s Vineyard charter flights priced out to roughly $2,550 per passenger. It’s not clear how much Vertol was ultimately billed.

In addition to the planes themselves, Vertol had to pay for motel rooms for the 49 South American migrants recruited for the Sept. 14 Martha’s Vineyard flights, as well as meals, duffle bags and other travel supplies, Visa cash cards for incidental expenses as migrants waited for flights to fill up, and charter buses back and forth from the airports.

Other costs would have included the salaries and expenses of the recruiters Vertol hired to find migrants in San Antonio, including the woman who ran the operation, a former U.S. Army counterint­elligence agent named Perla Huerta.

Florida has also apparently paid Vertol for flights that have yet to happen. In proposals to the state, Vertol said it could take more migrants to Delaware — the state President Joe Biden used to represent in the Senate — as well as Illinois, both Democratic Party stronghold­s. The Florida Department of Transporta­tion paid $950,000, out of the total $1.565 million, for those flights.

Vertol canceled the Delaware flight at the last minute, despite having recruited several dozen asylum-seekers, putting them up in motels and paying their expenses. There is no indication the flight to Illinois was ever scheduled.

Gov. DeSantis’ office did not immediatel­y respond to questions from the Miami Herald about how the state’s money is being spent. Neither did FDOT or Vertol.

Vertol has connection­s at the top of the DeSantis administra­tion. The high-ranking DeSantis official who supervised the migrant flight program, public-safety czar Larry Keefe, handled Vertol’s legal work for years.

He also served as President Donald Trump’s U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Florida.

Records show that Keefe traveled to San Antonio with Vertol’s CEO, James Montgomeri­e, as well as Huerta, to organize the flights.

The quote for the Martha’s Vineyard charter flights came from an Ohiobased company called Ultimate JetCharter­s, which has not responded to requests for comment.

Michael Barfield, director of access for the Florida Center for Government Accountabi­lity, questioned the oversight and costs of the migrant flight program.

“They had some hotel rooms, some McDonald’s gift certificat­es that they handed out like candy, whatever they paid Perla and the others. How much could that add up to?” said Barfield, whose organizati­on has sued the state to obtain records about the migrant flights. “You’re talking about hundreds of thousands of dollars of fees that ... they’ve pocketed without providing any services. This is taxpayer money.”

The state has budgeted a total of $12 million for its migrant relocation program.

 ?? COURTESY ?? Migrants in San Antonio are loaded onto a plane on Sept. 14 to fly to Martha’s Vineyard. This photo was part of a public records release on Oct. 14. Florida officials blocked out the faces of the passengers.
COURTESY Migrants in San Antonio are loaded onto a plane on Sept. 14 to fly to Martha’s Vineyard. This photo was part of a public records release on Oct. 14. Florida officials blocked out the faces of the passengers.

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