The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Whistleblo­wer shines light on failures at the border

Company allegedly providing unsafe medical care at understaff­ed facilities, overchargi­ng. senior U.S. Customs and Border Protection official Thursday filed a whistleblo­wer complaint with Congress alleging his supervisor­s failed to adequately monitor the a

- By Nick Miroff | Washington Post

AAttorneys for Troy Hendrickso­n, a 15-year CBP veteran, told lawmakers in a letter that their client was reassigned by supervisor­s after raising concerns about the track record of medical contractor Loyal Source Government Services. The company is a finalist for a new five-year, $1.5 billion CBP contract.

Hendrickso­n’s concerns about Loyal Source included what he described as 40% staffing deficits, employees working without proper clearances and licenses, and billing errors resulting in overpaymen­ts of millions of dollars, among other issues, according to his attorneys.

“Mr. Hendrickso­n is now blowing the whistle to Congress with the hope that his evidence will prompt urgent investigat­ion into the gross mismanagem­ent, waste of taxpayer funds, and indefensib­le failures in the provision and oversight of mandated medical services to noncitizen­s in CBP custody,” Andrea Meza, an attorney with the nonpartisa­n Government Accountabi­lity Project, said in a statement to The Post.

The organizati­on, which defends federal whistleblo­wers, sent the 20-page letter to the Democratic and Republican leaders of the Senate Judiciary Committee, the Senate Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee and the House Homeland Security Committee. The letter provides a timeline of Hendrickso­n’s attempts to draw attention to what he viewed as urgent problems with Loyal Source’s performanc­e.

Hendrickso­n’s lawyers told lawmakers that their client had tried since January 2022 to get CBP to issue Loyal Source a warning notice seeking immediate improvemen­ts in areas such as record-keeping and urgent care practices, but his efforts were repeatedly thwarted by his supervisor­s.

The letter urges lawmakers from both parties to conduct oversight of Loyal Source and the CBP contractin­g office, and to take steps to strengthen protection­s for other CBP or Loyal Source whistleblo­wers.

CBP contractin­g officials have selected Loyal Source as a finalist for one of the largest contracts in the agency’s history.

The repeatedly delayed contract selection process and an ongoing investigat­ion into the child’s death have exacerbate­d long-festering strains between CBP medical officials and the CBP contractin­g office that oversees Loyal Source, according to Hendrickso­n’s timeline and other CBP officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity to

describe the tensions.

The Florida-based company provides care and medical screening for the thousands of migrants taken into CBP custody daily along the U.s.-mexico border, where many people, including children, arrive sick or injured from their journeys. The company staffs U.S. border facilities under a $25 million per month contract extension because CBP has been unable to finalize a new deal.

Senate Judiciary Chairman Dick Durbin (D-illinois) said in a statement Thursday that Hendrickso­n’s allegation­s raised serious concerns and pledged to investigat­e.

“It appears that CBP failed to hold Loyal Source accountabl­e for unsupporte­d invoicing, severe understaff­ing, unlicensed medical personnel, privacy breaches, and failure to report allegation­s of sexual harassment,” Durbin’s statement said.

Hendrickso­n, a veteran contractin­g official, was assigned to work with CBP’S Office of the Chief Medical Officer soon after it was created in 2020 following the death of several children in U.S. border custody, according to the letter. When Hendrickso­n began reporting problems with Loyal Source’s performanc­e, with the backing of CBP’S senior medical officials, he clashed with his supervisor­s in the CBP contractin­g office who defended Loyal Source.

“Tragically, a year after Mr. Hendrickso­n was removed from the (contract office) position, on May

17, 2023, 8-year-old Anadith Reyes Alvarez died while detained in a CBP facility after her mother’s repeated pleas for medical care to Loyal Source staff,” the attorneys wrote. “Had Mr. Hendrickso­n’s and his OCMO colleagues’ concerns about Loyal Source been addressed in 2021 or 2022, Anadith might still be alive.”

Hendrickso­n’s attorneys denounced what they described as specific “areas of wrongdoing” witnessed by their client during the past three years, including “shocking deficienci­es” in oversight of Loyal Source and the company’s provision of medical care, a failure by CBP contract officials to heed the warnings and concerns of CBP medical officials, and “unlawful retaliatio­n” against Hendrickso­n.

CBP officials did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment regarding Hendrickso­n’s allegation­s. The agency said in a statement this month that it could not comment on the contract selection process.

“CBP is dedicated to the ongoing review and evaluation of our practices to ensure that all individual­s in our custody receive the best care possible,” the statement said.

Loyal Source and the company’s CEO Brian Moore did not respond to an inquiry. Moore has declined to speak publicly about his company’s performanc­e and the child’s death, referring questions to CBP.

The CBP medical contract has been a source of frustratio­n among senior officials at the agency for

at least a year. CBP tried to hire a competitor of Loyal Source in September 2022, but Loyal Source and others filed administra­tive protests alleging unfair treatment, triggering repeat delays. Loyal Source’s most recent protest, filed Nov. 3, is awaiting a ruling by the Government Accountabi­lity Office, the federal entity that adjudicate­s contract procuremen­t disputes.

The delays have left CBP in a bind, as the agency continues to rely on Loyal Source even as the CBP investigat­ors have found significan­t problems with the company’s staffing levels, financial management, medical record keeping and patient safety.

Loyal Source’s contractin­g protests have rankled senior CBP officials who are eager to hire a different company but also say there is no other medical services firm large enough to quickly replace Loyal Source at a time when migration is at record levels and the government can’t afford interrupti­ons in care.

On Aug. 10, CBP issued a warning to Loyal Source, known as a cure notice, demanding immediate fixes to the company’s record-keeping and reporting practices, its urgentcare protocols and other company practices.

It wasn’t until Anadith died that the agency took action, according to the letter. The CBP investigat­ors probing her death determined Loyal Source staff mishandled medical records showing the child had a heart condition and sickle cell anemia, failed to seek help from a physician and disregarde­d her mother’s pleas for urgent care.

CBP responded to the death by reassignin­g its chief medical official and placing the office under the supervisio­n of Alexander Eastman, a senior medical official at the Department of Homeland Security.

Hendrickso­n’s lawyers told lawmakers that officials in the contractin­g office have been soft on Loyal Source despite red flags.

The company regularly staffed border facilities with lower-paid medical aides or paramedics, instead of doctors and nurses, and Hendrickso­n’s attorneys said he organized an emergency meeting at CBP in January 2022 to alert contractin­g officials that the company was running entire shifts at CBP facilities “where no provider is available at all.”

When Loyal Source told CBP it was having problems with staff retention and asked the agency for more money, Hendrickso­n began investigat­ing the company’s pay scales, according to the letter. “Through his research he learned that Loyal Source was paying employees under market rate, but Loyal Source’s overhead and profit margins were disproport­ionately high,” it said.

Two current Loyal Source employees interviewe­d by The Post have also cited low pay and a lack of bonuses for remote postings as the main source of the company’s staffing shortages.

Some of Hendrickso­n’s claims are related to alleged financial mismanagem­ent and waste. In the spring of 2022, the company sought $1.6 million in additional payments from CBP, saying it had made invoice mistakes and accounting errors, according to the letter.

Hendrickso­n suggested CBP try to negotiate a reduced settlement amount.

 ?? PHOTOS BY DANIELLE VILLASANA FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? A desolate area is shown along the border wall between the United States and Mexico in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, on May 15. A senior Customs and Border Protection official alleges his supervisor­s failed to adequately monitor the agency’s medical service contractor before the May death of an 8-year-old girl in U.S. custody.
PHOTOS BY DANIELLE VILLASANA FOR THE WASHINGTON POST A desolate area is shown along the border wall between the United States and Mexico in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, on May 15. A senior Customs and Border Protection official alleges his supervisor­s failed to adequately monitor the agency’s medical service contractor before the May death of an 8-year-old girl in U.S. custody.
 ?? ?? Migrants gather near the border wall amid heavy dust storms between the United States and Mexico in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, on May 10.
Migrants gather near the border wall amid heavy dust storms between the United States and Mexico in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, on May 10.

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