The Mercury News

John Kelly joins board of contractor running shelter for migrant teens

- By Salvador Rizzo The Washington Post

Former White House Chief of Staff John Kelly has joined the board of Caliburn Internatio­nal, the parent organizati­on of the company that runs the largest facility housing migrant children in the United States.

Kelly was President Donald Trump’s chief of staff from mid-2017 through 2018, when the administra­tion’s zero-tolerance policy was implemente­d at the U.S.-Mexican border. That led to thousands of Central American migrant children being separated from their parents and housed in facilities run by government contractor­s.

A Caliburn subsidiary, Comprehens­ive Health Services, runs a “temporary influx care facility” for migrant children in Homestead, Florida, under contract with the federal government. It’s the only forprofit company operating such shelters. CBS first reported Kelly’s appointmen­t to the Caliburn board.

“With four decades of military and humanitari­an leadership, in-depth understand­ing of internatio­nal affairs and knowledge of current economic drivers around the world, General Kelly is a strong strategic addition to our team,” Caliburn chief executive James Van Dusen said in a news release Friday.

Kelly, a retired four-star general, joined the Trump administra­tion as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security for the first half of 2017. In that role, Kelly said he considered family separation­s as a way to deter mass migration to the United States. The policy was implemente­d once Kelly joined the White House team. A federal judge has ordered the government to reunite more than 2,700 separated children with their families.

Many of the Central American migrants detained at the border are minors without parents or guardians. According to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data, authoritie­s encountere­d 22,173 unaccompan­ied minors at the border from January through March.

The Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees housing for unaccompan­ied minors detained at the border, has been using the Homestead facility to cope with a surge of migrant children in need of temporary housing.

About 2,000 immigrant minors were residing in Homestead as of March 30, according to an HHS fact sheet, and bed capacity is being expanded from 2,350 to 3,200.

As CBS reported, “Located on several acres of federal land adjacent to an Air Reserve Base, the facility is the nation’s only site not subject to routine inspection­s by state child welfare experts.”

The health department’s Office of Inspector General is scrutinizi­ng Homestead and other facilities due to reports of sexual abuse at government-funded shelters for immigrant minors.

“We are deeply concerned that children in these large shelters and unlicensed facilities, such as the one in Homestead, Florida, are not adequately shielded from sexual violence,” Sens. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., and Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, wrote to the inspector general in a letter dated Feb. 28.

According to the South Florida Sun Sentinel, “The Florida Department of Children and Families has investigat­ed sexual abuse claims at the [Homestead] facility, including two allegation­s that state records say involved staff and legal guardians caring for migrant children. Investigat­ors later said there were no ‘indicators’ of abuse, but some lawmakers remain concerned.”

When President Barack Obama’s administra­tion used the Homestead facility to house immigrant minors, one worker was sentenced to prison in 2017 “for attempting to coerce and entice an unaccompan­ied alien minor to engage in illicit sexual activity,” according to the U.S. attorney’s office in South Florida.

Before joining the Trump administra­tion, Kelly sat on the board of advisers for DC Capital Partners, a private equity firm that owns Caliburn. An executive order signed by Trump bars Kelly from lobbying activities for five years after his government service, but Kelly is free to take jobs in the private sector.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., a candidate for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination, criticized Kelly for joining the company’s board. “John Kelly pushed for family separation while in the White House,” Warren tweeted. “Now he’ll profit off of separating mamas from their babies. It’s immoral, and under my plan to #EndCorrupt­ionNow it would be illegal for someone like Kelly to do this.”

Kelly and Caliburn did not respond immediatel­y to requests for comment on Saturday. The government contractor also runs shelter facilities in Texas. In a 2018 filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission, the company identified “border enforcemen­t and immigratio­n policy” as a growth opportunit­y.

 ?? VERN FISHER — BAY AREA NEWS GOUP ?? Ambassador R. Nicholas Burns, left, and Leon Panetta listen as Gen. John Kelly, right, speaks at the Panetta Lecture Series in Monterey on April 15.
VERN FISHER — BAY AREA NEWS GOUP Ambassador R. Nicholas Burns, left, and Leon Panetta listen as Gen. John Kelly, right, speaks at the Panetta Lecture Series in Monterey on April 15.

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