Treasury Department Opens Probe into DeSantis’ Use of Federal Funds

As the scrutiny into Ron DeSantis’ cowardly move to transport migrants to Martha’s Vineyard mounts, legal actions and investigations into DeSantis’ maneuvering are piling up. 

In addition to the Texas Sheriff’s investigation into how the migrants were lured onto a plane, and a lawsuit filed against DeSantis and members of his administration by state Sen. Jason Pizzo, the U.S. Treasury Department Office of the Inspector General has also opened an investigation into whether Ron DeSantis misused funds that were meant for relief for Floridians.

“Ron DeSantis’ cruelty knows no bounds,” said Florida Democratic Party spokesperson Kobie Christian. “Families in Florida have real economic problems like skyrocketing property insurance and utility bills that DeSantis refuses to address. Instead, Floridians who survive rape and incest have to escape the ‘free state of Florida’ in order to receive reproductive care because of DeSantis’ extreme abortion ban and their culture war-chasing Governor is under investigation for misusing funds in order to use women and children for political stunts.”

Spectrum News: Federal Watchdog Probes Florida Migrant Flights from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard

  • A federal watchdog is investigating whether the state of Florida improperly used coronavirus relief funds to fly migrants from Texas to Massachusetts last month to protest the Biden administration’s immigration and border policies.
  • The flights were paid for by the state of Florida and authorized by Gov. Ron DeSantis, his office confirmed
  • The probe look into whether or not DeSantis used funds earmarked for COVID-19 aid to pay for or facilitate the flights, according to a letter to lawmakers from Richard Delmar, the Deputy Inspector General of the Treasury Department.

Tallahassee Democrat: Inside the records, inconsistencies of DeSantis’ Martha’s Vineyard migrant relocation plan

  • When Gov. Ron DeSantis sent nearly 50 migrants from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts, last month, it appears to have gone against the program guidelines laid out in its bidding process, according to records obtained by the USA TODAY NETWORK – Florida.
  • The program was designed “to relocate out of the State of Florida foreign nationals who are not lawfully present in the United States,” according to the documents released by the governor’s office Friday evening after a public records request.
  • The records include a “request for quotes” document that the state used to locate bidding companies to take on the program. It too states that the unauthorized immigrants transported should be in Florida. 
  • The budget Florida passed this year also says the money is meant for in-state immigrants, a point that already has become the subject of litigation.
  • Soon after news broke of the Martha’s Vineyard flights, a Democratic Florida state senator filed suit to stop DeSantis from using more funds for the program.
  • And that wasn’t the only legal fallout.
  • A federal class action lawsuit was filed in Boston on behalf of the migrants that accuses the DeSantis administration of deploying a “fraudulent and discriminatory scheme” to transport them.
  • And Sheriff Javier Salazar of Bexar County, Texas, announced his agency had opened an investigation into how 48 Venezuelan migrants were “lured” to board flights from San Antonio to Martha’s Vineyard.
  • The governor’s office and FDOT did not respond to a Saturday morning media request. 
  • The in-state guidelines weren’t the only inconsistencies the USA TODAY NETWORK -Florida found in the records.
  • The price tag for the Massachusetts flights was initially put at $615,000, but the latest state records show that Florida paid another $950,000 to the Vertol Systems Company, a Destin, Fla.-based aviation firm, bringing the total spent by taxpayers so far to more than $1.5 million.