TALLAHASSEE, Fla. â Gov. Ron DeSantisâ top safety official helped write language that helped a former legal client secure a state contract to oversee a controversial program to fly migrants from the southern border to Marthaâs Vineyard.
In the process, the official, Larry Keefe, used a non-public email address that made it appear that emails were coming from âClarice Starling,â the main character from « The Silence of the Lambs » novel.
The newly released records show that Keefe, who served as a U.S. Attorney in the Trump administration, used encrypted messaging apps and a private email address from âClarice Starlingâ when communicating with James Montgomerie, CEO of Vertol Systems, a Destin, Fla.-based company the administration paid at least $1.5 million to coordinate the migrant flights. They also show Keefe helping Vertol, who he represented when in private legal practice, draft invoice language the company used when submitting its proposal to the Florida Department of Transportation.
The bizarre twist in the ongoing saga was revealed in records released by the DeSantis administration last Thursday, just days before the holiday weekend. The records were first reported by CBS Miami. They shed light on the layers of secretive steps the DeSantis administration was taking when coordinating the flights, which included sending about 50 mostly Venezuelan asylum-seekers from the southern border to Marthaâs Vineyard in mid-September. Additional flightsto Delaware, the home state of President Joe Biden, were planned, but never occurred.
âSee signal,â Keefe emailed Montgomerie on Aug. 28, a reference to an encrypted messaging app that can be set to automatically delete messages.
It was in response to an email from Montgomerie with his âsuggestions » for draft invoice language that would later be sent to the DeSantis administration transportation agency.
âShort and sweet,â Montgomerie wrote.
Keefe and Montgomerie did not return a request seeking comment.
The Keefe email came from the email address âheat19.heat19@gmail.com,â a private email account not tied to Keefeâs taxpayer-funded state account that has messages sent under the name âClarice Starling.â The âheat19â moniker was a âcall signâ given to him by Lt. Gen. Donald Wurster, a retired U.S. Air Force Special Operations commander, Keefe told administration officials.
On Sept. 1, Keefe used the personal email account to send Montgomerie draft language that the Vertol Systemsâ CEO would, nearly word-for-word, submit to the Florida Department of Transportation as part of his proposal for the state contract, which was ultimately approved.
âThis appears to be a purposeful attempt to evade Florida’s public records laws. It’s not surprising that the Governor’s office wanted to keep these records secret because they suggest that a public official helped draft a bid by a private company for government services,â said Ben Wilcox, co-founder of Integrity Florida, a nonprofit government watchdog. âThat’s bid-rigging and it’s potentially illegal.â
DeSantisâ office replied to a request for comment by including a note from the Office of Open Government, a state office tasked with providing the governor and agencies guidance on open records. The note from the Office of Open Government states that it discovered the emails linked to Keefe and turned them over to the governor.
âAccording to Mr. Keefe, he created and sometimes used this account while in private law practice to communicate via email in this setting,â the Office of Open Government replied in the note.
DeSantisâ administration has generally been reluctant to voluntarily release details about the program. Along with being sued over public records requests, the administration still has not released the Vertol contract or specifically how the $1.5 million was spent.
DeSantis has said the flights were designed to draw attention to the Biden administrationâs southern border policies, but opponents have charged the program is driven by politics as DeSantis eyes a potential 2024 bid for president. Democrats have accused DeSantis of exploiting vulnerable migrants and the Treasury Departmentâs watchdog has opened an inquiry into whether the Florida governor is improperly using money associated with Covid-19 federal assistance to fund the program.
Legislative leaders have vaguely said they support DeSantisâ focus on immigration when asked about the money for the flights, which amounts to about $50,000 per migrant. But they have side-stepped questions about whether lawmakers should have more specifics or an oversight role over how the money was spent. Senate President Kathleen Passidomoâs office on Wednesday declined to answer questions about the new records. House Speaker Paul Renner, who earlier this month said he is prepared to allocate more money for migrant flights in next yearâs budget, did not return a request seeking comment.
The new records were not released as part of an initial request from the Florida Center for Government Accountability, which is suing the administration over the slow release of public records related to the migrant flights. In a note that came with the records released last week, DeSantis administration officials said the failure to initially release the records was an oversight because Keefe was using a private email account, not his state email account.
âAfter discovering the âHeat 19â email address, [the Office of Open Government] conducted a search for responsive records involving this address,â read the note. âThis search yielded the records we are producing now.â
The new records have prompted The Florida Center for Government Accountability to ask a Leon County judge to consider the new evidence in connection with its lawsuit seeking public records pertaining to the migrant flights. The organization also wants to re-question Montgomerie, who the center said could have perjured himself based on the new records. He testified the draft language he sent Keefe was released to consent forms signed by the migrants on the flights, not the invoice language outlined in the new records.
âThe new evidence directly refutes Mr. Montgomerieâs testimony about the âdraft sentâ message he claimed was voluntary consent form signed by passengers,â read a motion filed Dec. 23. â
0 commentaires