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Miami Herald
Miami Herald
National
Anna Ceballos and Lawrence Mower

This is how much Florida has paid an aviation company to relocate ‘unauthorized aliens’

MIAMI — Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration last week paid an aviation company $615,000 as part of a new Florida program to relocate undocumented immigrants out of the state, according to state records.

Records show the company, Vertol Systems Company Inc., was paid on Sept. 8. A week later, DeSantis took credit for sending a group of 48 migrants — most, if not all, from Venezuela — to Martha’s Vineyard, a summer island destination for the rich and powerful in Massachusetts.

Vertol Systems’ website shows it is based in Hillsboro, Oregon, but has operations in Destin in Florida’s Panhandle.

The payment, which records say was for a “relocation program of unauthorized aliens,” was made by the Florida Department of Transportation, which earlier this year received $12 million to transport “unauthorized aliens from this state” to other parts of the country.

The company’s role in the program remains unclear. The state Department of Transportation and the company did not immediately respond to requests seeking comment.

At a press conference in Daytona Beach on Friday, DeSantis acknowledged for the first time that the migrants who were sent to Martha’s Vineyard were part of a “voluntary transportation they’re signing up for.”

He also suggested for the second time this week that the migrants were not transported from the state, a requirement that Florida lawmakers included in the state budget when they approved the publicly-funded program to relocate migrants.

DeSantis told reporters that most of the migrants “are intending to come to Florida, they are coming to Florida, we’re taking them from Florida to sanctuary jurisdictions.”

“You gotta deal with it at the source,” DeSantis added.

Migrants who landed in Martha’s Vineyard said they had been in Texas before boarding the flight. An unidentified woman, a migrant said, offered to take them to a place where she promised they would be better served.

The woman suggested she was waiting to reach a certain quota of people to fill the plane’s seats so they could make the trip happen, according to a migrant interviewed by the Herald/Times.

Migrants were also given two maps inside a red folder that showed the U.S. map with a red line that linked Texas to Massachusetts. The Martha’s Vineyard map had a red dot in the middle.

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(Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau Chief Mary Ellen Klas contributed to this report.)

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