Group sues DeSantis in search of any records detailing Martha’s Vineyard flights

by | Oct 10, 2022



  • A government transparency organization filed a lawsuit on Monday seeking records pertaining to Florida’s involvement in flying a group of people that the DeSantis Administration has described as “illegal immigrants” to Martha’s Vineyard
  • The group believes the records could be in the possession of the DeSantis Administration, but has no evidence such records exist
  • The DeSantis Administration handed over some records already, but the lawsuit says those records did not contain the information the group sought 
  • The group has asked for phone logs, text messages, emails or other records, but it is not clear if the DeSantis Administration ever created such records

TALLAHASSEE — An open-government group Monday filed a lawsuit seeking to force Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration to release additional records about a controversial decision last month to fly migrants from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts.

The Florida Center for Government Accountability filed the lawsuit in Leon County circuit court and alleged that the governor’s office did not comply with requests to release a series of records about the flights.

Among other things, the group sought records, phone logs or text logs that could show communications by DeSantis Chief of Staff James Uthmeier about the flights, according to the lawsuit. Also, it sought any records that would show communications with Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s office about relocating migrants.

The lawsuit said the DeSantis administration provided records Friday but that they were not “responsive” to requests made Sept. 20 and Sept. 21 under Florida’s public-records law.

“None of the records produced by defendants are records sent or received by the EOG (Executive Office of the Governor) or governor,” the lawsuit, filed by Sarasota attorney Andrea Flynn Mogensen and Tampa attorney Matthew Farmer, said. “None of the records are within the timeframe of records sought in the first or second requests.”

The lawsuit said the DeSantis administration provided records that had been “sent to or received from another agency.” It did not detail those records, but the administration released documents Friday to the Miami Herald and other news organizations involving the Florida Department of Transportation, which helped carry out the flights.

In an email attached to the lawsuit, the governor’s office described the documents released Friday as the “first production” of records.

“The Office of Open Government (in the governor’s office) has been working to retrieve, review and produce documents responsive to the many public records requests we have received regarding the flights to Martha’s Vineyard,” the email from the office said. “In an effort to produce documents more efficiently, this office is retrieving, reviewing and producing any documents related to the aforementioned flights.”

The two flights of migrants drew national attention and came as DeSantis regularly criticizes the Biden administration on border policy and the handling of undocumented immigrants. DeSantis and other Republicans also have heavily criticized “sanctuary” communities, such as Martha’s Vineyard.

The flights of about 50 people, mostly Venezuelans, started in San Antonio, Texas, stopped at an airport in the Northwest Florida community of Crestview and then headed north to Martha’s Vineyard. The DeSantis administration tapped into $12 million that the Legislature provided to transport undocumented immigrants from Florida — though part of the controversy has centered on the migrant flights originating in Texas.

Sen. Jason Pizzo, D-North Miami Beach, has filed a lawsuit in Leon County circuit court, alleging the DeSantis administration violated the state Constitution and a separate law. Meanwhile, lawyers representing some asylum seekers flown to Massachusetts filed a potential class-action lawsuit against DeSantis, Department of Transportation Secretary Jared Perdue and unidentified people who helped recruit the immigrants in Texas.

2 Comments

  1. dmmorrison

    Interesting how the asylum seekers seem to have flown themselves. Amazing that they could come up with $32,000 a seat.

  2. dolphincritic

    Why would an awake progressive Democrat who endorses the president’s immigration policy, which includes secret midnight flights to undisclosed U.S. cities sue anyone who assists illegal migrants in relocating to any state where the assistance is better than Florida’s? These same political saboteurs always claim that our state is a bad place, and they can make it better. Well, if you REALLY think Florida is bad and someone helps illegal immigrants to relocate to a wonderful place like Martha’s Vinyard, why would you complain and want anyone to stop saving indigent persons from our “hellhole?”
    This is an abuse of the law. It is a waste of the courts time.

 

What is the most glaring political issue facing Floridians ahead of Legislative Session?
×
%d bloggers like this: