By Kim Barker, Nicholas Kulish and Rebecca R. Ruiz
New York times
Juan Sanchez grew up along the Mexican border (in Brownsville) in a two-bedroom house so crowded with children that he didn’t have a bed.
Juan Sanchez grew up along the Mexican border (in Brownsville) in a two-bedroom house so crowded with children that he didn’t have a bed.
But he fought his way to another life. He earned three degrees, including a doctorate in education from Harvard, before starting a nonprofit in his Texas hometown.
Mr. Sanchez has built an empire on the back of a crisis. His organization, Southwest Key Programs, now houses more migrant children than any other in the nation. Casting himself as a social-justice warrior, he calls himself El Presidente, a title inscribed outside his office and on the government contracts that helped make him rich.
Mr. Sanchez has built an empire on the back of a crisis. His organization, Southwest Key Programs, now houses more migrant children than any other in the nation. Casting himself as a social-justice warrior, he calls himself El Presidente, a title inscribed outside his office and on the government contracts that helped make him rich.
Showing the ambition that brought him from the barrio to the Ivy League, Mr. Sanchez seized the chance to expand his nonprofit when thousands more unaccompanied children began crossing the border during the Obama era. When the Trump administration needed to house migrant children it had separated from their parents, Mr. Sanchez took them in.
As immigration intensifies as a flash point of the Trump presidency, with tear gas being fired at a migrant caravan and the price tag for separating families continuing to rise, Mr. Sanchez is central to the administration’s plans.
Southwest Key can now house up to 5,000 children in its 24 shelters, including a converted Walmart Supercenter that has drawn criticism as a warehouse for youths. The system is nearing a breaking point, with a record 14,000 minors at about 100 sites – a human crisis, but also a moneymaking opportunity.
Though Southwest Key is, on paper, a charity, no one has benefited more than Mr. Sanchez, now 71. Serving as chief executive, he was paid $1.5 million last year — more than twice what his counterpart at the far larger American Red Cross made.
Southwest Key has created a web of for-profit companies – construction, maintenance, food services and even a florist — that has funneled money back to the charity through high management fees and helps it circumvent government limits on executive pay.
The organization, sitting on $61 million in cash as of last fall, has lent millions of dollars to real estate developers, acting more like a bank than a traditional charity. It has opted to rent shelters rather than buy them, an unusual practice that has proved lucrative for shelter owners — who include Mr. Sanchez and the charity’s chief financial officer.
Marcus Owens, the former head of tax-exempt organizations for the Internal Revenue Service under both Republican and Democratic administrations, reviewed Southwest Key’s tax returns for The New York Times. Regulators, he said, seemed to be “asleep at the switch.” Describing the financial dealings of Mr. Sanchez and his colleagues, he said, “I think the word is ‘profiteering.’”
Mr. Sanchez defended his charity. It had to move fast at times, he said in an interview. But every act, he added, has been to help children.
“There are all these kids, they’re at the border, they’re in detention,” Mr. Sanchez said. “How do we get this thing done as quickly as we can so we can start serving those kids?”
Jeff Eller, a spokesman for Southwest Key, said on Tuesday that the charity was closely examining its management practices after questioning from The Times, and that there was “general acceptance” that the charity had made mistakes.
“Could we have done things better? Yeah. And should have? Yeah,” Mr. Eller said. “But there wasn’t a desire to game the system.”
Because of the substantial growth of migrant shelters, the federal government hired an accounting firm this year to review shelter grant recipients, said Mark Weber, a spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services. He added that the department’s Office of Refugee Resettlement, which oversees migrant shelters, had also created a new division to monitor shelters’ spending.
Separately, the Federal Bureau of Investigation is looking into another shelter provider, International Educational Services, for possible misuse of federal money, according to two people informed of the inquiry. The nonprofit’s founder, Ruben Gallegos, said he had no comment on the investigation.
(I.E.S.'s 2015 tax filings show that President Ruben Gallegos earned $519,200; Chief Operating Officer Ruben Gallegos Jr., the president’s son, made $505,202; Chief Financial Officer Juan J. Gonzalez earned $390,273; Vice President of Business Affairs Norberto Perez made $201,601; and grant writer Nelly Weaver earned $194,414. All of those figures include benefits.
(The newer returns for I.E.S. show that the salaries increased tremendously – by more than $100,000 for Gallegos Sr. and Jr. – the following year. Before they were shut down, Gallegos Sr. was paid $677,242 and Jr. $633,240. Even State Rep. Eddie Lucio III was paid $139,312 as "legal counsel."
Still, just recently Gallegos Jr. posted on social media that: "the stars are lining up and people that doubted them should be ashamed of themselves.)
Mr. Gallegos’s charity – which Mr. Sanchez helped create but cut ties with years ago – lost its federal contacts in February for renting shelters owned by charity officials and paying those officials well above the government salary cap from migrant-shelter grants.
Last year, Southwest Key paid eight people more than the federal salary cap of $187,000. In addition to Mr. Sanchez, they included his wife, Jennifer Sanchez, who earned $500,000 as a vice president, and Melody Chung, the chief financial officer, who was paid $1 million.
To read the complete article, click on link: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/02/us/southwest-key-migrant-children.html
(The newer returns for I.E.S. show that the salaries increased tremendously – by more than $100,000 for Gallegos Sr. and Jr. – the following year. Before they were shut down, Gallegos Sr. was paid $677,242 and Jr. $633,240. Even State Rep. Eddie Lucio III was paid $139,312 as "legal counsel."
Still, just recently Gallegos Jr. posted on social media that: "the stars are lining up and people that doubted them should be ashamed of themselves.)
Mr. Gallegos’s charity – which Mr. Sanchez helped create but cut ties with years ago – lost its federal contacts in February for renting shelters owned by charity officials and paying those officials well above the government salary cap from migrant-shelter grants.
Last year, Southwest Key paid eight people more than the federal salary cap of $187,000. In addition to Mr. Sanchez, they included his wife, Jennifer Sanchez, who earned $500,000 as a vice president, and Melody Chung, the chief financial officer, who was paid $1 million.
To read the complete article, click on link: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/02/us/southwest-key-migrant-children.html
16 comments:
Cameron County Texas, the place to come for shady deals and fast bucks. Best place on earth for the bent and the crooked.
Investigate this thoroughly and see whoo else is involved, Eddy Lucio never works alone, find out who else is involved, getting $500k salary making two million per family should buy them a nice prison cell. It was good while it lasted.
A cada santo se le llega su dia! No wonder he gave money all over especially to the school that was named after him. Shame on him for pretending to be so sincere in wanting to donate to the children of Brownsville. Now, do we go back and have the school's name changed or until he is proven guilty? Right?
Now both juniors, named after the father and mother Gallegos will also have to come down to earth and swallow their so called pride. Los padres de Gallegos estan hechando maromas en el cajon. Que vuerguenza!
Is this good or bad for Juan Sanchez ?
Juan what ever happened to that company that got sued by the handicapped employees that were being paid 50 cents an hour and the lady that ran the place was getting paid over One Million dollars a year??? I think it was a clothing company and they sold theirs goods to the government.
50 years for stealing meat, this lot should not be allowed bond. Where was legal counsel when this was going on, just dipping his fingers in the cookie jar. Life in jail is a good sentence, after confiscating all their assets.
Juan Sanchez was doing the same thing as Gallegos, just at a much larger scale. Shame on them. Close all these shelters down. They wanted almost 350 dollars a day to care for these undocumented kids, when a federal inmate costs around 80 dollars a day to house. We can better use that money to take care of our veterans! With all the money being stolen by Sanchez and Gallegos, we could have built local Hispitals for veterans. Ya basta!
Juan its all Congress fault for many years congress on both sides of the fence-republicans and democrats have failed to to change immigration laws to make sure these acts dd not occur, just a band-aid approach, however no one in Washington DC takes this as a serious issue. Its a hot potato kind of thing, and this is the results we have of all of this. Time for both parties to man up or woman up and do something about this ASAP. Cant keep it this way anymore, folks around the USA are tired of this situation. Same old, same old and no change in sight.
They should have let that senator in when he came to visit. I said there'd be a shitstorm coming down on Southwest Key when they slammed the door in his face. They messed up, and now all their shady practices are coming to light.
And they threaten their employees( to terminate them) who have been assaulted by these criminals unaccompanied illegal aliens and file criminal charges. this is a family operation juan. investigate and you'll fine that most the employees are related and 75 % of employee are Legal permanent resident aliens with employment authorization but live in matamoros
The senior's housing is occupied mostly by matamoros citizens not local citizens. Look it up all, the day care centers are full of citizens from matamoros and most ALL providers are from matamoros its bigger then texas...
Too funny and they act all big like their shit dont stink.
The problem is that nobody goes to jail. If Gallegos is found guilty Bisd should remove his name from school
Just wondering what type of businesses these folks are involved in or opened now that IES is no longer the cash cow?
Their shit will not stink when Bubba gets hold of them.
They will wish they never saw the money.
This blog has had several stories over the last couple of years about the double dealing of IES ! Nobody paid much attention. NOW we know that the FBI is on them. Great work Juan! Keep it up.
On another crime in progress, while the FBI is snooping around, they should take a close look at the Cameron County Head Start program. They've been around for years stealing with both hands!
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