'Alligator Alcatraz' Contracts Disappeared From a Florida State Database
A state official says the contracts contained "proprietary information," so they were scrubbed and replaced with bare-bones summaries.

State contracts for Florida's controversial "Alligator Alcatraz" detention camp were removed from a public database and replaced with far less detailed documents after media outlets began writing about them last week.
The Florida Division of Emergency Management (FDEM), which is overseeing the state's new immigrant detention camp in the Everglades, says the contracts contained "proprietary information."
However, open government advocates and state Democratic lawmakers say that removing details of the contracts flies in the face of Florida's promises to provide transparency in public spending, especially given the massive expenditures of taxpayer money involved. The most recent reporting on the ballooning costs of the Everglades detention camp puts it at $250 million and growing.
"That's a lot of our money that we deserve to see how it's spent, and it's a high profile project," David Cuillier, director of the Brechner Freedom of Information Project at the University of Florida, says. "There's a lot of public interest, so those are two reasons why this information should be proactively posted online."
On July 16, The Tributary, a nonprofit Florida news outlet, first reported details of a $78 million contract to Critical Response Strategies (CRS), a consulting company that is apparently responsible for managing day-to-day operations at the detention camp. The Tributary reported that CRS is linked to a venture capital firm headed by one of Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis' "biggest financial backers."
But shortly after reporters began piecing together the details of who was being hired to staff, supply, and service the 3,000-person-capacity tent prison, the information started being scrubbed from the internet—not just from the companies' webpages and LinkedIn profiles, but from state websites.
"State officials also appear to have clawed back information about CRS: A copy of the $78 million Alligator Alcatraz contract was included in a state vendor database Tuesday [July 15]," The Tributary reported. "On Wednesday, it was no longer available."
The CRS contract disappeared from the Florida Accountability Contract Tracking System (FACTS), an online database hosted by the Florida Department of Financial Services (FDFS). The database allows the public to track taxpayer-funded state contracts.
Florida state Rep. Anna V. Eskamani (D–Orlando) wrote on X on July 16 that it appeared more than a dozen contracts totaling more than $200 million in taxpayer dollars had been scrubbed from the FACTS website.
The Miami New Times confirmed that six of the contracts Eskamani flagged related to the detention camp were no longer available on the FACTS website.
Although the FDFS hosts the website, individual agencies, such as the FDEM, are responsible for uploading contracts.
Stephanie Hartman, FDEM spokesperson, says in a statement to Reason that the documents "included proprietary information that shouldn't have been uploaded, so they have been corrected and posted."
The agency did not respond to a follow-up question about which specific information it considers proprietary.
"They didn't correct anything," Eskamani says. "All they did was upload just the cover [sheet], which has no info. There are no trade secrets—only government grift to no-bid contracts."
The reuploaded document of the CRS contract, for instance, is a bare-bones summary of the contract amount, supplier, and other information such as issue date and the amount awarded for the contract. The previous version contained detailed line items of purchase orders and other information.
As Cuillier points out, if sensitive private information was included, it could simply be redacted without having to pull the entire document.
"I can't even imagine what [the concerns] would be for a contract like that, but let's say for argument there is something in there that really hurt the company," he says. "Just black that out and put the rest up. Transparency is critical here when we're talking about taxpayer dollars."
To prove his point, Cuillier quotes from the FACTS "frequently asked questions" webpage, which says that, "Given that government purchases are paid for by citizens, through taxes and fees, how government procures goods and services and the amounts it pays for them should be open for public review."
The FACTS website even includes a Thomas Jefferson quote on the importance of transparency in government bookkeeping: "We might hope to see the finances as clear and intelligible as a merchant's books, so that every member of Congress, and every man of every mind in the Union should be able to comprehend them, to investigate abuses, and consequently, to control them."
"I love that the State of Florida cares so deeply about transparency and is quoting our great Thomas Jefferson about how critical it is," Cuillier says. "Now they need to just follow through with that."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Officially a secret prison now. Got them this time.
In other news DeSantis confirmed leftist outraged when he stated they were not toasting detainees sandwiches.
Were those sandwiches Cubans?
Yes, but it didn't include pickle. They said that their immigration status was the pickle. Which was hilarious.
No more Quiznos!
Everything is the woke trying to get you MAGA tards? So deflect away from the corruption for your team like a true American patriot.
I'm sure Democrats did something similar first, and it was outrageously wrong when they did it. That makes it ok when Republicans do it.
You mean USAID?
I was thinking the Dominion voting machines. Because IIRC a lot of the excuses why we couldn't audit the machines or the contracts with Dominion was because of "proprietary information" being involved.
Good point.
Alligators pounce!
It's a Nazi concentration camp!!
Naw, Sarc's all in on concentration camps. You should have seen him drool over the Aussie Covid ones.
Quarantine camps!!!! Totally libertarian. - sarc
They might be sick
Okay. So they tested negative for covid. Well. Keep them locked up for a few more weeks.
I'll bet the Jews wish they had the freedom to leave their concentration camps anytime they wanted. Like these ingrate illegals, for whom we provide far greater than their nation of origin ever will, do.
No listing for Akita Alcatraz either. Keeping it secret will help muzzle the pro rapefugee crowd.
LOL rapefugee... hilarious!
Struggling to give a shit. Yeah yeah here it comes! Nah false alarm. I'll come back later. Carry on.
"That's a lot of our money that we deserve to see how it's spent, and it's a high profile project," David Cuillier
You're the only one who cares, Dave. The rest of us see money well spent.
You don't have to show us how the sausage is made. We don't care. Just throw it on the grill because it's delicious.
"Given that government purchases are paid for by citizens, through taxes and fees, how government procures goods and services and the amounts it pays for them should be open for public review."
Yea, and typically I would care about that. But we're talking about illegals, so I don't. F you.
BWAHAHAHA, normally you would care, but now you don't. HOORAY "American patriots."
Igonratn ass fucking maga clown thinks only illegals are getting caught up.
Language.
And yes, typically I would care. But you leftists have jumped the shark when it comes to these border jumping scumbags. So, now I DON'T care anymore.
And neither does anyone else. The border jumpers are out. Accept it.
You guys have been really reaching to find something to complain about.
This is literally just throwing shit at the wall to see what sticks.
You've been doing that for every single immigration story of the last several months - and nothing is sticking. Maryland Man fizzled out. Innocent makeup artist turned out to not be. Etc.
Look, open borders doesn't make any sense at all unless you're constantly lying through your teeth. Just accept the narrative and let your betters do your thinking for you.
Would a free trial week of Netflix help keep you distracted? Because Reason is offering that.
FUCK taxpayer money and the cornyism, because our team? Fucking maga clown
If elected officials cared this much about all government spending we wouldn't be in the financial troubles we are as a country. Why do they care now when they couldn't care less for decades about government spending?
Because demographic trends look devastating to the Democrats. They'll keep losing elections unless they import millions of illegals and bribe them with billions of dollars to vote D.
I imagine this is why the trolls like Molly and Sarc sound so hysterical.
It's hilarious how the minorities have been abandoning them anyway.
Deflect, deflect, deflect like a good cult member. Do you have anything to say about the actual issue here?
The info disappeared from the state website? Sounds very fishy to me. What kind of hanky panky is going on with this deal.