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Miami Herald
01-07-2025
- Politics
- Miami Herald
The $10 million central to Hope Florida charity probe may harm its tax status
The president of the Hope Florida Foundation told its board on Monday that the embattled charity was getting its financial house in order. During the second public meeting in the two-year-old organization's history, the board appointed a new member whom it named as its first treasurer. And charity President Joshua Hay assigned members to come up with a budget and a process for evaluating grants. But the state-created charity did not address what one board member in April called the 'elephant in the room': Hay's decision last year to accept, and quickly give away, $10 million from a Medicaid settlement to two other nonprofits, which then gave a similar amount to a political committee intent on defeating the recreational marijuana ballot initiative. The State Attorney's Office in Leon County has an open criminal investigation into the transactions. The board's decision to ignore the $10 million transfer, experts say, could jeopardize the tax-exempt status of the state-created Hope Florida Foundation, an IRS-recognized 501(c)(3) headquartered in the Department of Children and Families to assist first lady Casey DeSantis' top initiative, Hope Florida. The Hope Florida program is intended to move Floridians off of government assistance, and the charity is supposed to give money to churches and local nonprofits that help those people. But since its creation in 2023, the Foundation has been riddled with problems exposed by the Herald/Times. Its first board meeting last year was held in secret — in violation of state open meeting laws — and it has been functioning without any budget or audits, as required by law. Even Monday's meeting — held up by Hay as a step in the right direction in terms of good governance — lacked a public agenda, was not noticed through the state Department of Children and Families' administrative register, and didn't have the meeting's Zoom link posted on the Foundation's website until the weekend. The Herald/Times also reported this month that during its first fundraiser, the Foundation paid for hotel rooms, drinks and custom golf bags for DeSantis' top staffers and legislators but never notified them of the value of those gifts, which is required under state ethics laws. During its first public meeting on April 17, board member Stephanie White — who is married to former state Rep. Frank White — asked Foundation attorney Jeff Aaron whether the $10 million settlement funding was public money, which would be illegal to divert. But White did not address the matter at Monday's meeting, telling the Herald/Times afterward that she is 'looking forward to having policies and procedures put in place so that we can provide needed grants to organizations in Florida that help children and families.' Foundation board member Tina Vidal-Duart had previously requested that an outside attorney look into the matter, since Aaron acknowledged he had been accused of committing federal crimes related to it. But she, too, was silent on the topic Monday. (White and Vidal-Duart were the only ones out of the six-member board not given officer positions on Monday.) Vidal-Duart did not return a phone call from the Herald/Times on Monday. Aaron did not respond to a request for comment. A spokesperson for the state Department of Children and Families, where the Foundation is headquartered, never answered why the meeting wasn't noticed as other meetings are. State Rep. Alex Andrade, the Pensacola Republican probing the Foundation's spending, urged the board at the April 17 board meeting to recoup the money so as to not jeopardize the organization's charity status, a point reflected in the meeting minutes the board approved on Monday. After an expert told the Herald/Times that a charity like the Foundation could be heavily taxed on money diverted to a political campaign, which the IRS views as lobbying, Andrade said he was concerned about the Foundation being a liability to the state. 'If the [charity's] activity exposes state coffers to the risk of an excise tax from the IRS, you have to begin to question whether or not its existence is justified,' Andrade said after the meeting Monday. Hay claimed in Andrade's House hearing on April 15 — two days before the Foundation's first public board meeting — that while he had signed off on giving the $10 million to two 501(c)4 organizations in the form of two $5 million grants, there were 'deficiencies with monitoring' where the money went next. That argument isn't legitimate to the IRS, said Nathan Goldman, an associate professor of accounting at North Carolina State University who writes a tax column for Forbes. 'The classic defense for these organizations is that if they give to somebody else and they use it for lobbying, then all of a sudden they've kind of had their hands washed,' Goldman said in an interview. 'But that's why this rule's in place, because it's putting the burden on the original organization, that you need to understand where that money's going to.' Goldman said that the 'slap-on-the-wrist' punishment from the IRS would be to tax the organization — the Hope Florida Foundation — for all the money it overspent on lobbying at 25%, which is higher than the corporate tax rate of 21%. In this case, if the entire $10 million later went to defeating the recreational marijuana amendment, then the Foundation could face a tax penalty of up to $2.4 million, based on the amount Hay said the charity had raised in total and lobbying rules by the IRS. 'On the higher end of the spectrum, they'd lose their 501(c)(3) status, and everything that they're doing becomes taxable,' Goldman said. Similarly, Shanna Ports, senior legal counsel for the Campaign Legal Center, a campaign finance watchdog, previously told the Herald/Times that if political contributions are a 'substantial' part of a charity's activity, it could lose its tax-exempt status.

Yahoo
14-06-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Hope Florida charity paid for hotel rooms, perks for DeSantis officials
TALLAHASSEE — Gov. Ron DeSantis touted last year's Governor's Cup charity golf weekend as a fundraising success for the fledgling Hope Florida Foundation, saying it raised 'massive amounts of money.' Yet few of the attendees — which included officials in the governor's administration, his former campaign advisers and state contractors — donated to it. Several said they didn't even know the charity sponsored it, even though the nonprofit gave them custom golf bags and paid for their rooms, meals and drinks. The two-day event at a private club illustrates not only the overlap between the foundation's charitable arm and the DeSantis political operation, but messiness with the financial oversight of the nearly 2-year-old organization. Following questions from the Times/Herald, the charity is scrambling to file paperwork required by Florida law to notify state officials and lawmakers about the value of the gifts it provided as part of the event. The reports were due March 1. Foundation officials are also correcting the charity's IRS tax filing to more accurately show how much the event made. It wasn't the first time the Hope Florida Foundation, which benefits a program spearheaded by Florida first lady Casey DeSantis, has failed to file key paperwork. In April, its board president told state lawmakers that the charity had not filed any tax returns, created a budget or conducted audits required by law. The charity is under investigation after diverting $10 million from a settlement with the state's largest Medicaid contractor to a pair of nonprofits that then gave millions to a political committee. Nonprofit experts say the golf fundraiser, held at the Watersound Club near Destin last May, was unusual in multiple ways. Unlike a typical fundraiser, in which attendees are asked to at least pay for a ticket benefiting the charity, just 14 of the 60 attendees donated, the charity's records show. In addition, attendees received free rooms up to $654 per night, food and drinks and other perks on the charity's dime. Some received custom golf bags. Many, including Sen. Ed Hooper of Clearwater and Rep. Lawrence McClure of Dover, said they didn't realize the event was a fundraiser for the Hope Florida Foundation. 'I don't remember it being mentioned or described,' said Hooper, the chairperson of the Senate budget committee. Under federal law, a charity's expenses must further its mission, said Robert Tigner, regulatory council for The Nonprofit Alliance, which advocates for nonprofits. 'Straying wildly outside those bounds, like treating everybody the governor knows to a good time, it's hard to figure out how that fits in any legitimate mission,' Tigner said. The Governor's Cup was the debut fundraiser for the Hope Florida Foundation. The charity was created by the DeSantis administration two years ago to support the state's Hope Florida program, which uses a hotline to connect people with nonprofit charities and social services. The foundation is supposed to help the state carry out that mission, at least in part by giving grants to organizations that participate. It drew scrutiny from House Republicans earlier this year after it was found to have accepted — and quickly given away — $10 million from a $67 million settlement with a Medicaid contractor in October. The state attorney's office in Leon County said there is an open criminal investigation involving the transactions. None of the board members attended the Governor's Cup event, according to room receipts and other records about the fundraiser obtained by the Times/Herald through a public records request. The Hope Florida Foundation did not answer questions about why dozens of people received free rooms or whether DeSantis was among them. In a statement, the charity's attorney, Jeff Aaron, said the Governor's Cup was 'an extraordinary success' and had a net profit of nearly $700,000. That's well above the $425,000 that the foundation's current tax return says the event raised, an error that the charity is fixing. 'Everyone involved in the event played an important role in making the fundraising possible,' Aaron said. The Governor's Cup cost the charity $95,547, including $36,642 in room fees and charges. The charges and receipts were managed not by the foundation but by a former employee on DeSantis' campaign for governor. Some of the guests were associated with companies that hold state contracts, including Tidal Basin, the North Highland Co. and Centene. Centene gave $100,000 to the foundation around the time of the Governor's Cup event, records show. Several lobbyists who attended told the Times/Herald that they knew that it was for the Hope Florida Foundation. 'It's my understanding that golf, dinner and staying overnight were part of the fundraising costs for the event,' said longtime lobbyist and Republican consultant Slater Bayliss. He said he and colleague Chris Chaney represented four clients that donated to the event: Centene, Tampa Electric, Tidal Basin and Simply Healthcare Plans. 'I am a huge supporter of Hope Florida, and I believe in its mission,' Bayliss said. Records show that three people affiliated with the Hope Florida program attended the first night, including then-Department of Children and Families Secretary Shevaun Harris and Ginger Faulk, a mom who has been held up by the DeSantises as evidence that the state program works. Faulk couldn't be reached for comment. But unlike everyone else on the guest list, they were 'on (their) own for room payments,' the records state. Aaron did not answer when asked why. A spokesperson for the state Agency for Health Care Administration said Harris was there to give a presentation on the program, and the expenses for her and Faulk were paid by the Department of Children and Families. The rest of the attendees, who did not donate, included 13 members of the DeSantis administration. Among them: then-chief of staff James Uthmeier, who is now the state attorney general; then-Agency for Health Care Administration Secretary Jason Weida, who is now DeSantis' chief of staff; and Anastasios Kamoutsas, who was then a deputy chief of staff but was named Florida's education commissioner this month. A spokesperson for DeSantis said the legislators and staff participated 'for the benefit of the fundraiser.' There were five staffers and advisers from DeSantis' failed presidential campaign, including deputy campaign manager David Polyansky, adviser Marc Reichelderfer and pollster Ryan Tyson, who each received $169-per-night rooms. Tyson told the Times/Herald that he did not know that the Hope Florida Foundation paid for his room until a reporter sent him receipts. He also said he didn't recall whether the reason for the golf tournament was to raise money for the charity. 'There was no reason for them to do that, so I'll gladly reimburse them the $189.28 they spent on my stay,' he said. When notified by a reporter, Polyansky also said he was going to pay back the foundation for his room. He said he flew into town primarily to catch up with the governor and didn't remember the details of the event. Two executives with Charter Communications, including the recently named Florida A&M University President Marva Johnson, also received rooms, according to the records. The cable company gave $100,000 to the Republican Party of Florida in the weeks before and after the event but did not give to the foundation, according to a list of donations through March 24 this year. A spokesperson for the company declined to comment. Bennett Weiner, president and CEO of BBB Wise Giving Alliance, a standards-based charity monitoring organization, said he had never heard of a fundraising scenario in which participants weren't asked to make a donation. 'That's the purpose of the event,' he said. 'Even if it's not a large amount, it's something.' Nearly a year after the event, DeSantis touted its success during a news conference in the Panhandle. At the time, a House committee was scrutinizing the foundation, which was used to divert at least $8.5 million from the Medicaid settlement to a political committee controlled by Uthmeier. Republican Rep. Alex Andrade has called the series of transactions illegal. At the news conference, DeSantis singled out lawmakers who attended the Governor's Cup for apparent hypocrisy. 'They were all a part of this,' DeSantis said. 'They were all singing the praises.' Eight Republican lawmakers attended on the second day, golfing with DeSantis and state officials without lobbyists present, several said. But four, including Hooper and McClure, said they didn't know the event had anything to do with the Hope Florida Foundation until being contacted by a reporter more than a year later. The others did not return calls from the Times/Herald or could not be reached for comment. Hooper said past Governor's Cup events have supported the First Tee Foundation, a charity that helps kids learn to golf. Usually lobbyists pick up the tab, he said, but he recalled an announcement that the St. Joe Co., which owns the resort, paid for the rooms. The St. Joe Community Foundation donated $200,000 to the charity five weeks later. State ethics laws require lawmakers and state officials, such as Uthmeier and Weida, to report gifts they receive from state-created charities to the Commission on Ethics. But first, the charity is supposed to inform them of the value of the gifts by March 1. None said they received such notice. Aaron didn't answer a question about why those notices were not sent out. Everyone should have known they were there to support a charity, said Rep. Debra Tendrich, a Democrat from Palm Beach County who runs her own nonprofit. Tendrich is on the House committee that investigated the foundation. 'I would never have allowed my staff, or my team or my board to promote an event and let people leave without knowing what they were supporting,' Tendrich said. 'To me, this is mind-boggling.' Times investigative reporter Justin Garcia contributed to this report.

Miami Herald
14-06-2025
- Business
- Miami Herald
DeSantis golf fundraiser for Hope Florida charity ‘unusual,' nonprofit experts say
Gov. Ron DeSantis touted last year's Governor's Cup charity golf weekend as a fundraising success for the fledgling Hope Florida Foundation, saying it raised 'massive amounts of money.' Yet few of the attendees — which included officials in the governor's administration, his former campaign advisers and state contractors — donated to it. Several said they didn't even know the charity sponsored it, even though the nonprofit gave them custom golf bags and paid for their rooms, meals and drinks. The two-day event at a private club illustrates not only the overlap between the Foundation's charitable arm and the DeSantis political operation, but messiness with the financial oversight of the nearly 2-year-old organization. Following questions from the Herald/Times, the charity is scrambling to file paperwork required by Florida law to notify state officials and lawmakers about the value of the gifts it provided as part of the event. The reports were due March 1. Foundation officials are also correcting its IRS tax filing to more accurately show how much the event made. It wasn't the first time the Hope Florida Foundation, which benefits a program spearheaded by Florida first lady Casey DeSantis, has failed to file key paperwork. In April, its board president told state lawmakers that the charity had not filed any tax returns, created a budget or conducted audits required by law. The charity is under investigation after diverting $10 million from a settlement with the state's largest Medicaid contractor to a pair of nonprofits that then gave millions to a political committee. Nonprofit experts say the golf fundraiser, held at the Watersound Club near Destin last May, was unusual in multiple ways. Unlike a typical fundraiser, in which attendees are asked to at least pay for a ticket benefiting the charity, just 14 of the 60 attendees donated, the charity's records show. In addition, attendees received free rooms up to $654 per night, food and drinks and other perks on the charity's dime. Some received custom golf bags. Many, including Sen. Ed Hooper of Clearwater and Rep. Lawrence McClure of Dover, said they didn't realize the event was a fundraiser for the Hope Florida Foundation. 'I don't remember it being mentioned or described,' said Hooper, the chairperson of the Senate budget committee. Under federal law, a charity's expenses must further its mission, said Robert Tigner, regulatory council for The Nonprofit Alliance, which advocates for nonprofits. 'Straying wildly outside those bounds, like treating everybody the governor knows to a good time, it's hard to figure out how that fits in any legitimate mission,' Tigner said. The Governor's Cup was the debut fundraiser for the Hope Florida Foundation. The charity was created by the DeSantis administration two years ago to support the state's Hope Florida program, which uses a hotline to connect people with nonprofit charities and social services. The Foundation is supposed to help the state carry out that mission, at least in part by giving grants to organizations that participate. It drew scrutiny from House Republicans earlier this year after it was found to have accepted — and quickly given away — $10 million from a $67 million settlement with a Medicaid contractor in October. The State Attorney's office in Leon County said there is an open criminal investigation involving the transactions. None of the board members attended the Governor's Cup event, according to room receipts and other records about the fundraiser obtained by the Herald/Times through a public records request. The Hope Florida Foundation did not answer questions about why dozens of people received free rooms or whether DeSantis was among them. In a statement, the charity's attorney, Jeff Aaron, said the Governor's Cup was 'an extraordinary success' and had a net profit of nearly $700,000. That's well above the $425,000 that the Foundation's current tax return says the event raised, an error that the charity is fixing. 'Everyone involved in the event played an important role in making the fundraising possible,' Aaron said. DeSantis officials received free rooms The Governor's Cup cost the charity $95,547, including $36,642 in room fees and charges. The charges and receipts were managed not by the Foundation but by a former employee on DeSantis' campaign for governor. Some of the guests were associated with companies that hold state contracts, including Tidal Basin, The North Highland Co. and Centene. Centene gave $100,000 to the Foundation around the time of the Governor's Cup event, records show. Several lobbyists who attended told the Herald/Times that they knew that it was for the Hope Florida Foundation. 'It's my understanding that golf, dinner and staying overnight were part of the fundraising costs for the event,' said longtime lobbyist and Republican consultant Slater Bayliss. He said he and colleague Chris Chaney represented four clients that donated to the event: Centene, Tampa Electric, Tidal Basin and Simply Healthcare Plans. 'I am a huge supporter of Hope Florida and I believe in its mission,' Bayliss said. Records show that three people affiliated with the Hope Florida program attended the first night, including then-Department of Children and Families Secretary Shevaun Harris and Ginger Faulk, a mom who has been held up by the DeSantises as evidence the state program works. Faulk couldn't be reached for comment. But unlike everyone else on the guest list, they were 'on [their] own for room payments,' the records state. Aaron did not answer when asked why. A spokesperson for the state Agency for Health Care Administration said Harris was there to give a presentation on the program, and the expenses for her and Faulk were paid by the Department of Children and Families. The rest of the attendees, who did not donate, included 13 members of the DeSantis administration. Among them: then-chief of staff James Uthmeier, who is now the state attorney general; then-Agency for Health Care Administration Secretary Jason Weida, who is now DeSantis' chief of staff; and Anastasios Kamoutsas, who was then a deputy chief of staff but was named Florida's education commissioner this month. A spokesperson for DeSantis said the legislators and staff participated 'for the benefit of the fundraiser.' There were five staffers and advisers from DeSantis' failed presidential campaign, including deputy campaign manager David Polyansky, adviser Marc Reichelderfer and pollster Ryan Tyson, who each received $169-per-night rooms. Tyson told the Herald/Times that he did not know that the Hope Florida Foundation paid for his room until a reporter sent him receipts. He also said he didn't recall whether the reason for the golf tournament was to raise money for the charity. 'There was no reason for them to do that, so I'll gladly reimburse them the $189.28 they spent on my stay,' he said. When notified by a reporter, Polyansky also said he was going to pay back the Foundation for his room. He said he flew into town primarily to catch up with the governor and didn't remember the details of the event. Two executives with Charter Communications, including the recently named Florida A&M University President Marva Johnson, also received rooms, according to the records. The cable company gave $100,000 to the Republican Party of Florida in the weeks before and after the event but did not give to the Foundation, according to a list of donations through March 24 this year. A spokesperson for the company declined to comment. Bennett Weiner, president and CEO of BBB Wise Giving Alliance, a standards-based charity monitoring organization, said he had never heard of a fundraising scenario in which participants weren't asked to make a donation. 'That's the purpose of the event,' he said. 'Even if it's not a large amount, it's something.' Lawmakers received gifts Nearly a year after the event, DeSantis touted its success during a news conference in the Panhandle. At the time, a House committee was scrutinizing the Foundation, which was used to divert at least $8.5 million from the Medicaid settlement to a political committee controlled by Uthmeier. Republican Rep. Alex Andrade has called the series of transactions illegal. At the news conference, DeSantis singled out lawmakers who attended the Governor's Cup for apparent hypocrisy. 'They were all a part of this,' DeSantis said. 'They were all singing the praises.' Eight Republican lawmakers attended on the second day, golfing with DeSantis and state officials without lobbyists present, several said. But four, including Hooper and McClure, said they didn't know the event had anything to do with the Hope Florida Foundation until being contacted by a reporter more than a year later. The others did not return calls from the Herald/Times or could not be reached for comment. Hooper said past Governor's Cup events have supported the First Tee Foundation, a charity that helps kids learn to golf. Usually lobbyists pick up the tab, he said, but he recalled an announcement that the St. Joe Co., which owns the resort, paid for the rooms. The St. Joe Community Foundation donated $200,000 to the charity five weeks later. State ethics laws require lawmakers and state officials, such as Uthmeier and Weida, to report gifts they receive from state-created charities to the Commission on Ethics. But first, the charity is supposed to inform them of the value of the gifts by March 1. None said they received such notice. Aaron didn't answer a question about why those notices were not sent out. Everyone should have known they were there to support a charity, said Rep. Debra Tendrich, a Democrat from Palm Beach County who runs her own nonprofit. Tendrich is on the House committee that investigated the Foundation. 'I would never have allowed my staff, or my team or my board, to promote an event and let people leave without knowing what they were supporting,' Tendrich said. 'To me, this is mind-boggling.' Tampa Bay Times investigative reporter Justin Garcia contributed to this report.
Yahoo
13-06-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
DeSantis admin pressures news outlet to stop reporting on fraud allegations
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' opposition to the First Amendment is well established: see for example his efforts to roll back legal protections for media outlets and to quash diversity measures at private companies (which earned a colorful condemnation from a federal judge back in 2022). But his administration's latest effort to shut down a news investigation into alleged corruption is uniquely disturbing, even by his standards. The administration is facing criticism from First Amendment advocates over an unsigned cease-and-desist letter from Florida's Department of Children and Families (DCF) sent last week to the Orlando Sentinel, demanding that the paper and its reporter Jeffrey Schweers stop investigating allegations of fraud related to a community welfare program spearheaded by Casey DeSantis, the governor's wife and potential Republican candidate in next year's gubernatorial race. As NBC News reported: The investigation, first reported by the Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald, centered on what the DeSantis administration did with money from a $67 million settlement with Medicaid contractor ... Desantis administration officials 'directed' $10 million from that pot of money to the Hope Florida Foundation, the nonprofit arm of an organization led by Casey DeSantis, according to records the group had to file as part of its nonprofit status. Of that money, $5 million was then sent to a group aligned with the Florida Chamber of Commerce, and another $5 million to a group called Save Our Society from Drugs. Those groups then sent a total of $8.5 million toward a political committee led by [state attorney general James] Uthmeier that was working to defeat the recreational marijuana amendment. It's not clear how much of the $10 million went directly to the PAC. The governor's administration apparently wants the Sentinel to cease its reporting on the matter. The cease-and-desist letter from the Florida DCF accuses Schweers of 'falsely and with malicious intent asserting that the families are implicated in fraudulent activity by accepting financial assistance from Hope Florida Foundation' and claims that Schweers' 'threats and accusations were used as coercion to get the families to make negative statements about Hope Florida.' (The Hope Florida Foundation, as NBC News notes, is the nonprofit arm of the DeSantis' welfare alternative, 'which has a goal to steer Florida residents away from government programs and instead toward services from nonprofits and faith groups,' according to the Tallahassee Democrat.) 'We stand by our stories and reject the state's attempt to chill free speech and encroach on our First Amendment right to report on an important issue,' Roger Simmons, the Sentinel's executive editor, told The Associated Press via email, adding that DCF's description of Schweers' reporting was 'completely false.' DeSantis appeared to co-sign the agency's demand in a tweet sharing the letter. 'Bottom feeders gonna bottom feed,' he said. In a reply to the governor's post, Schweers asked why the administration hadn't responded to his public records requests. He's also shared social media posts from people who say he's done nothing untoward and accusing the administration of blatant intimidation tactics. In the absence of any evidence of wrongdoing by Schweers or the Sentinel, it certainly looks like DeSantis is bearing down on the free press to silence a story simply because it might portray his family in a bad light. This article was originally published on
Yahoo
13-06-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
DeSantis admin pressures news outlet to stop reporting on fraud allegations
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' opposition to the First Amendment is well established: see for example his efforts to roll back legal protections for media outlets and to quash diversity measures at private companies (which earned a colorful condemnation from a federal judge back in 2022). But his administration's latest effort to shut down a news investigation into alleged corruption is uniquely disturbing, even by his standards. The administration is facing criticism from First Amendment advocates over an unsigned cease-and-desist letter from Florida's Department of Children and Families (DCF) sent last week to the Orlando Sentinel, demanding that the paper and its reporter Jeffrey Schweers stop investigating allegations of fraud related to a community welfare program spearheaded by Casey DeSantis, the governor's wife and potential Republican candidate in next year's gubernatorial race. As NBC News reported: The investigation, first reported by the Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald, centered on what the DeSantis administration did with money from a $67 million settlement with Medicaid contractor ... Desantis administration officials 'directed' $10 million from that pot of money to the Hope Florida Foundation, the nonprofit arm of an organization led by Casey DeSantis, according to records the group had to file as part of its nonprofit status. Of that money, $5 million was then sent to a group aligned with the Florida Chamber of Commerce, and another $5 million to a group called Save Our Society from Drugs. Those groups then sent a total of $8.5 million toward a political committee led by [state attorney general James] Uthmeier that was working to defeat the recreational marijuana amendment. It's not clear how much of the $10 million went directly to the PAC. The governor's administration apparently wants the Sentinel to cease its reporting on the matter. The cease-and-desist letter from the Florida DCF accuses Schweers of 'falsely and with malicious intent asserting that the families are implicated in fraudulent activity by accepting financial assistance from Hope Florida Foundation' and claims that Schweers' 'threats and accusations were used as coercion to get the families to make negative statements about Hope Florida.' (The Hope Florida Foundation, as NBC News notes, is the nonprofit arm of the DeSantis' welfare alternative, 'which has a goal to steer Florida residents away from government programs and instead toward services from nonprofits and faith groups,' according to the Tallahassee Democrat.) 'We stand by our stories and reject the state's attempt to chill free speech and encroach on our First Amendment right to report on an important issue,' Roger Simmons, the Sentinel's executive editor, told The Associated Press via email, adding that DCF's description of Schweers' reporting was 'completely false.' DeSantis appeared to co-sign the agency's demand in a tweet sharing the letter. 'Bottom feeders gonna bottom feed,' he said. In a reply to the governor's post, Schweers asked why the administration hadn't responded to his public records requests. He's also shared social media posts from people who say he's done nothing untoward and accusing the administration of blatant intimidation tactics. In the absence of any evidence of wrongdoing by Schweers or the Sentinel, it certainly looks like DeSantis is bearing down on the free press to silence a story simply because it might portray his family in a bad light. This article was originally published on