A defense contractor that held immigrant children overnight in a Phoenix office building operates a second office nearby where a neighbor has seen immigrant children bathing themselves in bathroom sinks, Reveal has learned.
The company, MVM Inc., is the primary transportation contractor for the federal government’s court-ordered efforts to reunify families separated under President Donald Trump’s zero-tolerance policy. On Sunday, Immigration and Customs Enforcement filed a plan of operations in federal court for the reunification of families whose children are aged 5 to 17. In it, the agency says it will “coordinate with MVM to dispatch” those families.
After Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting published a story about the company housing children overnight in a Phoenix office building, MVM acknowledged that it also houses minors overnight in a second office building nearby. That building is on 20th Street, less than a mile away.
From the outside, MVM’s 20th Street office shares some features with the other office on Osborn Road: a nondescript, unmarked one-level office with dark tinted windows. It’s surrounded by a concrete parking lot — with no area for outdoor play — and near the airport on a busy street.
Bill Weaver, a Phoenix insurance executive who used to lease the 20th Street space now occupied by MVM, told Reveal that for the past two years, he’s seen children from babies to teenagers come through the office.
“They operate six 12-passenger vans,” he said Monday, referring to MVM. Weaver shot several videos on his phone of the children outside the building the morning of June 11 and recently provided them to Reveal. They show about 20 boys of various ages being led by adults in front of his office window.
Weaver estimates MVM leases about 2,000 square feet of space in the building. He says the space has no kitchen or shower — but that the property’s owner offered to install showers at some point.
It also has no private bathroom. Instead, Weaver said, three office suites share a set of bathroom stalls and sinks. To bathe, he said, the children would use a pair of bathroom sinks. He says he’s seen it himself on multiple occasions.
“One time, I walked in and saw two kids washing themselves in their underwear in the sinks,” said Weaver. “MVM would throw away all their clothes and even throw away the brush they combed their hair with and then reclothe them in sweatsuits and crocs.”
“That building was completely inappropriate for what they were doing,” Weaver told Reveal.
After Reveal’s story about MVM detaining children in the Osborn Road office building, with no showers, kitchen or yard, state and local officials called for investigations into the company’s treatment of children. MVM signed a lease for the Osborn Road location in March — just before the Trump administration launched its short-lived family separation effort — and operated it for at least one month between May and June.
Over the weekend, Reveal asked an MVM spokesman about whether children also were held at the second office on 20th Street.
“The statement I sent you on Wednesday,” Joseph Arabit responded via email, “is related to MVM’s entire Phoenix operations.”
Arabit was referring to a statement the company made to Reveal last Wednesday acknowledging that children MVM transported under contract with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement had sometimes stayed overnight at the office on Osborn Road in central Phoenix.
Housing children overnight there violated the company’s own policies, Arabit said. A city councilwoman said the practice also violated city codes.
According to ICE, its contract with MVM allows the company to use its offices as “waiting areas” for children awaiting same-day transport. ICE has not responded to questions about whether holding children overnight violates MVM’s contract or whether those sites must be licensed as child care centers under state licensing laws.
MVM, a Virginia-based defense contractor, has received contracts worth up to $248 million to transport immigrant children since 2014, records show. The company, which once provided guards for CIA facilities in Iraq, was founded by three former Secret Service agents. One of its vice presidents is a former CIA special agent and former acting director of the US Marshals Service.
The company has no child care center licenses in Arizona and the governor has ordered a review. Any determination about whether MVM was operating an unlicensed child care center under state law would be made by the Arizona Department of Health Services.
Phoenix Police Department spokesman Sgt. Vincent C. Lewis told Reveal that a service call was made on the morning of June 5 from the 20th Street MVM office address that was routed to the fire department. The caller reported that a juvenile “had reportedly passed out,” Lewis said.
Shelly Jamison, assistant chief of the Phoenix Fire Department, told Reveal that her department dispatched an engine to the office, where first responders found a 17-year-old girl who was awake. The department spent 15 minutes on site and didn’t transport the girl offsite.
On May 27, police responded to a call at the Osborn office. One of about 90 minors there that morning went missing. The MVM staffer who made the call approximated the teen’s age to be 16, but police say he is 17. The youth, who is from Honduras, was never found and is now officially a missing person, Lewis said.
MVM initially told Reveal the Osborn Road office — which also has only a few toilets, no kitchen and no showers — was used for temporary respite for children awaiting flights.
“These offices are not overnight housing facilities, per the contract with ICE,” spokeswoman Jennifer Elzea confirmed two weeks ago.
Elzea has not acknowledged that MVM detained children — some separated from their parents at the border during the Trump administration’s zero-tolerance policy — in its offices overnight. She’s also declined to state how many such locations the agency’s private contractors use in the transport of children.
“I have nothing further for you. I have made clear that we are looking into whether anything occurred that was outside the realm of our contract,” she told Reveal on Monday. “We will address any findings directly with the contractor.”
In interviews with Reveal, MVM has declined to say, other than these locations, whether and how many locations nationwide it operates where children are or have been detained.
Last Thursday, MVM verified that it had “initiated the lease termination process” on its Osborn Road location. MVM’s office on 20th Street appears to remain in operation and MVM hasn’t commented on whether it will terminate its lease for this office as well.
Arabit also hasn’t told Reveal how many children MVM held overnight at either office or for how long.
This story was originally published by Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting, a nonprofit news organization based in the San Francisco Bay Area. Learn more at revealnews.org and subscribe to the Reveal podcast, produced with PRX, at revealnews.org/podcast.
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