An
explosive new documentary details how Jared Kushner's coronavirus task force
consisted mainly of 20-something volunteers buying PPE with personal email
accounts
Susie Neilson
Business Insider
• October 7, 2020
·
For several weeks in March and April, Max Kennedy, Jr., then 26,
served on Jared Kushner's White House COVID-19 Supply-Chain Task Force.
·
Kennedy, who is Robert F. Kennedy's grandson, quit the task
force in April. Soon after, he wrote an anonymous whistleblower complaint to
Congress accusing the task force of corruption and ineptitude.
·
According to Kennedy, most members of the task force were young,
unpaid, and inexperienced volunteers "cold-emailing" Chinese
factories from their personal email accounts.
·
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When Max
Kennedy Jr. volunteered to help out on Jared Kushner's White House COVID-19
Supply-Chain Task Force, he thought he'd be helping out senior staff with rote
tasks like data entry.
"My old
boss called me and said he heard Kushner's task force needed younger volunteers
who had general skills and were willing to work seven days a week for no
money," Kennedy, now 27, said in the forthcoming documentary about the
Trump team's coronavirus response, "Totally Under Control." The film,
which was made in secret over the last five months, is slated for
on-demand release October 13.
Despite his
"apprehension" about working for the Trump administration, Kennedy volunteered
because he felt like it was the right thing to do.
So Kennedy
traveled to DC and showed up at the headquarters of the Federal Emergency
Management Agency. Once there, he said volunteers were led to Conference Room
A, a windowless, underground meeting space. TVs covered the walls, all blaring
Fox News.
After they sat
down, Kennedy said representatives from FEMA and the military came in and gave
them a "pep talk." The officials told volunteers that they needed to
procure "the stuff" for the US government — Kennedy said they were
referring to personal protective equipment, or PPE.
Then the
officials left, leaving Kennedy and the other volunteers. Slowly, they realized
what was happening.
"We
thought we'd be auxiliary support for an existing procurement team,"
Kennedy, who is the grandson of Robert F. Kennedy, said in the film. "Instead,
we were the team."
Kennedy said he
and a dozen unpaid, inexperienced volunteers had become a core component of the
US government's efforts to procure PPE.
A severe shortage of PPE across the US
Kushner formed
the COVID-19 Supply Chain Task Force in March to address what had become a
pressing issue: the US's severe shortage of PPE and other medical equipment.
Already, hospitals in many regions were running out of masks and ventilators,
and workers were making single-use masks last over several days. One surgeon in
Fresno, California, told The New York Times it was like being "at war with no
ammo."
There were
multiple reasons for these shortages, including lack of preparations by
previous administrations — many of the Strategic National Stockpile's 12
million N95 masks were expired, for instance. But in February, the
Trump administration made the mask shortage worse by creating the "CS
China COVID Procurement Service," which existed partly to encourage
American producers like 3M to sell their entire inventories of N95 masks to China.
One month
later, when American hospitals desperately needed N95s, they were forced to
import them, and pay up to 10 times more than the price that American producers
would have charged, according to the documentary.
Using personal email accounts to buy critical
supplies
For the rest of
March and well into April, Kennedy sat with the other volunteers in Conference
Room A with the other volunteers, who he said had no experience in supply
chains or medical issues. With very little direction, the team members opened
up their own personal laptops and got to work.
"We
started cold-emailing people we knew who had business relationships in China,
looking for factories online, and emailing them from our personal Gmail
accounts," Kennedy said in the film.
The group was
also told to prioritize leads from "VIPs," which mostly consisted of
well-connected and wealthy Trump supporters, Buzzfeed News and The New York
Times previously reported. The task force kept track of such leads in a
spreadsheet called "VIP Updates."
In one
particularly egregious example, one "VIP," Silicon Valley engineer
Yaron Oren-Pines, received a $69 million contract to provide 1,000 ventilators to New York state after he
tweeted at the president, as Business Insider previously reported. Oren-Pines never
delivered, and the state has tried to get its money back.
As the team
worked, the TVs kept playing Fox News 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Kennedy said he remembers the channel's coronavirus death counter ticking
steadily upward.
Kennedy said nobody told the other volunteers
how to buy PPE
Buying PPE
without any experience or advice turned out to be difficult, largely because
Kennedy said he and the other volunteers had no idea about how procurement
worked, and nobody would tell them.
"We would
call factories and say, 'We think the federal government can send you a check
in 60 days,' and they would say, 'There's someone with a briefcase of cash, and
they're offering to pay me right now,'" he said in the film. "And we
would run around the FEMA building looking for someone who could tell us what
payment terms the government was allowed to offer, and no one ever told
us."
A week into
their work, Kennedy said several government employees walked into Conference
Room A and told the volunteers they had to sign non-disclosure agreements. They
offered an ultimatum: Sign the NDAs, or leave the room immediately, according
to Kennedy.
"We all
had built our own relationships with manufacturers, and it felt like if we
walked away, it would negatively affect our ability to buy this critical,
life-saving equipment. And so we all begrudgingly signed the NDA," he said
in the film.
Kennedy quit
the task force in April. That month, he also broke his NDA, sending an anonymous complaint to Congress detailing the
task force's incompetency.
"In my
time on the task force, our team did not directly purchase a single mask,"
he said in the film.
Kushner's
program was mostly shut down in May, even though state governments and
healthcare facilities were still experiencing critical shortages of PPE and
ventilators.
The White House
didn't immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment on the
film or Kennedy's characterization of the task force.
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original article on Business Insider