Trading on Tom Homan: Inside the Push to Cash in on the Trump Administration's Deportation Campaign
The first time a Pennsylvania consultant named Charles Sowell connected with border czar Tom Homan was when Sowell reached out on LinkedIn in 2021, looking for advice about border contracting work. Homan had finished a stint as acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, capping a three-decade career in federal government. He and Sowell built a rapport, based partly on their shared criticisms of then-President Joe Bidens border policies.
By 2023, the men had gone into business together. Sowell was paying Homan as a consultant to his boutique firm, SE&M Solutions, which advised companies in some cases for a fee of $20,000 a month seeking contracts from the agencies where Homan had once worked. In 2024, Sowell became chair of the board of Homans foundation, Border911, which championed tougher border security.
During his 2024 presidential campaign, Donald Trump made it clear that if he won reelection he would appoint Homan to oversee the sweeping crackdown on illegal immigration that hed promised his supporters, which would likely involve billions of dollars in new contracts for private companies. At the Republican National Convention speech in which Trump accepted his partys nomination in July, he said Homan would have a role in launching the largest deportation operation in the history of our country.
Put him in charge, Trump said, and just sit back and watch.
After Trump won and formally announced Homan would be returning with him to the White House, Sowell kept Homan on his payroll until the end of the year. Once named as the border czar, Homan said he would recuse himself from contracting, saying he would have no involvement, discussion, input, or decision of any future government contracts.
https://www.propublica.org/article/tom-homan-border-czar-trump-mark-hall-charles-sowell