A still image of a flying jetAn animated image of a flying jet

(Ashley Borg/Globe staff)

Jet travel, yacht adventures, and more. How Steward’s CEO used corporate funds as the company crumbled.

Steward Health Care CEO Ralph de la Torre and his top deputy jetted last summer to Jamaica for an escape from the scorching heat in Dallas. Among the worries they left behind: the unpaid bills that were piling up at headquarters.

They stepped off the company’s private plane and onto de la Torre’s personal yacht, bound for a weeklong cruise through the Caribbean. They followed that trip with a few days back in the office. And then de la Torre headed to the Virgin Islands on another break.

And then another — and another. Jamaica, Antigua, St. Kitts, Bermuda, Turks and Caicos. In all, the CEO spent 34 days in the tropics — plus a long weekend in the French Riviera — last summer as his health care company teetered on the brink of bankruptcy, according to a new Globe Spotlight Team analysis of public flight records, yacht records, internal company documents, and interviews with people close to the matter.

The Amaral was docked at the Seahaven Marina in Dania Beach, Fla., in August.

The Amaral was docked at the Seahaven Marina in Dania Beach, Fla., in August. (Mike Stocker For The Boston Globe)

Nearly half of the 582 flights flown in 2022 and 2023 were to or from destinations more than 100 miles away from any official Steward location, such as hospitals or corporate offices. Passengers included de la Torre’s fishing friends, a luxury yacht salesman, and high-profile horse trainers.

De la Torre flew to Massachusetts — the birthplace of his company and then home of eight of its hospitals — just seven times in two years, records show. Each trip lasted a day or less.

In many, if not all, instances, the private jet excursions were paid for by Steward, records show, the funds pulled directly from the coffers of one of the nation’s largest — and most troubled — for-profit, private hospital chains.

De la Torre’s personal spokesperson, in a statement to the Globe, confirmed that the executive was paid for such travel and noted that de la Torre views the benefit as supplemental to his pay.

“For safety reasons, Dr. de la Torre elected to use the plane as part of his compensation rather than receive a substantially higher salary,” Rebecca Kral said.

By the time de la Torre returned to the office last September, unpaid vendors had repossessed medical supplies across the hospital chain, putting lives at risk. A recent Spotlight investigation found at least 15 cases in recent years in which Steward patients died after failing to receive professionally accepted standards of care due to equipment issues or staffing shortages.

The use of the company’s jets raises a host of legal questions about corporate disclosures and possible tax avoidance.

“When you’re at the point where the company jet is at the disposal of third parties who are not employees or there’s no business purpose for the flight, it is going to get very tricky for the accountants to classify that as a legitimate expense,” said David Yermack, a finance professor at New York University and author of two papers on executive jet use.

In February, the IRS announced a crackdown on large corporations and high-income taxpayers who use business jets for personal reasons. Federal tax code allows a corporation to deduct money spent maintaining a corporate jet — but only if that plane is used for business use.

A Steward spokesperson responded to a list of questions from the Globe by saying the company has no comment.

Last week, de la Torre failed to appear before a Senate committee investigating the implosion of his health care chain. The committee voted Thursday to hold the executive in contempt of Congress, referring him for civil and criminal charges over his refusal to testify.

Advertisement

The Spotlight Team previously reported that de la Torre often used Steward’s bank accounts as his own; to purchase and renovate an 8 million euro apartment in Madrid; to donate millions of dollars to his children’s prep school; and more. Some of these transactions are now under scrutiny by a federal grand jury in Boston, people close to the matter have told the Globe.

This new Globe analysis rounds out a globetrotting portrait of how de la Torre and other executives spent their time — and the company’s money — in the months and years before it went under.

The Globe found that two company jets flew more than 200 flights in 2022 and 2023 to or from destinations that were at least 100 miles from any known Steward hospitals and business offices.

Steward jets transported de la Torre and his friends to fishing tournaments. They ferried his wife, Nicole Acosta — and her friends — to and from Costa Rica and other far-flung locales. And they shuttled Steward executives on luxurious de la Torre-led excursions to the likes of the Amalfi Coast and Adriatic Sea.

De la Torre’s yacht, Amaral, arrived in Jamaica last summer with a fresh paint job and expanded hull. A Steward jet first flew de la Torre to the Caribbean to meet the yacht on June 12, records show. Also on the jet? Michael Callum, the head of physician services at Steward.

That same summer, vendors sued Steward for more than $24 million in outstanding bills. At Carney Hospital in Dorchester, nurses were squirreling away IV tubes and respirators, fearful they would run out.

Exotic summertime retreats were the norm for de la Torre. A year before, Steward’s Bombardier jet served as a personal shuttle service between Europe and Dallas, with de la Torre flying across the Atlantic eight times in three months. He visited six countries, embarked on two week-plus yacht trips, and partied alongside fellow executives aboard Amaral.

The 2022 European sojourn began on July 7 in Nice, France. After a week on the French Riviera, de la Torre’s friends — professional anglers and yacht salesmen — flew back to North Carolina on Steward’s jet. De la Torre and his wife stayed behind in Madrid, where Steward International is headquartered and de la Torre uses an 8 million euro apartment — purchased by Steward on his behalf, as the Globe exclusively reported earlier this month.

De la Torre then boarded Amaral on July 17 in Corfu, Greece. In a July 22 email, obtained by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project and shared with the Globe, the ship’s captain assured Steward staff that “Ralph is having a great time!”

The second yacht trip of that 2022 summer took place in September, this time off the coast of Croatia and Montenegro and catering to a group of high-ranking Steward personnel: Callum, Steward International CEO Armin Ernst, and Steward International’s general counsel Iñigo Gomez-Jordana. They cruised the Adriatic Sea for eight days. The trip concluded with a lavish bash aboard the yacht. Guests were invited “to party until wee hours of the morning, singing karaoke, dancing, and having a great time with some of your closest friends,” according to an itinerary reviewed by the Globe.

When asked about this excursion, de la Torre’s spokesperson called it “a business trip during which Dr. de la Torre and others met with government officials.”

The party coincided with the birthday of de la Torre’s wife, Nicole Acosta. She was the second-most frequent flier on Steward jets, besides her husband. The company’s bankruptcy filing lists her as an “Employee — Relative of Insider,” who received $10,944 in salary and $15,125 in nonbusiness flights in the year before bankruptcy.

Acosta’s Texas-based horse trainer regularly accompanied Acosta on her trips aboard Steward jets. In the fall of 2023, de la Torre, Acosta, and the trainer flew to Lexington, Ky, for an annual dressage championship. Acosta competed aboard a world-renowned gelding that once sold for over 3 million euros at auction. She swept the field, taking home four blue ribbons.

Acosta is a native of Costa Rica, the second-most popular destination for Steward jets, with 39 trips over 2022 and 2023.

Steward has no official business in the country. But de la Torre used to own at least four properties in Costa Rica. Callum, who is also a Steward board member, owned a property near one of de la Torre’s residences.

De la Torre almost exclusively used the company’s Bombardier Global 6000, the more lavish of the two models.

Another jet — the slim Dassault Falcon 2000 – was used mostly to fly other Steward executives throughout the United States and Acosta to Costa Rica, records show. The one exception: the summer of 2022, when both jets were used to ferry guests to de la Torre and Acosta’s wedding on the Amalfi Coast.

In the released statement, de la Torre’s spokesperson said the executive’s contract “incorporates the personal use of corporate jets.” She did not address questions about specific flights or travel by de la Torre’s and Acosta’s friends and associates. Nor did she respond to questions about de la Torre’s awareness of Steward’s financial woes amid his non-business travel.

The spokesperson noted that the locations in which Steward hospitals operate or seek to operate carry significant security risks and threats of “terrorism, high levels of violence, and kidnapping of high-net worth individuals.”

Advertisement

“A third-party private security consulting firm strongly recommended that he and his family use private transportation, including private air travel, for safety reasons given ‘the threat profile the head of a major health care system inherently faces.’”

The statement continued: “To be clear, his use of the corporate plane not only counted as compensation but was also taxed appropriately. Further, as we have said before, it is highly inaccurate to say or imply that the costs of the plane were born solely by Steward Health Care. Two other entities, including Steward International contributed significantly to these costs.”

Steward’s global entity, Steward International, was registered first as a company in Delaware in 2017, with de la Torre and Callum listed as managers. The Globe has previously reported that Steward executives regularly mixed funds among the entities, and that the companies are not as separate as executives claim.

A super midsize jet such as the Falcon costs roughly $1,900 an hour to operate, according to experts contacted by the Globe. The Bombardier runs closer to $2,700 an hour. At those hourly rates, roughly half a million dollars were spent flying Steward jets to and from Costa Rica from 2022 to 2023.

“One has to wonder,” said Bernard Black, a professor at Northwestern University with expertise in corporate governance. “Did the board know about all this and really think it was a good use of company funds? And how much time did this guy spend doing work?”

Source: Globe analysis of flight records

Khadija Sharife of the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project contributed to this report.

Credits
  • Reporters: Hanna Krueger and Yoohyun Jung
  • Editors: Brendan McCarthy and Mark Morrow
  • Visuals editor: Tim Rasmussen
  • Design: Ashley Borg, John Hancock
  • Illustration: Ashley Borg
  • Development and graphics: Kirkland An and John Hancock
  • Digital editor: Christina Prignano
  • Copy editor: Michael J. Bailey
  • Quality assurance: Michael Johnston
  • Audience: Cecilia Mazanec
  • SEO strategy: Ronke Idowu Reeves