Two weeks from today, Broward will wake up to news about who earned the Democratic Party's nominee to be Broward Sheriff. Who will it be?
Consider how each of these facts, on their own, in other parts of the country would be considered damning, and then consider what they -collectively- say about how things are done in South Florida politics and rates barely a shrug from most journalists.
I half-expect that among the younger reporters, esp. on TV, who lack any kind of institutional memories for what has gone on in South Florida in the past 30 years.
Few make an effort to learn the politcal
Whether it's:
a.) the South Florida Sun-Sentinel's inexplicable endorsement of disgraced former #Broward Sheriff #ScottIsrael, who was first suspended from office by FL Gov. Ron DeSantis and then had that removal made final when the Florida state Senate refused last October to reinstate him.
As most of you regular readers of this blog will recall, all four of Broward's Democratic senators -Lauren Book, Gary Farmer, Kevin Rader, Perry Thurston Jr.- voted for Israel's reinstatement as Sheriff, a vote and effort which raised many more questions among Broward citizens and voters -and local media- than the four of them seemed prepared for.
Text of endorsement is at bottom
b.) the bewildering endorsement and then quick rescinding and backtracking of an endorsement of him by the unpopular, problem-plagued Broward Teachers Union, after a large member and public backlash; or,
c.) via a previously unknown to me #SoFL lifestyle magazine called THINK, that's sold at Publix supermarkets, which currently features Scott Israel on the cover just as the Aug. 18th Democratic Party primary and Early Voting in Broward County nears, and as he seeks to regain the reins of that large, powerful and cash-dispensing political patronage machine that also deals with crime fighting.
Perhaps worst of all with respect to the latter, Scott Israel is the cover boy because there is a profile inside, and if you can believe it, that profile NEVER mentions the 17 students and teachers murdered at #MSD, or the murders @FLLFlyer!
I never heard of that magazine.— Stephanie #JournalismIsDead (@dwightyoakamfan) June 25, 2020
Follow-up to my 6/25 tweet: here's THINK cover, 1st 2 pages of so-called profile of disgraced ex-#Broward Sheriff #ScottIsrael that NEVER mentions #MSD or @FLLFlyer shooting, in a mag I'd never heard of B4 last month, but saw 4 sale @ #SheridanPlaza @Publix #HollywoodFL. 😡😡😡😡 pic.twitter.com/hNavaGSQZQ— HallandaleBeach/Hollywood Blog (@hbbtruth) July 26, 2020
-------------
So, here's a selected overview via Twitter of what's been happening the past few months in the race to be Broward Sheriff and the persistent efforts by allies and cronies of Scott Israel to sabotage things at BSO and find anything that they believe will publicly embarrass his successor, Gregory Tony.
Tony was savvy enough to get rid of many people at BSO who were high flyers under Israel, who, himself, was a very big believer in traditional political patronage, including hiring people to work for BSO not because of their outstanding abilities, talent or expertise, but rather because of who they were -a relative or child of an important supporter in an area where Israel wanted to be boss.
A good place to start reading about and/or understanding what's often seemed like often craven sense of entitlement that Scott Israel had exhibited is with my blog posts of 2013:
July 24, 2013
Broward County Ethics in Action! Sometimes the gravy train of cronyism leads you and your family to a yacht vacation to The Bahamas; Local10 investigative reporter Bob Norman asks Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel to answer questions about his family's yacht vacation after the Sheriff claimed paying $1,500 settled the matter. But websites say the value of that yacht trip is MUCH
MORE!; @CityEthics
https://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2013/07/broward-county-ethics-in-action.html
August 28, 2013
End-of-the-Summer BSO Blues continue under Broward Sheriff Scott Israel. Ethical, financial and management problems -and questions about his hiring so many high-priced political hires- hover over Sheriff Israel almost 10 months after his election, and are examined, separately, by Broward Beat's Buddy Nevins and Local10's Bob Norman.
http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2013/08/end-of-summer-bso-blues-continue-under.html
By the way, before you start re-reading some of the headlines and stories about what's been going on the past year with Scott Israel and Gregory Tony, ask yourself a question.
It concerns a frequent foil on this blog, someone who has exhibited such appalling personal and political behavior and so little interest in properly serving his hallandale beach constituents when I lived there, serial liar and manipulator Florida state Rep. Shevrin Jones, District 101, which includes part of Hollywood. Jones is now a candidate for state Senate District 34, and, most importantly for this post, is the son of the mayor of West Park, with a population that's smaller than many condominium developments in Florida, and less than half of Hallandale Beach's.
West Park is not so much a city as it is a political clubhouse -and the home of WPLG/Local10 News.
So, Jone not only has a primary job that pays him over $100,000 a year, despite nobody being especially clear what it is that he does for such a sum, considering how much time he's away in Tallahasse doing his second job as a state rep, but has, yes, a third job.
Wow, that's a lot of hats, isn't it?
A lot of situations where he has a loyalty to different people, right?
Well, in that third job of his, he's paid $72,000 a year by BSO for what is designated a part-time position.
Wow, $72,000 for a part-time position, when you already have two other jobs?
Well, when you know that BSO has a contract with the City of West Park, which his father was mayor of since it was incorporated, though not now, it all makes much more sense, doesn't it?
So that being said, if Jones had been in the Florida state Senate last Fall when they had to vote and decide whether or not to reinstate Scott Israel into his job after he'd been suspended by Governor DeSantis, how do you think he'd have voted?
(Assuming he wasn't smart enough to recuse himself from the vote, so he would not get charged with ethics violations?)
Well, why don't you ask him?
As I write this blog post on Wednesday morning August 5th, there are 13 days to go until the August 18th primary election where Jones is attempting to get promoted politically after many years of accomplishing very, very little as a state Rep., and become one of just 40 state senators in Florida, the third-largest state in the nation.
A political post from which I have long-believed based on simply keeping my eyes open and asking lots of questions, that Jones will devote every single waking day of trying desperately to inject himself onto the radar of South Florida news media under the flimsiest of possible reasons, something he has already been doing for years.
Why?
To become the successor in Congress to Rep. Frederica Wilson when she is no longer on the scene and can thoroughly trounce him.
Trust me, that's his goal, which is a very, very scary prospect condisdering how shallow and narcissistic he is.
In case you forgot, narcissistic personality disorder symptoms include an excessive need for admiration, disregard for others' feelings, an inability to handle any criticism, and a sense of entitlement.
Check.
I'll have more on that quest of Jones in an upcoming blog post, but returning to the question of Jones and his jobs, if you were a Broward voter who were to ask him how he'd have voted last October on Israel's reinstatement, that would put you one up on the South Florida press corps,
Not a single South Florida-based reporter has shown any interest in asking him this simple question and asking him to explain why.
Me, I think that speaks volumes.
These tweets are in reverse-chron order to flow more logically:
I am pleased that the court recognizes my authority as governor to suspend a public official for reasons of neglect of duty and incompetence. Now, I will ask the Florida Senate to move forward with the process of the formal removal of Scott Israel.— Ron DeSantis (@GovRonDeSantis) April 4, 2019
Was Broward senator asleep in his chair during Florida Senate debate on removing Scott Israel as sheriff? https://t.co/Z4k1NrKNlO pic.twitter.com/4dejRcJcPw— South Florida Sun Sentinel (@SunSentinel) October 24, 2019
The #Florida Senate voted to officially remove #ScottIsrael from his elected position as the sheriff of #BrowardCounty.— The Epoch Times (@EpochTimes) October 25, 2019
Families of some of the victims in the #Parkland shooting praised the decision to not reinstate Israel. https://t.co/JsINU17XEo
As predicted, ex Broward Sheriffs Officer Scot Peterson moves to dismiss criminal charges against him, since Florida Senate pinned responsibility for murders at Marjory Stoneman Douglas HS on suspended sheriff Scott Israel— Glenna Milberg (@GlennaWPLG) October 30, 2019
https://t.co/QWyOJs8h6J@WPLGLocal10 pic.twitter.com/05lHq4HWT8
Sheriff Gregory Tony officially launches his campaign for next year’s election, filing paperwork at the Broward Governmental Center. He’ll face Scott Israel, who was ousted from the post by the Florida Senate last month. pic.twitter.com/neJOoh4X7w— Skyler Swisher (@SkylerSwisher) November 4, 2019
Cost of Florida Senate special master last year topped $87,000, mostly for the case involving the removal of Scott Israel as Broward Sheriff.— Anthony Man (@browardpolitics) January 10, 2020
Special master recommended reinstating Israel.
Senate rejected recommendation & permanently suspended Israel.https://t.co/I63lXegddH
BREAKING: BSO deputies union will hold no-confidence vote on Sheriff Gregory Tony— WPLG Local 10 News (@WPLGLocal10) April 13, 2020
https://t.co/D3t8B2QfhZ
One doesn't need to be a believer in conspiracy theories, just aware of human behavior + how things REALLY work in #Broward govt/politics to know that #ScottIsrael minions @ #BSO have been planning/looking 4 pre-Election traps for Tony. @RedBroward @Buddynevins @BrittanyWallman— HallandaleBeach/Hollywood Blog (@hbbtruth) April 16, 2020
A newly disclosed development from decades ago about a killing involving @browardsheriff Gregory Tony unleashed a torrent of dramatically different assessments on Sunday —via @Susannah_Bryan @browardpolitics & @BrittanyWallman— Scott Travis (@smtravis) May 4, 2020
https://t.co/SatHa7VgPg
You mean a sheriff like #ScottIsrael w/an unethical taint fm beginning of his reign acting indignant abt being forced to publicly explain how poorly HIS #BSO responded?— HallandaleBeach/Hollywood Blog (@hbbtruth) May 4, 2020
Plus, an airport massacre where HIS crew behaved so erratically that TV reporters said @FBI was cursing them?
A federal judge has ruled that former Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel’s due-process rights weren't violated when the Florida Senate refused to reinstate him after Gov. Ron DeSantis suspended him from office. https://t.co/TgyeaYemK7— Miami Herald (@MiamiHerald) May 7, 2020
Former sheriff Scott Israel made some omissions for background check in 2004 — via @rolmeda https://t.co/Ww5MQWVO6I— Scott Travis (@smtravis) June 24, 2020
I was proud to sign #AlyssasLaw, which will require teachers & staff to have mobile apps that silently alert law enforcement to emergencies on school campuses. Thank you @lorialhadeff for your tireless efforts to help prevent future tragedies in honor of your daughter's memory. pic.twitter.com/c9saiZfNfz— Ron DeSantis (@GovRonDeSantis) July 2, 2020
#ScottIsrael - the frmer Broward Cnty Sheriff of the team that left a live shooter in the school, w/ am weapons, for 11 min.The dad of #AnthonyBorges said Israel barged in his son's hospital room- 5 sec & left. This was in the paper the next day-Anthony was unconscious. https://t.co/j1CUICbyeO pic.twitter.com/QKeLfR6yin— Charley (@CharleysJake) July 3, 2020
Isn't the real story here how the union leadership could have been so naive + disconnected -craven?- to think that this wld not happen?🤨— HallandaleBeach/Hollywood Blog (@hbbtruth) July 14, 2020
.@smtravis #Broward teacher's union pivots on endorsing former Broward Sheriff #ScottIsrael after getting blowback. https://t.co/nx4bEVws1R
(1,2) Today should have been Jaime's 17th birthday. This cake photo is from her 13th and last birthday. This is the beauty and the dancer that I miss. Doing a college tour as she enters her senior year & her graduation we will miss. Today, we will visit her at the cemetery. pic.twitter.com/eR330TfHY0— Fred Guttenberg (@fred_guttenberg) July 13, 2020
Sheriff Tony’s new ad is live! Sheriff Tony holds the bad cops accountable and puts the people of Broward County first. Ex-sheriff Scott Israel failed to stop police brutality at the Broward Sheriff's Office — and had a record of six unnecessary force complaints. pic.twitter.com/3yltCmNZ5m— Sheriff Gregory Tony 2020 (@sherifftony2020) July 14, 2020
The Sun Sentinel endorses the same man they previously called on to resign. https://t.co/hqaFLHVmjc— The Federalist (@FDRLST) July 17, 2020
@RedBroward NOT mentioned while #TedDeutch spouted Dem #TalkingPoints? It's the same week @SunSentinel + @BrowardTeachers endorsed #ScottIsrael for #Broward Sheriff.— HallandaleBeach/Hollywood Blog (@hbbtruth) July 19, 2020
Within 24 hrs, #BTU wld rescind pick after tsunami of backlash, but NOT @SoFlaOpinion. @CGreenbarg @politicofl
Meanwhile disgraced Former Sheriff Scott Israel is out Campaigning while positive with Covid pic.twitter.com/I70EBqw3d5— 305tilidie (@305tilidie1) July 20, 2020
Viewpoint: Sun Sentinel Endorses the Wrong Sheriff; Gregory Tony Deserves the Vote https://t.co/i0j4QLdDlA pic.twitter.com/BSJkralOog— Parkland Talk (@ParklandTalk) July 20, 2020
The @SunSentinel has a decision to make.— Hunter Pollack (@PollackHunter) July 22, 2020
Rescind their shameful endorsement of disgraced former Sheriff Scott Israel.
Or continue to support him—knowing his incompetence will cause history to repeat itself in Broward. https://t.co/eFTGCmWuue
Parkland dad, pastor say Broward sheriff candidate Israel misused their images in flyer https://t.co/Ugt42f4FpU— Chuck Rabin (@ChuckRabin) July 22, 2020
Scott Israel was okay with Jail deaths, excessive force and police brutality. please readhttps://t.co/eTyv6V8Hg9— 305tilidie (@305tilidie1) July 24, 2020
— 305tilidie (@305tilidie1) July 25, 2020
“I don’t want to apologize for anything I said,” @ScottJIsrael supporter Terry Scott said of Sheriff Tony. “He deserves it. It’s the truth, & I won’t take it back. I am a Black man. There is nothing racist in what I can say to another Black man.”— Scott Travis (@smtravis) July 27, 2020
https://t.co/ziWhzs2Rut
— Robert G Smith (@RobertS94525971) July 29, 2020
Current @sherifftony2020 again criticizes former Sheriff (& Dem primary foe) @ScottJIsrael for taking @goBCPBA police union endorsement.— Anthony Man (@browardpolitics) August 3, 2020
1st issue Tony cites: PBA endorsed @realDonaldTrump re-elect.
2nd issue:"This is a group that rejects the calls for meaningful police reform."
"There seems to be a double standard that makes it OK for some unions to make political endorsements and not OK for police unions to make political endorsements. That is wrong," says @goBCPBA President Rod Skirvin.— Anthony Man (@browardpolitics) August 3, 2020
Scott Israel tried to get famous from a massacre he enabled.— Andrew Pollack (@AndrewPollackFL) August 3, 2020
He lied to CNN.
He lied to the Governor.
He lied to the people of Broward County.
But Broward County is a cesspool of Democrats, so this failure of a Sheriff has a chance to be re-elected.https://t.co/QXDBndNZup
On August 18th, we decide the future of public safety in our community. Sheriff Tony has made BSO more accountable and more transparent. Let us show our state and the nation what an emphasis on reform and inclusion looks like for law enforcement. https://t.co/i3PVUXrk4C— Sheriff Gregory Tony 2020 (@sherifftony2020) August 3, 2020
Current @sherifftony2020 again criticizes former Sheriff (& Dem primary foe) @ScottJIsrael for taking @goBCPBA police union endorsement.— Anthony Man (@browardpolitics) August 3, 2020
1st issue Tony cites: PBA endorsed @realDonaldTrump re-elect.
2nd issue:"This is a group that rejects the calls for meaningful police reform."
"There seems to be a double standard that makes it OK for some unions to make political endorsements and not OK for police unions to make political endorsements. That is wrong," says @goBCPBA President Rod Skirvin.— Anthony Man (@browardpolitics) August 3, 2020
Scott Israel tried to get famous from a massacre he enabled.— Andrew Pollack (@AndrewPollackFL) August 3, 2020
He lied to CNN.
He lied to the Governor.
He lied to the people of Broward County.
But Broward County is a cesspool of Democrats, so this failure of a Sheriff has a chance to be re-elected.https://t.co/QXDBndNZup
He falsely tried to blame my wife for the massacre in front of thousands in attendance and millions watching CNN. How can this man even show his face again? Tell the people of Broward that they don’t want to reelect an abject failure! https://t.co/zeFKwai1hh— Chris Loesch (@ChrisLoesch) August 3, 2020
"I stood up to the NRA" –Fired Parkland Sheriff— NRA (@NRA) August 3, 2020
Scott Israel is pathetic. He continues to blame the law-abiding members of the NRA for the acts of a madman.
The Parkland tragedy happened on his watch. If he'd taken the shooter off the street, his community would've been safer.
Best friend in #DC was #Arkansas woman who loved #Japan as kid, and thru hard work became fluent enough to be hired by Jap. TV network as producer/reporter who'd go on WH overseas trips. Mention bec we'd talk 4 hrs abt diff b/w J + US re "responsibility."— HallandaleBeach/Hollywood Blog (@hbbtruth) August 4, 2020
Where's #ScottIsrael's?
@CGreenbarg 2 weeks B4 Dem primary election: Always one of my favorite #ScottIsrael gets-caught-but-lives-to-fight-another-day exposés by #BobNorman, circa '16. Feat. another unctuous #Broward Dem hack we both loathe!https://t.co/dOYzbd9KF1 @crespogram @newschica @PatriciaMazzei— HallandaleBeach/Hollywood Blog (@hbbtruth) August 4, 2020
----
Endorsement: Despite the past, Broward Democrats should nominate Scott Israel for sheriff https://t.co/XIWoEanwWR pic.twitter.com/AIvDgmnig3— South Florida Sun Sentinel (@SunSentinel) July 17, 2020
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Sun Sentinel Editorial Broward sheriff
Despite past, Dems should nominate Israel
July 19, 2020
The six-way Democratic primary for Broward County sheriff is one of those elections without an ideal choice, in which the question is simply which of the viable candidacies is the better one. That is why we recommend Scott Israel, the former sheriff.
Gregory Tony, the incumbent, should not have been appointed and does not deserve to be elected. The other four candidates lack sufficient money and political support to be competitive. There are only two viable candidates in this race: Israel and Tony.
This has been our most difficult endorsement decision. We recognize that it will be poorly received among the families shattered by the February 2018 massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, where a former student firing a military-style semi-automatic rifle left 17 students and faculty dead, and 17 injured. Their grief is beyond anyone's comprehension and deserves respect.
Many of them held Israel to blame, as did Gov. Ron DeSantis when he carried out a campaign promise to suspend him.
We thought so too, at first, and advised then-governor Rick Scott to remove Israel.
With time, however, that judgment seems harsh. Israel could not have prevented the tragedy. The school system was more to blame. So was the FBI, which did nothing about a credible warning of a potential school shooter.
Israel's most serious failing was a policy that left it to a deputy's discretion whether to engage an active shooter.
Overall, Israel had been a good sheriff.
The question, then, is whether Tony, his major rival, deserves the office to which DeSantis appointed him upon suspending Israel.
He does not, and the department would be in better hands with Israel.
Tony's career is marred by deceit. He lied to DeSantis to get the job. He lied by concealing a significant fact that the governor and the public deserved to know - that when he was 14, he had shot and killed another young man. He also withheld this fact from the Coral Springs Police Department, where he began his law enforcement career 15 years ago.
He also kept from Coral Springs that he had used a hallucinogenic substance - LSD - in the 1990s, and that he had been charged with passing a bad check while a student at Florida State University. He told Coral Springs he had not known about the charge.
Besides credibility, there also are questions of conflict of interest, a hot temper ill befitting the office, and injudicious conduct in his private life.
Israel and Tony dominate the field of six. There are no longer runoffs in Florida, so the nomination may be won with a small fraction of the vote.
Voters have one chance to get it right.
The nominee - and the likely next sheriff, since Democrats dominate Broward politics - will either be Israel, a veteran at 64, or Tony, who at 41 seems to be out of his depth despite the five stars that adorn his collar.
Israel's tenure before the Parkland tragedy was progressive and without personal scandal. As we have said before:
"In many ways Israel has been a good sheriff ... Burglaries and violent crime are down. He's taken stands against guns on campus, the Stand your Ground law and people openly carrying guns. He's made reluctant deputies wear body cameras and at least one non-lethal device - like a Taser or baton - on their belts. And he's masterful at community relations, handing out turkeys at Thanksgiving, riding in the LGBTQ pride parade and attending services at diverse churches and temples."
BSO's failures at Parkland
Israel could not have known that Scot Peterson, the decorated deputy assigned to the high school in Parkland, would prove to be a coward. Peterson hid outside while Coral Springs police rushed in.
The reason that BSO deputies didn't take the lead owed to the vagaries of Broward's 911 system, which routed calls from inside the school to Coral Springs PD. The sheriff's dispatcher initially knew only what Peterson was reporting on his radio - misinformation about possible gunshots outside and directions for deputies to stay back.
BSO's epic failure that day remains seared in our collective memory. While some deputies eventually demonstrated bravery, far too many showed cowardice, hiding behind trees, cars and walls. Besides Peterson, seven other deputies also heard the gunfire and failed to pursue the shooter. The Marjory Stoneman Douglas Public Safety Commission, which investigated the tragedy in detail, said they showed "no sense of urgency" despite hearing gunshots on a school campus. And unlike Coral Springs police, who every year trained to respond to active shooters, BSO only held active-shooter drills every three years.
Israel was criticized fiercely - including by this editorial board - for his decision to change BSO policy to give deputies the discretion, rather than the duty, to confront an active shooter. It turns out, however, that other Florida sheriffs had a similar policy, which Israel says was necessary to avoid compelling a deputy to walk into a trap.
However, following criticism in the investigating commission's initial report, he changed the word "may" to "shall." The policy, maintained by his successor, allows for "very limited extenuating circumstances" when a sole deputy might have to wait for reinforcements.
Israel might never have been removed had he taken responsibility for what happened, rather than credit for the response, which the Sun Sentinel's reporting proved to be untrue. For BSO's response was his responsibility, if not his fault. There is a difference.
Neither can Israel's boastful defense in the days that followed be forgotten. We can only hope he's since learned some humility. We saw hopeful signs during our interview.
Now the question is whether Tony is a suitable sheriff.
The governor's hasty choice
DeSantis chose poorly in his haste to keep a campaign promise to suspend Israel days after taking office. He knew little about Tony other than that he was then a Republican, and that he had been recommended by a Parkland parent.
There's no sign that the governor questioned whether Tony's time at Coral Springs PD - which he left after 11 years as a sergeant - qualified him to manage an entity as enormous and complex as the Broward Sheriff's Office. Only a cursory records check was done, rather than a proper background investigation.
Even so, there was a place on the form where Tony should have revealed the shooting.
Living in a rough section of Philadelphia, he had shot and killed a neighbor, 18, who he says was threatening his life and the life of his brother. A newspaper reported that he was taken into custody. A juvenile court found him blameless and apparently expunged the record. Now he quibbles that it was not technically an arrest because of his age.
Law enforcement is not just another line of work. Police have a license to kill. DeSantis was entitled to know that Tony had already killed. But for the reporting of the Florida Bulldog, an online investigative news site, it might still be a secret.
Asked his reaction to the revelations, DeSantis told reporters in May: "It's not like he's my sheriff. I didn't even know the guy."
Decisions to withhold information from the governor - and to swear that false answers on law enforcement documents were "true and correct"- came from the man Tony is today, not the teenager he was in Philadelphia.
A referendum on the governor
The governor didn't just bungle Israel's replacement. He mishandled the suspension itself, which also faulted Israel for BSO's response to the mass shooting at the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport the year before.
The special master who reviewed DeSantis's suspension order for the Florida Senate concluded that the governor had failed to prove a single charge.
"Insistence is all the governor gives," wrote Dudley Goodlette, a respected Republican lawyer from Naples who once chaired the House Judiciary Committee.
Goodlette said it would be an "unworkable precedent" to remove the sheriff over the failures of those who responded to the school. As for the airport incident, he said the deputy stationed there had reacted promptly to arrest the killer.
In disregarding Goodlette's legal advice, the Senate turned the Broward Sheriff's Office into a partisan trophy. It voted 25-15, mostly along party lines, to support the Republican governor by removing the Democratic sheriff. Although DeSantis had chosen a Black to replace a white sheriff, Broward's two Black senators voted to reinstate Israel, as did the three who are white.
At last word, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement was investigating whether Tony broke the law by omitting the Philadelphia incident from the affidavit he submitted for his background check.
Citing our editorial calling for his resignation or suspension because of his non-disclosure, Tony declined our invitation to a joint candidate interview. Israel accepted, along with rival Al Pollock, a retired sheriff's colonel. We separately interviewed Andrew Smalling and Willie Jones together. Santiago Vazquez was unable to attend. You can view the videos online.
Of note, Israel retains significant support among Broward's Black politicians and opinion leaders. They credit him with always listening and working with them to stop the schoolhouse-to-prison pipeline. They resent that DeSantis replaced a Democratic sheriff with a Republican appointee who was not known in Broward. Tony is now a registered Democrat.
For many, this election is as much a referendum on DeSantis as it is on Israel and Tony.
Tony's tenure and temper
Tony's problems go beyond the past that he concealed. He twice lost his temper with deputies grieving the death of a colleague from COVID-19 - first at the hospital, then at the funeral home. Abruptly and rashly, he suspended Jeff Bell, president of the deputy sheriffs' union, after Bell accused him of not giving officers enough masks and other protective equipment against the coronavirus.
Even if Tony considered the criticism unfair, as perhaps it was, he should have had the maturity to bear it.
Earlier, he lost his temper with members of the Tamarac City Commission over their desire to have a third deputy barred from policing there following the rough arrest of a 15-year-old Taravella High School freshman. Tony, who had already suspended two others, barked back. "I will not stand here as if I'm suspect to anything. I will not be lectured to."
He also criticized the state attorney for dismissing the charges against the student.
Now, Tony's advertising touts him as a terror for rogue cops. But to use the cases of men whom he has fired or suspended as political fodder jeopardizes the successful prosecution of the misdemeanor charges against three of them.
Moreover, Tony waited two days past a deadline in state law to suspend a sergeant whom he accused of failing to react during the Parkland shooting. An arbitrator has ordered the man restored to duty with substantial back pay.
Poorly executed discipline is as bad as none at all.
Public and private dealings
How Tony spends the public's money has also raised questions.
He gave a $750,000 contract for bleeding control kits to a South Carolina company, North American Rescue LLC, with which he had had a side business relationship. Blue Spear Solutions, formed by Tony and his wife, marketed North American's products. Recently, Tony's affiliated PAC, Broward First, reported contributions of $5,000 and $10,000 that the Florida Bulldog traced to the founder and an employee of North American Rescue.
Tony refused to comment when the Bulldog asked about the sizable pay raises he had given to five BSO employees who moonlight for Blue Spear, which his wife runs.
Broward First, which has raised more than $1 million to support Tony, got much of it in a single $500,000 contribution from Donald Sussman, a Fort Lauderdale hedge fund investor. That's more than the entire $347,725 raised by Israel's PAC.
As for direct contributions to their campaigns, Israel and Tony lead the field with $153,205 and $163,611 respectively. Pollock trails them with $96,290.
Tony was in private life five years ago when he and his wife posed semi-nude for photographs at what appears to be a swingers club in Miami. Granted, public officials are entitled to private lives, but children can find these raunchy photographs on the internet. And swingers clubs hardly represent our community's values. We assume DeSantis didn't know about that, either.
The other candidates
Among the other Democratic candidates, we were particularly impressed with Andrew Smalling, a former captain and acting major in the sheriff's office - and a former chief in Lauderhill - who is now a faculty member and assistant dean at the Broward College Institute for Public Safety.
Smalling, 58, has constructive positions on reforms in criminal law and police practices, especially recruiting. He was the only candidate to talk about the excessive militarization of civilian police agencies and their emphasis on a "warrior mentality." He likely would be a leading candidate were the position being filled by appointment, as it should be, so that political connections and fund-raising wouldn't be factors. Regrettably, Florida doesn't allow that option and Smalling's campaign has gained little traction.
Pollock, who is 66 and lives in Davie, is an experienced law enforcement officer who has support from the unions representing deputies, sergeants, firefighters and paramedics. The jailers' union backs Israel. None of BSO's unions have endorsed Tony.
In our candidate interview, we questioned whether Pollock would be tough enough in renegotiating contracts that make it difficult to discipline or remove dubious officers.
Pollock and Israel are both harshly critical of Tony, but we believe only Israel has enough political support to defeat him.
The sheriff employs nearly 6,000 people for patrol and investigations, firefighting and rescue, regional communications, maintaining four jails and operating 911. The budget is almost $1 billion. It is a demanding job that calls for much judgment, experience and integrity, as well as for sufficient political skills to get elected.
The remaining Democratic candidates are Santiago Vazquez and Willie Jones. Jones, 65, retired from the BSO. He calls for building better relations between the command staff and rank and file. He ran a distant second to Israel in the 2016 Democratic primary.
Vazquez, 51, is a 23-year veteran of the BSO, who ran against Israel as a Republican four years ago. He did not participate in our joint interview with Smalling and Jones.
We encourage you to read all of the candidates' questionnaires and view our interviews with them online.
Editorials are the opinion of the Sun Sentinel Editorial Board and written by one of its members or a designee. The Editorial Board consists of Editorial Page Editor Rosemary O'Hara, Dan Sweeney, Steve Bousquet and Editor-in-Chief Julie Anderson.
-----
Twitter: @hbbtruth, https:// twitter.com/hbbtruth/with_ replies
July 19, 2020
The six-way Democratic primary for Broward County sheriff is one of those elections without an ideal choice, in which the question is simply which of the viable candidacies is the better one. That is why we recommend Scott Israel, the former sheriff.
Gregory Tony, the incumbent, should not have been appointed and does not deserve to be elected. The other four candidates lack sufficient money and political support to be competitive. There are only two viable candidates in this race: Israel and Tony.
This has been our most difficult endorsement decision. We recognize that it will be poorly received among the families shattered by the February 2018 massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, where a former student firing a military-style semi-automatic rifle left 17 students and faculty dead, and 17 injured. Their grief is beyond anyone's comprehension and deserves respect.
Many of them held Israel to blame, as did Gov. Ron DeSantis when he carried out a campaign promise to suspend him.
We thought so too, at first, and advised then-governor Rick Scott to remove Israel.
With time, however, that judgment seems harsh. Israel could not have prevented the tragedy. The school system was more to blame. So was the FBI, which did nothing about a credible warning of a potential school shooter.
Israel's most serious failing was a policy that left it to a deputy's discretion whether to engage an active shooter.
Overall, Israel had been a good sheriff.
The question, then, is whether Tony, his major rival, deserves the office to which DeSantis appointed him upon suspending Israel.
He does not, and the department would be in better hands with Israel.
Tony's career is marred by deceit. He lied to DeSantis to get the job. He lied by concealing a significant fact that the governor and the public deserved to know - that when he was 14, he had shot and killed another young man. He also withheld this fact from the Coral Springs Police Department, where he began his law enforcement career 15 years ago.
He also kept from Coral Springs that he had used a hallucinogenic substance - LSD - in the 1990s, and that he had been charged with passing a bad check while a student at Florida State University. He told Coral Springs he had not known about the charge.
Besides credibility, there also are questions of conflict of interest, a hot temper ill befitting the office, and injudicious conduct in his private life.
Israel and Tony dominate the field of six. There are no longer runoffs in Florida, so the nomination may be won with a small fraction of the vote.
Voters have one chance to get it right.
The nominee - and the likely next sheriff, since Democrats dominate Broward politics - will either be Israel, a veteran at 64, or Tony, who at 41 seems to be out of his depth despite the five stars that adorn his collar.
Israel's tenure before the Parkland tragedy was progressive and without personal scandal. As we have said before:
"In many ways Israel has been a good sheriff ... Burglaries and violent crime are down. He's taken stands against guns on campus, the Stand your Ground law and people openly carrying guns. He's made reluctant deputies wear body cameras and at least one non-lethal device - like a Taser or baton - on their belts. And he's masterful at community relations, handing out turkeys at Thanksgiving, riding in the LGBTQ pride parade and attending services at diverse churches and temples."
BSO's failures at Parkland
Israel could not have known that Scot Peterson, the decorated deputy assigned to the high school in Parkland, would prove to be a coward. Peterson hid outside while Coral Springs police rushed in.
The reason that BSO deputies didn't take the lead owed to the vagaries of Broward's 911 system, which routed calls from inside the school to Coral Springs PD. The sheriff's dispatcher initially knew only what Peterson was reporting on his radio - misinformation about possible gunshots outside and directions for deputies to stay back.
BSO's epic failure that day remains seared in our collective memory. While some deputies eventually demonstrated bravery, far too many showed cowardice, hiding behind trees, cars and walls. Besides Peterson, seven other deputies also heard the gunfire and failed to pursue the shooter. The Marjory Stoneman Douglas Public Safety Commission, which investigated the tragedy in detail, said they showed "no sense of urgency" despite hearing gunshots on a school campus. And unlike Coral Springs police, who every year trained to respond to active shooters, BSO only held active-shooter drills every three years.
Israel was criticized fiercely - including by this editorial board - for his decision to change BSO policy to give deputies the discretion, rather than the duty, to confront an active shooter. It turns out, however, that other Florida sheriffs had a similar policy, which Israel says was necessary to avoid compelling a deputy to walk into a trap.
However, following criticism in the investigating commission's initial report, he changed the word "may" to "shall." The policy, maintained by his successor, allows for "very limited extenuating circumstances" when a sole deputy might have to wait for reinforcements.
Israel might never have been removed had he taken responsibility for what happened, rather than credit for the response, which the Sun Sentinel's reporting proved to be untrue. For BSO's response was his responsibility, if not his fault. There is a difference.
Neither can Israel's boastful defense in the days that followed be forgotten. We can only hope he's since learned some humility. We saw hopeful signs during our interview.
Now the question is whether Tony is a suitable sheriff.
The governor's hasty choice
DeSantis chose poorly in his haste to keep a campaign promise to suspend Israel days after taking office. He knew little about Tony other than that he was then a Republican, and that he had been recommended by a Parkland parent.
There's no sign that the governor questioned whether Tony's time at Coral Springs PD - which he left after 11 years as a sergeant - qualified him to manage an entity as enormous and complex as the Broward Sheriff's Office. Only a cursory records check was done, rather than a proper background investigation.
Even so, there was a place on the form where Tony should have revealed the shooting.
Living in a rough section of Philadelphia, he had shot and killed a neighbor, 18, who he says was threatening his life and the life of his brother. A newspaper reported that he was taken into custody. A juvenile court found him blameless and apparently expunged the record. Now he quibbles that it was not technically an arrest because of his age.
Law enforcement is not just another line of work. Police have a license to kill. DeSantis was entitled to know that Tony had already killed. But for the reporting of the Florida Bulldog, an online investigative news site, it might still be a secret.
Asked his reaction to the revelations, DeSantis told reporters in May: "It's not like he's my sheriff. I didn't even know the guy."
Decisions to withhold information from the governor - and to swear that false answers on law enforcement documents were "true and correct"- came from the man Tony is today, not the teenager he was in Philadelphia.
A referendum on the governor
The governor didn't just bungle Israel's replacement. He mishandled the suspension itself, which also faulted Israel for BSO's response to the mass shooting at the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport the year before.
The special master who reviewed DeSantis's suspension order for the Florida Senate concluded that the governor had failed to prove a single charge.
"Insistence is all the governor gives," wrote Dudley Goodlette, a respected Republican lawyer from Naples who once chaired the House Judiciary Committee.
Goodlette said it would be an "unworkable precedent" to remove the sheriff over the failures of those who responded to the school. As for the airport incident, he said the deputy stationed there had reacted promptly to arrest the killer.
In disregarding Goodlette's legal advice, the Senate turned the Broward Sheriff's Office into a partisan trophy. It voted 25-15, mostly along party lines, to support the Republican governor by removing the Democratic sheriff. Although DeSantis had chosen a Black to replace a white sheriff, Broward's two Black senators voted to reinstate Israel, as did the three who are white.
At last word, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement was investigating whether Tony broke the law by omitting the Philadelphia incident from the affidavit he submitted for his background check.
Citing our editorial calling for his resignation or suspension because of his non-disclosure, Tony declined our invitation to a joint candidate interview. Israel accepted, along with rival Al Pollock, a retired sheriff's colonel. We separately interviewed Andrew Smalling and Willie Jones together. Santiago Vazquez was unable to attend. You can view the videos online.
Of note, Israel retains significant support among Broward's Black politicians and opinion leaders. They credit him with always listening and working with them to stop the schoolhouse-to-prison pipeline. They resent that DeSantis replaced a Democratic sheriff with a Republican appointee who was not known in Broward. Tony is now a registered Democrat.
For many, this election is as much a referendum on DeSantis as it is on Israel and Tony.
Tony's tenure and temper
Tony's problems go beyond the past that he concealed. He twice lost his temper with deputies grieving the death of a colleague from COVID-19 - first at the hospital, then at the funeral home. Abruptly and rashly, he suspended Jeff Bell, president of the deputy sheriffs' union, after Bell accused him of not giving officers enough masks and other protective equipment against the coronavirus.
Even if Tony considered the criticism unfair, as perhaps it was, he should have had the maturity to bear it.
Earlier, he lost his temper with members of the Tamarac City Commission over their desire to have a third deputy barred from policing there following the rough arrest of a 15-year-old Taravella High School freshman. Tony, who had already suspended two others, barked back. "I will not stand here as if I'm suspect to anything. I will not be lectured to."
He also criticized the state attorney for dismissing the charges against the student.
Now, Tony's advertising touts him as a terror for rogue cops. But to use the cases of men whom he has fired or suspended as political fodder jeopardizes the successful prosecution of the misdemeanor charges against three of them.
Moreover, Tony waited two days past a deadline in state law to suspend a sergeant whom he accused of failing to react during the Parkland shooting. An arbitrator has ordered the man restored to duty with substantial back pay.
Poorly executed discipline is as bad as none at all.
Public and private dealings
How Tony spends the public's money has also raised questions.
He gave a $750,000 contract for bleeding control kits to a South Carolina company, North American Rescue LLC, with which he had had a side business relationship. Blue Spear Solutions, formed by Tony and his wife, marketed North American's products. Recently, Tony's affiliated PAC, Broward First, reported contributions of $5,000 and $10,000 that the Florida Bulldog traced to the founder and an employee of North American Rescue.
Tony refused to comment when the Bulldog asked about the sizable pay raises he had given to five BSO employees who moonlight for Blue Spear, which his wife runs.
Broward First, which has raised more than $1 million to support Tony, got much of it in a single $500,000 contribution from Donald Sussman, a Fort Lauderdale hedge fund investor. That's more than the entire $347,725 raised by Israel's PAC.
As for direct contributions to their campaigns, Israel and Tony lead the field with $153,205 and $163,611 respectively. Pollock trails them with $96,290.
Tony was in private life five years ago when he and his wife posed semi-nude for photographs at what appears to be a swingers club in Miami. Granted, public officials are entitled to private lives, but children can find these raunchy photographs on the internet. And swingers clubs hardly represent our community's values. We assume DeSantis didn't know about that, either.
The other candidates
Among the other Democratic candidates, we were particularly impressed with Andrew Smalling, a former captain and acting major in the sheriff's office - and a former chief in Lauderhill - who is now a faculty member and assistant dean at the Broward College Institute for Public Safety.
Smalling, 58, has constructive positions on reforms in criminal law and police practices, especially recruiting. He was the only candidate to talk about the excessive militarization of civilian police agencies and their emphasis on a "warrior mentality." He likely would be a leading candidate were the position being filled by appointment, as it should be, so that political connections and fund-raising wouldn't be factors. Regrettably, Florida doesn't allow that option and Smalling's campaign has gained little traction.
Pollock, who is 66 and lives in Davie, is an experienced law enforcement officer who has support from the unions representing deputies, sergeants, firefighters and paramedics. The jailers' union backs Israel. None of BSO's unions have endorsed Tony.
In our candidate interview, we questioned whether Pollock would be tough enough in renegotiating contracts that make it difficult to discipline or remove dubious officers.
Pollock and Israel are both harshly critical of Tony, but we believe only Israel has enough political support to defeat him.
The sheriff employs nearly 6,000 people for patrol and investigations, firefighting and rescue, regional communications, maintaining four jails and operating 911. The budget is almost $1 billion. It is a demanding job that calls for much judgment, experience and integrity, as well as for sufficient political skills to get elected.
The remaining Democratic candidates are Santiago Vazquez and Willie Jones. Jones, 65, retired from the BSO. He calls for building better relations between the command staff and rank and file. He ran a distant second to Israel in the 2016 Democratic primary.
Vazquez, 51, is a 23-year veteran of the BSO, who ran against Israel as a Republican four years ago. He did not participate in our joint interview with Smalling and Jones.
We encourage you to read all of the candidates' questionnaires and view our interviews with them online.
Editorials are the opinion of the Sun Sentinel Editorial Board and written by one of its members or a designee. The Editorial Board consists of Editorial Page Editor Rosemary O'Hara, Dan Sweeney, Steve Bousquet and Editor-in-Chief Julie Anderson.
-----
Dave
David B. Smith
Hallandale Beach/Hollywood Blog: http://www. hallandalebeachblog.blogspot. com/
Instagram: https://www. instagram.com/hbbtruth/
Travel Massive: https:// travelmassive.com/dbsmith