Miami Herald

Charges against former state health department worker are dismissed after she admits guilt

- BY CAMELLIA BURRIS cburris@miamiheral­d.com

Former Department of Health data analyst turned whistleblo­wer Rebekah Jones reached an agreement with state prosecutor­s to dismiss the criminal hacking charges against her. As a condition of the dismissal, Jones admitted she was guilty.

Amid suspicions that Jones illegally accessed the Florida Department of Health System to send a message on the agency’s internal platform, police searched her home in December 2020. A subsequent search of her electronic­s suggested she sent a message to 1,750 people, downloaded confidenti­al data and saved it to her devices, according to the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t.

Jones was charged with an offense against users of computers, computer systems, computer networks and electronic devices, a third-degree felony. Jones officially admitted guilt as part of the Dec. 8 agreement.

This saga began in

May 2020 when Jones accused Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administra­tion of manipulati­ng COVID-19 data. After raising concerns about the lack of transparen­cy within the agency, she said her responsibi­lities and duties were taken away, citing the loss of her position of overseeing the COVID-19 dashboard.

The state suspected her of gaining “unauthoriz­ed access” to an employee-messaging platform to send a group text by using her old log-in credential­s. The state alleged she instructed her former employees to “be a hero” and “speak up” in a Nov. 10 message.

Jones denied sending the email at the time.

Attention on Jones heightened in December 2020 when the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t

raided her Tallahasse­e home to execute a search warrant of her computer equipment.

Agents entered home with guns drawn in a recording captured by a camera on Jones’ bookshelf.

FDLE released about 30 minutes of police body-camera footage showing portions of the raid after Jones claimed on Twitter that the agents “pointed a gun in my face. They pointed guns at my kids.”

FDLE denied that agents pointed their guns at anyone.

Shortly thereafter, in January 2021, the state issued an arrest warrant for Jones, charging her with one count of offenses against users of computers, computer systems, computer networks and electronic devices.

On December 8, 2022, Jones announced, via the social-media platform substack, that the state attorney was dismissing the charges against her, contingent, in part, on her $20,000 payment to police for “investigat­ive costs.”

While detailing the terms of the deferred prosecutio­n agreement, she lamented that she had been subjected to an unfair justice system with “unchecked power to intimidate people into silence and compliance.” She took aim at DeSantis, referring to his supporters as “thugs” and claimed that his actions were an attack on speech, science and freedom.

Court documents show that prosecutio­n against Jones will be deferred for 24 months, conditione­d on her fulfillmen­t of its terms. Among these obligation­s include seeing a licensed mental-health profession­al of the state’s choosing, admitting her guilt of the offense charged, completing 150 hours of community service at a minimum rate of 13 hours per week, and working regularly at a lawful occupation.

Any violation of these conditions affords the state attorney the right to revoke or modify the conditions of Jones’ deferred prosecutio­n.

 ?? ?? Rebekah Jones
Rebekah Jones

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