Orlando Sentinel

Lopez is fresh start Osceola County Sheriff ’s Office needs

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The killing of George Floyd has forced police agencies to re-evaluate how they do their jobs. At least, it have them doing some soul-searching.

One of the central questions in electing a sheriff for Osceola County is which candidate shows the greatest capacity for introspect­ion — then keep what works and change what doesn’t.

In the Democratic primary, we think Marco Lopez, a veteran of the U.S. Navy and the Osceola Sheriff ’s Office, is that candidate. (The winner will face Luis “Tony” Fernandez, a no-party-affiliatio­n candidate, in the fall.)

Lopez wants to establish a closer bond between the community and his agency. He’s dedicated to increasing the percentage of minority deputies and staff to serve a county whose Hispanic population is pushing 60%.

He wants to create a review board to provide some community oversight of the agency. We like some of his simple, common-sense ideas, like teaching non-Spanish speaking deputies some key phrases to help them communicat­e and connect with the Spanish speakers. (Interestin­g note about Lopez is he speaks three languages — English, Spanish and Portuguese.)

He talks about the need for more training that focuses on de-escalating confrontat­ions and helping law enforcers understand the nature of bias.

Law enforcemen­t experience is important in a sheriff, but Lopez has more than that. He enlisted at an early age and was deployed overseas. In all Lopez says he spent 22 years in the military. At the Sheriff ’s Office he was made a sergeant and spent 16 years in a variety of patrol and investigat­ive roles. He now owns his own security consulting business.

Osceola has two other candidates in the primary, and both of them are highly qualified.

That includes the incumbent sheriff, Russ Gibson, a 35-year veteran of law enforcemen­t. He was elected in 2016 and, to his credit, has boosted the number of minority deputies on the force, particular­ly the number of Hispanic deputies, which has grown from about one-quarter of the deputies to about one-third today.

He’s made strides in his outreach to the county’s sizable Hispanic population as well.

But in other ways Gibson has been late to the party. He says he wants to establish a civilian review board as a community watchdog, but he’s had nearly four years to make that happen before now. What’s been the holdup? Is it a priority now because so much public attention is focused on having more oversight?

Gibson’s also been slow in getting deputies equipped with body-worn cameras, which hold authoritie­s the public accountabl­e. While many other agencies were making steady progress, it was 2 1⁄2 years after Gibson’s election before the office sought a federal grant to equip all of its deputies.

Gibson also can have a thin skin. It was hard to see the point of his public feud with State Attorney Aramis Ayala over the timing of arrests in an Osceola County homicide. We’re not picking sides here, but neither of the officials was demonstrat­ing the cooperatio­n needed to make sure justice was being served.

Mike Fisher is the third candidate. He spent nearly 30 years at the Sheriff ’s Office before retiring as a captain and going to work for Universal Orlando’s security operation. He’s well qualified for the job, no doubt, but in an interview with the candidates seemed too interested in picking fights with the sheriff.

In this field of Democrats, we think Lopez has the best chance of establishi­ng a balance between effective law enforcemen­t and implementi­ng the kind of change that will create a stronger bond between the community and the agency.

 ?? RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Protests like this one in Kissimmee show the growing movement for police to rethink how they go about their jobs.
RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL Protests like this one in Kissimmee show the growing movement for police to rethink how they go about their jobs.
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