South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Sheriff ’s Office: District chief removed

Cause has not been released; office will appoint an interim leader until replacemen­t is found

- By Lisa J. Huriash and Angie DiMichele

PARKLAND — The chief of the Parkland district of the Broward Sheriff ’s Office was “relieved of duties” Friday, the city’s mayor, Rich Walker, said.

The Broward Sheriff ’s Office confirmed in an email late Friday that Capt. Craig Calavetta was “removed from his assignment as district chief in Parkland.”

It is unclear why Calavetta, who has worked as the executive officer in Parkland since 2021, was removed from the post.

The removal comes a week after someone reported finding two guns at Somerset Parkland Academy to a school resource deputy on June 2. The Sheriff ’s Office said last week deputies took the guns for safekeepin­g as they investigat­ed how the weapons got into the school. No arrest had been made, the Sheriff ’s Office said.

Walker said Sheriff Gregory Tony relayed that the Sheriff ’s Office is investigat­ing the circumstan­ces around how the two guns ended up on the campus on June 2 and that the incident at the school is an active internal investigat­ion.

“How it was handled, that’s going to come out,” Walker said.

The Sheriff ’s Office released a statement from Tony late Friday: “Since 2019, my administra­tion has worked diligently and relentless­ly to earn the trust of our Parkland residents. The journey toward that trust required advanced training, enhanced investigat­ive practices, policy reforms, as well as the procuremen­t of essential tools and equipment. More importantl­y, it required accountabi­lity and transparen­cy. I will not allow anyone in leadership to compromise the integrity of this office by deliberate­ly providing false informatio­n to administra­tion,” Sheriff Gregory Tony said.

The guns were unintentio­nally brought into the school inside of a closed box, the Florida Charter School Alliance said in an email June 3, while other items were being unloaded from the principal’s car. The guns belonged to the principal, the Sheriff ’s Office said.

The school’s governing agency said the box containing the guns was locked in a room that teachers and staff did not have

access to and that staff were unaware of what was inside.

It remains unclear who found the guns and reported them to the school resource deputy.

The charter school alliance’s statement said, “BSO Parkland police investigat­ed the matter and determined there was no threat.”

“No one intended to bring a weapon into the building. The box was among many items brought into the locked room from the principal’s vehicle,” the Florida Charter School Alliance’s email said.

A voicemail left on Calavetta’s cell phone was not returned Friday evening.

Todd DeAngelis, Parkland spokesman, said the city will eventually pick its own chief from among Sheriff ’s Office candidates, and in the meantime, the agency will appoint an interim chief.

Calavetta started his law enforcemen­t career as a public safety officer in Parkland in 1991, according to his biography on the Sheriff ’s Office’s website. He started working for the Sheriff ’s Office in 1999 as a road patrol deputy in Dania Beach.

Calavetta had served as a Dania Beach detective, a member of the Tamarac district Criminal Investigat­ions Unit and the Broward County Dive Rescue Team, the bio says, before he was promoted to sergeant in 2007.

He led the Sheriff’s Office’s Economic Crimes Unit in 2015 and was promoted to lieutenant two years later, the bio says, and was the patrol commander of the night shift in the Pompano Beach district.

Calavetta was assigned to be the Parkland executive officer in 2021 and promoted to captain that same year, according to the Sheriff ’s Office website.

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