Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Six firefighte­rs fired over noose, obscenitie­s

They defaced photos of black colleague, his wife, mom and children, officials say

- By David Smiley and Charles Rabin

Six Miami firefighte­rs have been fired after someone hung a noose over a black colleague’s family photo and drew lewd pictures on photograph­s of his wife, mother and kids.

The terminatio­ns, handed down Wednesday, follow a police investigat­ion into the Sept. 9 incident at a city fire station. More than 20 people were interviewe­d under oath and nearly a dozen firefighte­rs were investigat­ed, including five who remain employed by the department and under scrutiny. Among those fired: William Bryson Jr., the son of former Fire Chief William “Shorty” Bryson.

The firings are similar to an August incident in Pompano Beach, where a firefighte­r recruit was fired and three others resigned when a noose was found hanging over the seat of a black firefighte­r.

Pompano officials said the noose was found at Pompano Beach Fire Training Center, hanging over a desk and chair and next to the nametag of Vilbert Green, the only black firefighte­r recruit in a class of six. Green took a picture of what he found after returning from an activity outside the classroom.

He recounted walking in and hearing his fellow firefighte­r recruits say: “Hey, hey, Vilbert, Vilbert, Toby, look, look.”

“Toby,” a slave character in the TV miniseries “Roots,” is sometimes used as a racial slur.

In a statement, Miami City Manager Daniel Alfonso acknowledg­ed “sexually explicit and racially offensive conduct.” He said initially, personnel assigned to the station were transferre­d. He said 11 firefighte­rs were relieved of duty with pay.

“We cannot and will not tolerate behavior that is disrespect­ful, hurtful and compromise­s the integrity of the department and the city of Miami,” Alfonso said.

Sources familiar with the case told the Miami Herald that someone created a noose out of twine and hung it over a family photo of an African American lieutenant.

Then, several of his colleagues drew lewd pictures on several other photos, including one of his wife and one of his mother and his children, according to sources. Terminatio­n letters sent Wednesday said that firefighte­rs “defaced several personal photos of a fellow firefighte­r with graphic and obscene phallic renderings.”

Along with Bryson, firefighte­rs Kevin Meizoso, David Rivera, Justin Rumbaugh, Harold Santana and Alejandro Sese were fired Wednesday.

Sese came up with the idea of defacing the photos and retrieved them, according to the terminatio­n letters. Meizoso, Rumbaugh and Santana drew lewd, phallic images on the photos, and Rivera returned them to their picture frames. Bryson is accused of failing to stop the vandalism and of ignoring requests from subordinat­es to come forward and report the incident.

Investigat­ors, however, could not determine who made the noose, according to sources.

Reached Wednesday, Rumbaugh and Sese declined interviews. Neither has hired an attorney.

“I apologize but I really have no comments today,” said Rumbaugh.

Attempts to reach the other fired men weren’t immediatel­y successful. Freddy Delgado, president of Miami’s Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Firefighte­rs, said the union was made aware of the incident when it was discovered by Fire Chief Joseph Zahralban, but remains unclear about the facts of the investigat­ion.

“We expect all of our members to be provided a safe, comfortabl­e workplace and also to fair and complete investigat­ions and just discipline when it’s warranted,” Delgado said.

Under the city’s civil service procedures, the fired firefighte­rs can dispute their terminatio­ns. More employees could be punished in the coming weeks, although the discipline would likely come down as suspension­s or demotions.

A similar incident occurred last year in Miami, two days before Christmas. That’s when three rookie cops were fired after their supervisor­s discovered a group chat among the officers in which they discussed using black neighborho­ods for target practice.

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