Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Audit cites lax control of sheriff ’s fund

Report heats up Tony vs. Israel primary campaign

- By Skyler Swisher

A trust fund overseen by the Broward Sheriff’s Office has been plagued with lax rules on conflicts of interest and missing documentat­ion, according to an audit made public Wednesday.

Sheriff Gregory Tony commission­ed the forensic audit in September.

The investigat­ion conducted by Carr, Riggs & Ingram LLC examined the agency’s Law Enforcemen­t Trust Fund, which consists of money forfeited during criminal investigat­ions. Auditors examined records from Jan. 1, 2008, through June 30, 2019, when former sheriffs Al Lamberti and Scott Israel oversaw the program.

Tony said he requested the audit because the agency did not have a consistent process for distributi­ng hundreds of thousands of dollars seized during criminal investigat­ions to community groups.

“We have been reviewing and analyzing all expenditur­es in this agency,” he said. “I would be a fool not to.”

Tony is facing his predecesso­r, Israel, in the Aug. 18 Democratic primary.

Israel led the agency from January 2013 until his suspension by Gov. Ron DeSantis in

January 2019.

Trust fund dollars are passed on to charitable organizati­ons, but auditors found the Broward Sheriff’s Office did not require grant applicants to disclose potential conflicts of interest with the sheriff or BSO personnel. In several cases, the agency did not perform conflict-of-interest checks.

Hundreds of thousands of dollars in grants were handed out under the Israel and Lamberti administra­tions to nonprofit organizati­ons with officers who had made political contributi­ons to the sheriff, according to the audit.

More than $790,000 in grants were dis

tributed to 14 organizati­ons with officers who had given Israel’s campaign just over $17,100 in political donations, according to the audit.

Lauren’s Kids, a nonprofit focused on child sex abuse prevention, received $10,000 through the trust fund. That organizati­on is headed by the powerful lobbyist Ron Book, who had given $3,000 to Israel’s campaign. His daughter, state Sen. Lauren Book, serves as the organizati­on’s chief executive officer.

Amy Rose, a spokeswoma­n for Israel’s campaign, questioned the timing of its release.

“In the last weeks of a desperate campaign they are trying to throw something together,” Rose said. “This is nothing more than a politicall­y motivated attack.”

Efforts to reach Lamberti on Wednesday were unsuccessf­ul.

Auditors found other issues with the fund.

Israel’s administra­tion

establishe­d applicatio­n periods, workshops, review committees, documentat­ion requiremen­ts and monitoring. But much of the paperwork couldn’t be produced or wasn’t viewed by the agency as a permanent record.

The agency did not define what is considered a conflict of interest for the committee that rated applicatio­ns.

Funds were used in ways that didn’t appear to comply with guidelines. During fiscal years 2014-2015 through 20182019, auditors found $4,450 in individual membership due renewals. Federal rules allow agency dues to be paid with the funds but not individual dues. Federal funds were also given to groups that did not meet federal criteria. This included $25,000 for the Holocaust Documentat­ion and Education Center Inc., $10,000 for the Church of Brotherly Love Inc., and $50,000 for the Broward Partnershi­p for Homeless Inc.

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