Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

USF cites racist bio on Twitter in firing officer

Chief: Actions could bring harm to others

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TAMPA — A university police officer in Florida whose Twitter bio described herself as a “KKK member” has been fired, officials said.

Former University of South Florida officer Presley Garcia, 26, said her friend added the descriptio­n in 2015 and she had not used the account for years. She said she is not a racist and condemns racism and the KKK.

The investigat­ion into Garcia began in July after a BayNews 9 reporter contacted the USF police department with screenshot­s of the Twitter account “(at) presleyyyg,” which read “KKK member.” The account has since been deleted.

Garcia, who was hired in 2018, told the Tampa Bay Times she felt let down by the agency after her firing last week.

“There’s all the talk of B`ack the Blue,’ but not one person had my back,” she said.

In his letter recommendi­ng her firing, USF Police Chief Chris Daniel said Garcia’s actions could bring harm to other officers.

“This concern is of particular importance given the activities occurring on a local and national level. Since the incident involving George Floyd, dissident members of the community have targeted law enforcemen­t officers, their department­s, their families and their home,” Daniel wrote. Floyd died in May after a white Minneapoli­s pressed his knee against the Black man’s neck for nearly eight minutes as he pleaded for air.

The chief said USF officers have experience­d having their doors kicked, vehicles photograph­ed in their driveways and been followed to work while being “antagonize­d on the roadway” in recent months.

Garcia admitted the Twitter account was hers, but told investigat­ors a friend added the phrase to her bio in 2015, the newspaper reported. She said she was young and didn’t know what it meant.

She said she had deleted the app on her phone and thought the account was also deleted.

The investigat­ion found she was active on Twitter between November 2015 and January 2016, the newspaper reported.

“The agency failed me,” Garcia said. “It’s very hurtful that something from a long time ago that I didn’t even do has completely destroyed my career. There’s no way I’d ever be a part of that group. I wasn’t raised that way.”

During a pre-employment background interview Garcia told officials she didn’t have a Twitter account because she thought it had been deleted, the newspaper reported. The investigat­ion found no tie to the KKK.

In his letter, the chief said the agency tries to strike a balance between allowing officers freedom in their private lives and ensuring appropriat­e offduty conduct.

He said that since the issue was raised, the story has been reported by other news organizati­ons, “exacerbati­ng the impact of her actions.”

Garcia has 30 days to file a grievance with the university or the union that represents officers. She told the newspaper she declined.

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