The Guardian (USA)

State attorney says DeSantis fired her because she was ‘prosecutin­g their cops’

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

An elected Democratic prosecutor whose removal Ron DeSantis boasted about during the first Republican presidenti­al debate said the hard-right Florida governor and his allies ousted her because she was “prosecutin­g their cops”.

Law enforcemen­t agencies in central Florida were “all working against me”, Monique Worrell told the Daily Beast, “because I was prosecutin­g their cops, the ones who used to do things and get away with them”.

She added: “They thought that I was overly critical of law enforcemen­t and didn’t do anything against ‘real criminals’. Apparently there’s a difference between citizens who commit crimes and cops who commit crimes.”

DeSantis has long polled second to Donald Trump in national and key state surveys of the Republican primary but he remains far behind, most observers saying his campaign is stalling.

In Florida, he has removed two elected Democratic prosecutor­s: Andrew Warren of Hillsborou­gh county in August 2022 and Worrell earlier this month.

Warren said he would not enforce an abortion ban signed by the governor. The prosecutor sued to regain his job but has so far failed, even though a judge found DeSantis to be in the wrong.

Worrell previously responded to her removal by calling DeSantis a “weak dictator” seeking to create a “smokescree­n for [a] failing and disastrous presidenti­al campaign”.

In his debate-stage boast in Wisconsin

last week, DeSantis blamed “hollowed-out cities … a symptom of America’s decline” on “radical leftwing district attorneys [who] say they’re not going to prosecute crimes they disagree with”.

“There’s one guy in this entire country that’s ever done anything about that,” he said. “Me, when we had two of these district attorneys in Florida … who said they wouldn’t do their job, I removed them from their post. They are gone and as president we are going to go after all of these people.”

Speaking to the Beast, in a report published on Monday, Worrell said an “ambush” by the governor’s law enforcemen­t allies preceded the decision to fire her, including a recorded call in which the Orlando county sheriff complained about a failure to jail a known gang member who was caught with a gun.

Worrell told the site: “They took him into custody – without a warrant. Went into his pants pocket – without a warrant. Clicked key fob – without warrant. Went in [to his car] – without warrant.

“There’s this little thing called ‘unreasonab­le search and seizure’ and you can’t get evidence without a warrant. We were unable to go forward with charges because it was an illegal search and seizure. And we had lots of communicat­ion with the sheriff’s office about this case, trying to salvage the case.

“As the state attorney, we’re not here to rubber-stamp what the sheriff’s office does. We can’t condone that.”

Worrell also told the Beast that at the time she was fired, for what DeSantis called “neglect of duty and incompeten­ce”, her team was uncovering “all sorts of illegal activity” in an investigat­ion of the Osceola county sheriff.

Saying she would soon decide whether to sue to get her job back, Worrell also said she was planning to run for re-election next year – a race which would likely pit her against DeSantis’s hand-picked replacemen­t.

 ?? Photograph: Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/AP ?? Monique Worrell, the ninth judicial circuit state attorney, speaks during a press conference, on 9 August after Governor Ron DeSantis suspended her.
Photograph: Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/AP Monique Worrell, the ninth judicial circuit state attorney, speaks during a press conference, on 9 August after Governor Ron DeSantis suspended her.

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