Miami Herald

Deputies fired over Parkland massacre to get jobs back

A judge ruled that two deputies who were fired for inaction can get back pay plus accrued sick and vacation time, overtime and off-duty detail pay. The judge said the Broward sheriff waited too long to fire them.

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A judge ruled that two deputies who were fired for inaction during the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School mass shooting in 2018 should be reinstated with back pay.

Broward Circuit Judge Keathan Frink concluded Thursday that arbitrator­s last year were correct in ruling that the fired Broward County deputies,

Brian Miller and Joshua Stambaugh, should get their jobs back, with back pay plus other benefits, the Sun Sentinel reported. That includes accrued sick and vacation time, overtime and off-duty detail pay, among other benefits that they would have been paid had they not been fired.

One arbitrator had ruled in September that Broward Sheriff Gregory Tony acted 13 days too late when he fired deputy

Stambaugh in 2019 for his conduct during the February 2018 massacre in Parkland. The shooting left 17 students and staffers dead.

State law says discipline against police officers must occur within 180 days of an investigat­ion’s completion. Another arbitrator reinstated Miller last May, saying Tony had missed that deadline by two days.

The sheriff’s office appealed both decisions.

Lori Alhadeff, who joined the Broward County School Board less than

a year after the shooting, said in a message to The Associated Press that her daughter, Alyssa, and 16 other people are no longer alive because of the inaction and failures of many, including Miller and Stambaugh.

“It is painful for me to once again see that there is no accountabi­lity,” Alhadeff said.

An arbitrator has not yet ruled on the case involving a third fired deputy, Edward Eason.

Jeff Bell, president of the Broward Sheriff’s Office Deputies Associatio­n, said the judge’s decision solidifies that Miller and Stambaugh were terminated improperly.

The sheriff’s office released a statement pointing out that the union’s victory was based on a procedural technicali­ty, which the sheriff’s office maintains was wrongly decided. The agency also reaffirmed its position that Miller and Stambaugh do not deserve to have their jobs back.

A state investigat­ive commission found that Stambaugh was working an off-duty shift at a nearby school when he responded to reports of shots fired at Stoneman Douglas. He got out of his truck, put on his bulletproo­f vest and took cover for about five minutes after hearing the shots, according to body-camera footage. Stambaugh then drove to a nearby highway instead of going toward the school.

Eason ran the other way as gunfire continued, then spent time putting on his bulletproo­f vest and body camera while the carnage continued, investigat­ors said.

Eason also was faulted for not writing an official report after receiving a tip in February 2016 that the shooting suspect, Nikolas

Cruz, was making threats on social media to shoot up a school. Tips to the

FBI about Cruz also were not followed up, a separate investigat­ion has

found.

Miller was the first supervisor to arrive at the school and heard three or four shots, records show. Investigat­ors found that Miller took his time putting on a bulletproo­f vest

and hid behind his car.

Cruz, 22, is awaiting trial and could get the death penalty if convicted. His attorneys have said he is willing to plead guilty in exchange for a life sentence.

 ?? MIKE STOCKER South Florida Sun Sentinel ?? Students are evacuated from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland on Feb. 14, 2018.
MIKE STOCKER South Florida Sun Sentinel Students are evacuated from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland on Feb. 14, 2018.
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