Miami Herald

New law signed by DeSantis could dismantle Fort Lauderdale’s police oversight board

- BY RAISA HABERSHAM rhabersham@miamiheral­d.com

Florida cities were left scrambling earlier this month when Gov. Ron DeSantis signed House Bill 601, limiting how government-affiliated civilian boards can investigat­e the behavior of local law enforcemen­t officers.

Fort Lauderdale commission­ers will discuss the fate of the city’s Citizens’ Police Review Board at a May 21 commission conference, City Attorney Thomas J. Ansbro wrote Monday in a memorandum to the board that was shared with the Miami Herald.

Ansbro wrote that the city will have to revise its legislatio­n for the review board, which has been in existence for three decades. The new Florida law, Ansbro noted, does allow a police chief to establish a civilian oversight board to review the department’s policies and procedures.

“This means that the scope of the Citizen Police Review Board’s activities would have to be narrowed,” Ansbro wrote, adding it is likely an entirely new oversight board will be proposed at the May 21 conference.

District 1 Commission­er John Herbst said he’d asked the city attorney for guidance on the new law and how it would affect the city’s review board.

“It’s not entirely clear to us just yet if it can move forward in anything resembling its current form,” Herbst said. “I suspect not, based on my understand­ing of the legislatio­n.”

Establishe­d in 1994, the existing board has nine members, six of whom are appointed by the commission and three that are police department employees appointed by the police chief. The board, which reviews complaints investigat­ed by the Fort Lauderdale Police Department’s internal affairs unit, was created after Patrick Lavon Lee was shot and killed by a Fort Lauderdale police officer in 1989, leading to outrage in the Black community, according to a Sun

Sentinel report.

As of December 2021, Florida had 21 citizen oversight agencies, according to a report from the LeRoy Collins

Institute at Florida State University. At least one agency, North Miami’s Citizens Investigat­ive Board, opted to shutter in

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