Orlando Sentinel

Scott: Sorry for how I handled FDLE ouster

- By Gary Fineout Associated Press

But some other GOP elected officials still call for further inquiry.

TAMPA — Florida Gov. Rick Scott apologized Thursday for the way he forced out the state’s top cop, but he maintained he did nothing wrong even as other Republican elected officials continued to call for additional investigat­ions into how it was handled.

During an annual visit Thursday to the Florida State Fair usually reserved for photo-ops among the corn-dog stands and horse stables, Scott and the three elected members of the state Cabinet — all Republican­s — spent more than an hour discussing how state agency officials should be hired and fired in the future.

It was there that Scott briefly acknowledg­ed he mishandled the ouster of Gerald Bailey, the commission­er of the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t.

“While I wanted to bring in new leadership at FDLE as we transition­ed into a second term in office, it is clear, in hindsight, that I could have handled it better,” he said.

Scott did not spell out what he could have done better, either during the meeting or in a brief session afterward with reporters.

Scott’s rare act of contrition came just a month after his inaugurati­on for a second term, a time when the governor has been struggling with a string of setbacks that could leave him a lame duck even though he has nearly four years left in office.

Scott has seen his handpicked leader of the state Republican Party rejected by party activists and his former prisons chief contend the governor ignored festering problems in the prison system.

Scott’s staff pushed for Bailey’s resignatio­n in December. But after his resignatio­n, Bailey has made a series of allegation­s that he refused questionab­le and unethical requests from the Scott administra­tion and from the governor’s campaign staff.

Scott has denied most of the allegation­s, including that Bailey was asked to falsely name the Orange County Clerk of Court as the target of an investigat­ion.

But Bailey did not report to Scott exclusivel­y. And the three Cabinet members who were also Bailey’s boss say they knew Scott wanted a change at the agency but did not agree Bailey needed to resign.

This has led to a lawsuit from media organizati­ons and open government advocates contending the state’s open meeting law was violated.

Scott made it clear during

the meeting he still wants to replace three additional top state officials, including the state’s insurance commission­er, but he agreed to put that request on hold for at least another month as a new process is in put in place.

Left unresolved, however, is how to handle Bailey’s allegation­s. Agricultur­e Commission­er Adam Putnam said after the meeting that “I have no reason not to believe Jerry Bailey.”

Putnam, however, refused to say if he thought the governor was lying, saying he doesn’t have enough informatio­n.

Still, it’s not clear if there will be an investigat­ion. Scott said he will not appoint a special prosecutor, and Willie Meggs, the state attorney who handles prosecutio­ns in Tallahasse­e, has said he sees no reason to investigat­e.

Alex Sink, the state’s former chief financial officer who lost to Scott in the 2010 governor’s race, attended the meeting Thursday and sharply criticized the Republican­s for not pressing the governor further.

“The governor breaks the law, and he gets away with it, that’s what he did,” Sink said. “How irritating; the people of Florida should be mad about it.”

 ?? CHRIS O’MEARA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Florida Gov. Rick Scott looks at the names on a replica of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial wall at the Florida State Fair in Tampa on Thursday. It was there that Scott briefly acknowledg­ed he mishandled the ouster of Gerald Bailey.
CHRIS O’MEARA/ASSOCIATED PRESS Florida Gov. Rick Scott looks at the names on a replica of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial wall at the Florida State Fair in Tampa on Thursday. It was there that Scott briefly acknowledg­ed he mishandled the ouster of Gerald Bailey.

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