Orlando Sentinel

DeSantis removes, replaces Israel over Parkland failures

- By Lisa J. Huriash, Anthony Man, Linda Trischitta and Brittany Wallman

Gov. Ron DeSantis removed Broward Sheriff Scott Israel from office Friday, replacing him after 10 months of turmoil spawned by the slaughter of 17 staff and students in Parkland.

The new governor replaced Israel with former Coral Springs Police Sgt. Gregory Tony, 40, who has a background in active-shooter training and becomes the first black sheriff in Broward County’s history.

DeSantis announced the sus-

pension at the Broward Sheriff’s Office headquarte­rs while the displaced former sheriff prepared his response from a church in northwest Fort Lauderdale.

“I have no interest in dancing on Scott Israel’s political grave,” DeSantis said of the Democratic former sheriff, “but suffice it to say the massacre might never have happened had Broward had better leadership in the sheriff’s department.”

In his executive order, the governor cited Israel for incompeten­ce and neglect of duty. DeSantis said Israel “egregiousl­y failed in his duties” by not properly training deputies and not maintainin­g “a culture of vigilance and thoroughne­ss,” among other weaknesses.

The suspension caps a nearly year-long series of revelation­s that exposed the failure of Broward sheriff’s deputies to run in to save children at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School as a former student marched through the halls with an assault rifle.

Some deputies said they couldn’t remember when they’d last been trained to handle an active shooter, even though the agency had a confused, chaotic response to a mass shooting at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport in 2017.

Much of the criticism has focused on Israel’s leadership. Though he enjoyed strong popularity in Broward before the shooting, Israel’s star fell in the aftermath, particular­ly after a disastrous appearance on CNN in which he praised his own leadership and glossed over his agency’s mistakes.

After he was removed from office Friday, Israel, backed by religious leaders and supporters, accused the governor of carrying out a political mission because the sheriff had spoken out against gun violence. Donning a blue pinstripe suit and red tie instead of his usual green Sheriff’s Office uniform, Israel said he would seek every avenue to contest the suspension, including making his case in a hearing before the Florida Senate.

“This was about politics, not about Parkland,” Israel said.

Israel's attorney Stuart Kaplan, said that while mistakes occurred, the shooter is the only person responsibl­e for the lives lost at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

Many family members of victims and people in Parkland blame Israel for the agency’s handling of the teenage killer during interactio­ns before the shooting, and for the way it handled the unfolding tragedy. Coral Springs officers showed valor, running into the school. They reported being routinely trained to run toward gunfire. Many of the sheriff’s deputies, meanwhile, crouched behind trees or cars and didn’t try to enter the school.

Israel had changed the agency’s policy from deputies “shall” go in after an active shooter, to they “may” go in — another flaw cited by DeSantis. Israel recently changed it back.

The voice of parents

“On Feb. 14, my daughter died on the third floor of MSD running down the hallway from an active shooter,” one of the grieving parents, Fred Guttenberg, said Friday at the announceme­nt. “One more second, and she makes it into the stairwell. She needed one more second. If anybody wants to know what failure means, and lack of response, my daughter would have lived if somebody could have just given her one more second.”

Andrew Pollack, whose daughter Meadow was killed, emceed the parents’ portion of the event, where other family members of victims spoke.

Pollack said his next target is Broward Schools Superinten­dent Robert Runcie, though DeSantis said he isn’t sure if he has the authority to suspend an appointed superinten­dent. Pollack said he’d see to it himself that Runcie loses his job.

“I get things done,” Pollack said, “and there’s nothing on this planet that I can’t get done, especially since my daughter was murdered. And I have the heart of a lion, OK, and I’m not going anywhere.”

Pollack connected the new sheriff, Tony, with DeSantis.

“We all went to the same gym together and that’s where we all met,” Pollack said after the announceme­nt Friday. “I think he’s going to do a wonderful job and the community’s going to get behind him, and the kids are going to be safer, and the community as a whole will be safer.”

Tony, a resident of Boca Raton, worked for 12 years as an officer and then sergeant in Coral Springs. His former boss, Coral Springs Chief Clyde Parry, said Tony has a “bright future” and he was sorry to see him leave the agency in 2016.

Tony and his wife, Holly, a nurse, operate Blue Spear Solutions, which specialize­s in active-shooter training and provides threat assessment­s on schools and other businesses.

The Florida Constituti­on gives the governor power to suspend public officials for “malfeasanc­e, misfeasanc­e, neglect of duty.” Governors routinely remove public officials who are arrested or charged with crimes, but it is unusual to remove an officehold­er who does not face criminal charges.

Broward Commission­er Nan Rich said she doesn’t think the County Commission will attempt to challenge Israel’s suspension, even though she doesn’t agree with it.

“I’m personally just very concerned about our democracy and all these suggestion­s and recommenda­tions about removing people that have been elected and have not been indicted of any crime,” Rich said. “We live in a democracy, not an autocracy, and I would just like to maintain it.”

Second officehold­er removed

It was the second removal of a countywide elected official in Broward in two months. Former Gov. Rick Scott suspended elections supervisor Dr. Brenda Snipes at the end of November. Snipes had already submitted a letter of resignatio­n.

The news conference Friday at Broward sheriff’s headquarte­rs attracted a stream of public officials, including Republican state Rep. Chip LaMarca, new state Emergency Management Director Jared Moskowitz of Parkland, and Coral Springs Commission­er Joshua Simmons.

Protesters also appeared, including one man who is part of the QAnon conspiracy theory movement, people active in Donald Trump clubs in Broward and Palm Beach counties, and Republican Party activists from Broward and Palm Beach counties.

The crowd applauded Parkland parents who spoke and reacted negatively to mention of Scott Israel. At one point, when the governor mentioned his name, one person in the crowd — just one — yelled “lock him up.”

Reaction to the removal was mixed in Broward, where most elected officials carry the same Democratic label that Israel does.

Broward Commission­er Steve Geller, a Democrat and former state senator, doesn’t think DeSantis had a legal basis for removing Israel.

Broward Commission­er Michael Udine, who represents the Parkland area, said he wasn’t looking “into the politics of this.” He was more focused on accountabi­lity.

“I think that the MSD report and common sense leadership principles, and listening to all the families with 17 dead relatives, I think it made it clear that there had to be some kind of changes made in that organizati­on,” said Udine, also a Democrat.

A report from the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Commission detailed a series of problems with the agency’s performanc­e during the massacre.

Resignatio­ns at the top

Attorney General Ashley Moody issued a statement saying there is ample justificat­ion in that report for Israel’s removal, including radio failures that indicate a lack of attention to resources, a failure to establish a command post and take control of the shooting response, a lack of coordinati­on with other responding agencies, lack of training and failures by deputies who encountere­d the shooter before Feb. 14.

Anticipati­ng the suspension, five of Israel’s command staff submitted separation forms.

The ranking deputies who said they were leaving for personal reasons are Col. John “Jack” Dale, who wrote on his form, “Actions by governor not in the best interest of public safety,” and Undersheri­ff Steve Kinsey, the second in command at the agency under Israel, who wrote on his form, “Due to the sheriff being suspended unjustly.”

Dale was executive director for the agency’s department of profession­al standards and the department of investigat­ions.

Major Kevin S. Shults, who was in charge of training, also resigned.

Dale, Kinsey and Shults were among many highrankin­g officials Israel hired from his former employer, the Fort Lauderdale Police Department.

Major Chadwick Wagner, a former Hollywood police chief who served as BSO human resources director, said his reason for leaving included “the unjust decision by Gov. Ron DeSantis to remove Broward County Sheriff Scott J. Israel. Sheriff Israel has been twice elected by Broward County residents. This is a decision that only the resident voters of Broward County should decide.”

Col. James Polan retired effective Thursday and did not comment on his form.

Broward Sheriff’s Sgt. Anthony Marciano, president of the Federation of Public Employees union, representi­ng detention deputies, courtroom deputies and others, said Israel made some missteps: He spoke publicly too soon, when investigat­ions were still going on; he didn’t take responsibi­lity; and he unnecessar­ily “poked a big bear that he didn’t need to poke” when he challenged the National Rifle Associatio­n, Marciano said.

But Marciano said Israel’s fate would have better been left to voters.

“I listened to all the MSD commission meetings, and the sheriff said one thing that should have resonated with everybody: ‘You can’t teach courage to people,’ ” Marciano said.

Jeff Bell, head of the deputies’ Internatio­nal Union of Police Associatio­ns and a member of DeSantis’ transition team, had a more harsh assessment.

“He has turned this agency, the largest fully accredited sheriff’s office in the country, into a political machine for his own wellbeing,” Bell said. “He’s incompeten­t and should be removed permanentl­y before anyone else is killed on his watch.”

DeSantis said Tony was “tailor-made” for the job.

Tony is building a transition team and is expected to name his undersheri­ff — the second in command — as early as this weekend, a source told the South Florida Sun Sentinel.

“I am not here for any type of political grandiose agenda,” Tony said in his public remarks Friday. “I’m here to serve.”

 ?? CARLINE JEAN/SUN SENTINEL ?? Former Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel, speaks during a press conference at Mount Olive Baptist church in Fort Lauderdale.
CARLINE JEAN/SUN SENTINEL Former Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel, speaks during a press conference at Mount Olive Baptist church in Fort Lauderdale.

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