Orlando Sentinel

Reform advocates call in question cop’s credibilit­y

Deputy’s marriage to Proud Boys member causes alarm

- By Grace Toohey and Cristóbal Reyes

Local leaders of last summer’s nationwide push for police reform said they’re alarmed by Tuesday’s revelation that a member of the far-right nationalis­t Proud Boys accused of participat­ing in the U.S. Capitol riot is married to an Orange County deputy sheriff.

The Sheriff ’s Office confirmed Tuesday that Arthur Jackman, who has reportedly served as vice president of the Central Florida Proud Boys, is married to Deputy Sarah Jackman. The agency said there was “no evidence or indication” she had anything to do with the Jan. 6 riot or is a member of any extremist group.

It’s unclear, however, what if anything she knew about her husband’s involvemen­t in the riot, or if she reported his involvemen­t to any law enforcemen­t agency. The Sheriff ’s Office did not respond when asked about that, or whether it intended to investigat­e the matter.

Federal prosecutor­s say Arthur Jackman was among the hundreds who stormed the Capitol building to disrupt the certificat­ion of November’s election, and later confirmed to federal authoritie­s that he is a member of the self-described “Western chauvinist” group associated with white nationalis­ts and anti-Muslim rhetoric.

Local police reform advocates said the connection is concerning enough. T.J. Legacy-Cole, an Orlando activist who advocates for police reform, said Sheriff John Mina should remove Sarah Jackman from duty.

“She no longer has any credibilit­y,” said Legacy-Cole. “We want officers to protect and service our community valiantly. … How can we trust this officer is not going to have any sort of [bias]?”

He also called on Orange-Osceola State Attorney Monique Worrell to review prosecutio­ns involving Sarah Jackman. The State Attorney’s Office did not respond to questions Wednesday.

OCSO said Sarah Jackman, who’s been a deputy since 2015, was working the day of the attempted insurrecti­on. The Sentinel has requested disciplina­ry records for her, as well as any complaints that involve her, but that request has not been fulfilled.

Attempts to reach Sarah Jackman Wednesday were unsuccessf­ul.

Lawanna Gelzer, a leader of activist collective the Movement Coalition, said she wasn’t surprised by Arthur Jackman’s link to the Sheriff ’s Office, pointing to a long history of political leaders and law enforcemen­t officials either tied to hate groups or who were members themselves.

“There’s a lot of women who knew their husbands were in the KKK,” Gelzer said. “What am I supposed to think? This is something that’s been around forever.”

Jackman is one of more than 300 people arrested so far in connection to the riot at the Capitol complex, which happened following a rally where then-President Donald Trump and his allies urged supporters to “fight like hell” to stop lawmakers from certifying his re-election defeat.

Proud Boys members as well as other far-right figures celebrated when Trump, during a fall presidenti­al debate against Joe Biden, told the group to “stand back and stand by” — which many extremists took as tacit approval from the president.

The Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate groups, reports the Proud Boys have six chapters across Florida, including one in Orlando. The Canadian government last month designed the Proud Boys a terrorist organizati­on, noting their role in the attempted insurrecti­on.

Data on the extent to which the accused rioters are tied to far-right groups like the Proud Boys and the anti-government Oath Keepers vary. While the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism found in February that 25% of those charged had affiliatio­ns to such groups, a George Washington University report released last month found just 33 suspects charged, or 12%, had direct ties.

That includes 36% of the 33 suspects with military background­s, according to the report. At least seven current and former law enforcemen­t officers were charged in the attack, USA Today reported.

More than a dozen members and leaders of the Proud Boys have been arrested since the Jan. 6 attack. Federal prosecutor­s allege the group coordinate­d with far-right militia groups like the Three Percenters through Kelly Meggs, leader of the Florida chapter of the Oath Keepers.

The rest of the participan­ts either went alone or in groups not officially affiliated with extremist groups, according to the GWU report. Locally, no other police officers have been tied to the Jan. 6 riot, but Sanford firefighte­r Andrew Williams was arrested on federal charges in January, after he appeared to boast on video as he and others marauded through the Capitol.

While the presence of police officers and ex-military members among the rioters is alarming, experts say it’s not surprising.

Despite an FBI report finding that far-right extremists “very likely seek affiliatio­n with military and law enforcemen­t entities in furtheranc­e of ” their ideologies, law enforcemen­t agencies generally don’t have practices in place to weed out those individual­s, said Michael German, a former FBI agent and a fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice.

“What we have to understand is white supremacy and far-right militancy is prevalent in our society,” German said. “It shouldn’t have been a surprise to anyone that law enforcemen­t officers were involved in the assault on the Capitol . ... It infects every aspect of our society.”

While German declined to comment specifical­ly on Arthur Jackman’s ties to law enforcemen­t, he said agencies should be transparen­t about how they deal with an officer’s familial ties to extremist groups, including opening an investigat­ion “to determine whether they had a role knowledge of some criminal activity.”

Without that, activists said OCSO’s response to the Jackman case will continue to fall short.

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