South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Parkland parents: Don’t give Israel his job back

- By Dara Kam News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E – Gov. Ron DeSantis is facing a showdown about one of his highest-profile decisions: the ouster of Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel, whose fate now rests in the hands of the Florida Senate.

The Republican governor’s legal team failed to persuade a Senate special master that Israel’s suspension was warranted, but DeSantis has a cadre of allies who might have the power to do what his lawyers could not.

The families of victims of last year’s horrific mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Broward County have started contacting senators to try to ensure that Israel stays out of office.

“We want to make sure that the senators have a complete picture of the failures that preceded the tragedy that took the lives of our loved ones, the inadequate response and leadership of Scott Israel, and, after the tragedy, the continued failures,” Ryan Petty, whose 14-year-old daughter, Alaina, was among the 17 students and faculty members slain at the Parkland school, told The News Service of Florida on Thursday.

Petty was among the Parkland family members who joined DeSantis at a January news conference where the governor announced the suspension of Israel. He’ll be in the Capitol this month, when a key Senate committee takes up Israel’s case. Fred Guttenberg, whose daughter, Jaime, was killed in the Parkland shooting, will also be there.

“To bring Sheriff Israel back is a threat to the safety of the citizens of Broward County. I only wish he had the intensity behind public safety that he has behind keeping his job,” Guttenberg said in a telephone interview.

DeSantis ordered Israel’s suspension as one of his first acts after taking office, accusing the sheriff of “neglect of duty” and “incompeten­ce” connected to the Feb. 14, 2018, school massacre and a 2017 mass shooting at the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport in which five people were killed.

Israel appealed his suspension to the Senate, which has the power to remove or reinstate elected officials. Senate President Bill Galvano appointed former Republican lawmaker Dudley Goodlette to preside over the case as a special master.

In a stunning rebuke to the governor last month, Goodlette recommende­d that the Senate reinstate Israel, finding that DeSantis’ lawyers failed to make the case that the Democratic sheriff was to blame for the deaths.

The Senate Rules Committee will take up the case on Oct. 21 and offer a recommenda­tion about whether Israel should be reinstated. On Oct. 23, the full Senate will meet in a special session and is expected to vote on whether Israel should get his job back.

DeSantis, meanwhile, is reaching out to senators, making the case for why he stripped Israel of the post. Meredith Beatrice, a DeSantis spokeswoma­n, said in an email the governor “routinely speaks to legislator­s on a variety of topics.”

“The governor has been clear that the Parkland families deserve justice and has voiced his firm belief that Scott Israel must be held accountabl­e; he respects that each senator must vote according to his or her own conscience,” she added.

DeSantis discussed the upcoming Senate proceeding with the Senate president, Galvano said.

“He [DeSantis] recognizes the special master has a report, but he also believes that his folks will be able to highlight what they view as shortcomin­gs in the report, and he continues to feel very strongly about the decision that was made to suspend,” Galvano, R-Bradenton, said in an interview.

Senate budget chief Rob Bradley, who serves on the Rules Committee, also recently spoke with DeSantis about Israel’s suspension.

“I think it’s entirely appropriat­e for the governor to engage with individual senators on this issue or any other issue that is before the Legislatur­e and share with us how he feels about it,” the Fleming Island Republican told the News Service. “This was an important decision in his tenure, and I, for one, value hearing from the governor himself, as to why he did what he did. So I found it to be very helpful.”

But some Senate Democrats accuse DeSantis — who can veto bills and has line-item veto authority over the budget — of bullying lawmakers to avert a potential political embarrassm­ent that would happen if the Senate reinstates Israel.

“I think he is browbeatin­g the Republican senators in a manner that’s unbecoming of the governor of the state of Florida,” Sen. Perry Thurston, D-Fort Lauderdale, told the News Service.

Thurston pointed to DeSantis’ statement, following the release of Goodlette’s report on Sept. 25, in which the governor said the victims’ families “deserve justice and accountabi­lity.”

“Floridians were appalled by Scott Israel’s repeated failures and expect their senators will provide the accountabi­lity that the Park land families have sought for the past year and a half,” DeSantis said at the time.

Thurston interprete­d the comments as an implicit threat, calling the governor’s actions “appalling.”

Goodlette will present his report to the Rules Committee. Also, lawyers for DeSantis and Israel will be able to comment, and the public will be allowed to speak at the hearing.

Guttenberg — a Democrat who said he did not vote for DeSantis — called Goodlette’s report “a cop-out.”

“This governor and I, we’re not what you would consider two people typically aligned,” Guttenberg said. “However, I will walk the halls of the Senate with him to show, on this, you have absolute bipartisan agreement.”

Galvano, however, cautioned that the hearing is not an opportunit­y to re-litigate Israel’s suspension.

“We’re not going to have another evidentiar­y hearing in committee. But both parties, and the special master made this very clear, both parties have a continuing opportunit­y to make submission­s and a presentati­on at the Rules Committee,” Galvano, an attorney, said.

“We want to make sure that the senators have a complete picture of the failures that preceded the tragedy that took the lives of our loved ones, the inadequate response and leadership of Scott Israel, and, after the tragedy, the continued failures.” Ryan Petty, whose 14-year-old daughter, Alaina, was among the 17 students and faculty members slain

 ?? MICHAEL LAUGHLIN/SUN SENTINEL ?? Suspended Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel speaks to the media on Sept. 25 at Robbins Park in Davie, thanking a Senate special master for a reinstatem­ent recommenda­tion.
MICHAEL LAUGHLIN/SUN SENTINEL Suspended Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel speaks to the media on Sept. 25 at Robbins Park in Davie, thanking a Senate special master for a reinstatem­ent recommenda­tion.

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