Tuesday, December 04, 2018

PERSONNEL FALLOUT FROM PARKLAND DEBACLE

by Bob Walsh

A couple of more shoes have dropped relating to the grossly incompetent police response to the Parkland, Florida school shooting.

The latest was Edward Eason, an 18-year veteran of the Broward County S.O. He is now on restricted duty due to his action, or maybe more properly inaction, at MSD High School on Valentine's Day. (Restricted duty in Broward County is no badge, no gun, no peace officer authority.)

It seems pretty clear that Eason moved AWAY from the gunfire when he was there, and then spent a great deal of time adjusting his body armor and body cam. In addition he had received information well BEFORE the shooting that something was up, specifically naming Nikolas Cruz, the school shooter. Deputy Eason didn't bother to write the tip up until AFTER the shooting, when it was of substantially less value. He got a three day suspension for that piece of incompetence.

One week ago Sgt. Brian Miller, also of Broward County S.O., was put on restricted duty due to his failure to act at the time of the shooting.

Captain Jay Jordan, who was in charge of the Parkland Division of the S.O., has resigned in the wake of the shooting, citing personal reasons.
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Another Deputy Suspended Following Parkland Massacre

by Tonya Alanez

Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel
December 3, 2018

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.—He ran the other way as gunfire blasted, then wasted precious time fiddling with his bulletproof vest and body camera while students were dying, investigators said.

On Friday, that Broward sheriff’s deputy went to work to find out he had been placed on restrictive duty — the second deputy in as many weeks to face suspension over his response to the Feb. 14 massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

Edward Eason, an 18-year veteran of the agency who made $127,342 last year, is the latest domino to fall as authority figures begin to face consequences for their actions, or inaction, that day. Seventeen people died and another 17 were critically injured.

Despite an extraordinary series of blunders leading to the bloodshed at the Parkland school, it has taken nine months to bring repercussions over errors that may have cost lives. So far, it’s been only a few, and mostly low-level, employees who have taken the hit.

“(Deputy Eason) is not aware of what the charges are; they didn’t give him a reason,” said Jeff Bell, president of the Broward Sheriff’s Office Deputies Association.

They weren’t told but they know what Eason’s suspension is all about, Bell said. “It’s a knee-jerk reaction to the MSD commission.”

The Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Commission is a state panel reviewing the shooting. In mid-November, the panel denounced law enforcement’s response to the deadliest school shooting since the 2002 massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.

“Based on the information provided at this month’s MSD Safety Commission meeting, Sheriff Scott Israel requested an internal review of the actions Eason took on Feb. 14,” said Veda Coleman-Wright, a spokeswoman for the sheriff’s office.

Bell said he was at sheriff’s headquarters filing a grievance Friday afternoon.

This is Eason’s second blunder related to the school shooting. He was faulted for not writing an official report after receiving a tip in February 2016 that the school shooter, Nikolas Cruz, was making threats on social media to shoot up a school. For botching that tip, Eason was given a three-day suspension.

His annual pay is $75,673.72 but with overtime, supplemental earnings and special detail duties, Eason earned $51,668 more than that in 2017, according to the sheriff’s office.

When Eason arrived at the Parkland school campus and heard gunfire, he drove away from it rather than run toward it, investigators said. And as students in need of emergency care bled out in the hallways, Eason dawdled while he put on his bulletproof vest and adjusted his body camera, according to investigators.

Eason’s explanations were marred with contradictions. At first, he told investigators he heard shots “as soon as I got there” coming from the direction of the school. He later claimed he could not tell where the gunshots were coming from or where he was when he heard them, according to the panel’s review.

A recording from Eason’s body camera further contradicted the deputy. It showed Eason pointing toward the exact building where the shooting occurred and telling bystanders that was where the shots were coming from, the review said.

A week ago, on Nov. 20, Broward sheriff’s Sgt. Brian Miller also was ordered to hand over his badge and gun because of his alleged failures to take action during the shooting. He was placed on restrictive duty too, pending an internal review at the sheriff’s office.

Miller was the highest-ranking officer initially at Stoneman Douglas. He was accused of hearing gunshots and not moving.

On the same day as Miller’s suspension, Jan Jordan, the captain formerly in charge of the Parkland division, resigned. She also was widely criticized by the commission for her role leading the response.

She cited “personal reasons” in her separation form.

Allowing Jordan to resign “in good standing” without an investigation while two deputies face suspension is a clear “double standard of treatment,” said Bell, the union president.

“Obviously the agency wants to target the low-lying fruit, by targeting the deputies and sergeants,” Bell said.

Many of the failures at Stoneman Douglas, Bell said, were caused by Sheriff Israel’s incompetence. The rank and file, Bell said, just wants to see that what goes around comes around.

“We’re not saying that every one of our members is innocent of every allegation; we’re not, we’ve never said that,” Bell said. “We’re asking for fair and equal discipline for all members of the sheriff’s office.”

Others to face ramifications in November include three assistant principals and a security specialist who were reassigned pending investigations by the Broward School District.

The first school district employees to lose their jobs were two coaches who worked as security monitors.

One was faulted for failing to stop Cruz when he saw him arrive on campus carrying a large duffel-like bag and recognized him as “crazy boy.” The other was criticized for hiding in a closet as shots rang out.

The first to go was longtime School Deputy Scot Peterson. He was branded a coward and forced to retire from the sheriff’s office — with his $8,702 per month pension.

Peterson was the first law enforcement officer on the scene and the one with the greatest opportunity to stop the gunman. He took cover outside until well after the killer had left.

EDITOR'S NOTE: He was only trying to secure the rear from attack.

2 comments:

Trey Rusk said...

I'm sure multiple lawsuits have been filed. This whole incident could have been halted if the people who were assigned tasks had done their jobs correctly. They knew the risks that came with the job. In my opinion they are all cowards and the county will pay bigtime.

bob walsh said...

There is at least SOME reason to believe that at some point the officers on the scene were ordered to not engage until reinforcements arrived. According to my understanding of current doctrine that is exactly the WRONG thing to do in the case of an active shooter but presumably if that occurred there are witnesses and maybe even recordings of radio traffic to back up that assertion. That being said it sounds to me like a couple of being wimped out and a couple of more screwed the pooch in other ways. The Sheriff wants to put it off on the grunts to avoid personal fallout. Maybe the Captain who resigned will be hung out to dry. In my old agency the suits always used the "blame the dead guy" rule. It usually worked. In this case there are no dead good guys to blame, so...….