DeSantis's $13.5M police program lures officers with violent records to Florida [View all]
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/may/22/ron-desantis-police-relocation-violent-records
DeSantiss $13.5m police program lures officers with violent records to Florida
Governors incentive scheme recruits officers with history of excessive violence or who have been arrested since signing up
Richard Luscombe in Miami
Mon 22 May 2023 15.39 EDT
Numerous police officers lured to new jobs in Florida with cash from Governor Ron DeSantiss flagship law enforcement relocation program have histories of excessive violence or have been arrested for crimes including kidnapping and murder since signing up, a study of state documents has found.
DeSantis, who is expected to launch his campaign for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination this week, has spent more than $13.5m to date on the recruitment bonus program, which he touted in 2021 as an incentive to officers in other states frustrated by Covid-19 vaccination mandates.
This will go a long way to ensuring we can have the best and the brightest filling our law enforcement ranks, Floridas Republican attorney general, Ashley Moody, said in April last year as DeSantis announced one-time $5,000 bonuses for new recruits.
However, among the almost 600 officers who moved to Florida and received the bonus or were recruited in state are a sizable number who either arrived with a range of complaints against them, or have since accrued criminal charges, the online media outlet Daily Dot has discovered.
They include a former trainee deputy with the Escambia county sheriffs office charged with murdering her husband; an officer with the Miramar police department fired for domestic battery and kidnapping; and a former member of the New York police department (NYPD) who was hired by the Palm Beach police department having once been accused of an improper sexual proposition.
That officer, named by the Daily Dot as Daniel Meblin, was also part of a $160,000 settlement by the NYPD for violence at a 2020 protest against the deaths of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd in which officers were accused of beating Black males without provocation.