Because the ECSO has now, through their attorney Gerald
Champagne, filed a criminal complaint against the Board of County
Commissioners, I feel compelled to speak up about this ridiculous, rubbish-filled,
nonsensical complaint.
The relevant portion of the complaint, as ridiculous as it
reads, does allege serious misconduct –and it should be addressed, and is being
addressed, in a very serious manner…. The relevant excerpt reads as follows:
"On Behalf of Sheriff Morgan, we respectfully request that you
initiate an investigation into this meeting on the basis that it was wrongfully
closed to the public in violation of Section 286.011 (8), Florida Statutes
(2017)."
If we have indeed violated the open meeting law (which Eric
knows we didn’t, by the way)—there are potential criminal sanctions that could
be imposed. (A former Escambia CountyCommissioner and a former Escambia County School Board member each spent time
in jail for violating the Florida Open Meeting and Public Records Laws). So yes, when someone alleges something like
this----This is an attack, an allegation I take very seriously.
But if we committed a crime by holding this meeting—why go
to the SAO a month later? This makes no sense at all. So I asked Eric Haines this very question on a
Facebook
back and forth he initiated with me after his office filed the complaint
and the news broke on Rick’s Blog early Saturday…(I was aware of the complaint but
had no intention of blogging about it unless it became media fodder, which it
did on Saturday…..and thus my subsequent Facebook post and blog post)
Eric Haines: “…. I’m
of the belief that your rationale is insufficient for a shade meeting…”
Me: “You
are being inefficient here Eric. You are a Florida Certified Law Enforcement
Officer and so here's what you know: if you believe a crime has been committed
(and apparently, you do judging from your vituperative objection to our
legitimate shade meeting), and if you have probable cause that leads you to
believe that a crime has been committed--you do not need to wait, Eric. You do
not need to send an email a month after the fact to the SAO. You can draft a
warrant to arrest all five (5) of us and take that warrant to a judge and see
what happens; see if you would find ANY judge that, based upon this fact
pattern, would countenance this ridiculous rubbish claim you are making. Good
luck with that.”
Eric Haines: “More
words of peace and reconciliation from the bearer of olive branches...”
Eric Haines: (to
another poster on the thread)” Jeff Bergosh apparently has no knowledge of the
criminal justice process. One of the things required for a crime to occur is
criminal intent. If the commissioners made the decision thinking they were
within the law it more than likely wasn’t a criminal act.”
Me: “Eric
Haines , it appears that within your agency, the left hand does not
know what the right hand is doing. For example, here, below is Gerry’s (your
lawyer) final paragraph to the state attorney requesting an investigation over
this meeting.
"On Behalf of
Sheriff Morgan, we respectfully request that you initiate an investigation into
this meeting on the basis that it was wrongfully closed to the public in
violation of Section 286.011 (8), Florida Statutes (2017)."
To which you just now answered to the world on Facebook:
To which you just now answered to the world on Facebook:
"One of the
things required for a crime to occur is criminal intent. If the commissioners
made the decision thinking they were within the law it more than likely wasn't
a criminal act.
EXACTLY!—Congratulations, you cracked the case! (You should have just told Gerry this last week instead of wasting the SAO’s time requesting an investigation)”
EXACTLY!—Congratulations, you cracked the case! (You should have just told Gerry this last week instead of wasting the SAO’s time requesting an investigation)”
Eric Haines: “… I
don’t know why you are upset. If we are incorrect about the shade meeting
everything is status quo. If we are right, you just have to release the
transcript that you are keeping from the public.”
Me: Why did
your lawyer request an investigation if all you wanted was a transcript? you
are too clever by half. Let me break it down for you and connect the dots one
by one.
The way to compel production of documents is contained in chapter 119 Florida Statutes; You file the matter in Circuit Court and the statute requires that the case be expedited on the docket.
You are being inefficient again, by going to the State Attorney and requesting the relief you seek but that only a judge can provide------if you are right.
Drilling a dry hole part II
The way to compel production of documents is contained in chapter 119 Florida Statutes; You file the matter in Circuit Court and the statute requires that the case be expedited on the docket.
You are being inefficient again, by going to the State Attorney and requesting the relief you seek but that only a judge can provide------if you are right.
Drilling a dry hole part II
I’m not sure if you just have flaws in your logic or you are intentionally misdirecting. If the State Attorney Office was briefed on all the details about your shade meeting, why then would they ask your attorney for an explanation rather than just inform ECSO that they already looked at the issue, approved it, and the meeting was appropriate? It seems they want more information.
ReplyDeleteIn addition, you ask us to take your attorneys decisions at face value. If everything your attorneys say is correct, why then after they (as well as the Clerk of the Court and her attorney) blessed the BOCC’s current LETF process did you seek out an Attorney General opinion to see if they were correct. Hypocrisy of Flawed Logic?
Eric, no misdirection at all. Re-read 286.011(8). (8) "Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (1), any board or commission of any state agency or authority or any agency or authority of any county, municipal corporation, or political subdivision, and the chief administrative or executive officer of the governmental entity, may meet in private with the entity’s attorney to discuss pending litigation to which the entity is presently a party before a court or administrative agency" What we did by having that meeting comports with statutes, was completely, thoroughly vetted by a team of lawyers six ways from Sunday, and was totally appropriate. The LETF process is a different discussion all together. Stop conflating issues, stay on task Eric.....stop breaking olive branches.....
ReplyDelete