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Scott Israel Should Be Reinstated As Broward Sheriff, Special Master Says

Former Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel
News Service of Florida
A Senate special master has recommended reinstating suspended Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel, and the Senate will hold a special session starting Oct. 21 to consider the issue. NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA

A Florida Senate official is recommending that the sheriff suspended over his handling of shootings at a Parkland high school and the Fort Lauderdale airport should be reinstated.

Senate special master Dudley Goodlette was appointed by the Senate to look into the suspension process. In a report released Wednesday, Goodlette said Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis failed to prove the charges in suspending former Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel in January.

"While the governor has offered a plethora of criticism, he has not shown that Sheriff Israel's policies, procedures or trainings on active shooter situations were inconsistent with Florida law enforcement standards," Goodlette wrote. He added that the shooting was the culmination of "individual failures," especially on the part of Scot Peterson , the school resource officer on duty that day.

Israel had argued that DeSantis had overreached his authority and suspended him for political reasons, and sought an award for his legal fees in defending his efforts to be reinstated.

Goodlette declined to award fees. He said there was some evidence that at first glance could seem to support the governor's position and that "this was not a situation of executive overreach" on the part of DeSantis.

Goodlette collected evidence and held two days of hearings on the matter in June.

DeSantis issued the following statement following the Senate Special Master’s report and recommendation:

“The victims with families impacted by the massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School deserve justice and accountability. I disagree with the analysis contained in the non-binding recommendation; the senators will render their own independent judgement on Scott Israel. Floridians were appalled by Scott Israel’s repeated failures and expect their senators will provide the accountability that the Parkland families have sought for the past year and a half.”

Israel's attorneys say they're optimistic the Senate president and the rest of the Senate will allow him to resume his position as sheriff.

"This is not a time for politics, but for doing the right thing in support of real evidence and the law," according to a statement from Israel's attorneys. They said Israel is committed to working with the community in the wake of the shootings to "find solutions."

The Florida Senate is scheduled to determine Israel's fate during a special session set to begin Oct. 21.

Israel's suspension came after intense criticism, particularly over his handling of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that killed 17 people on Feb. 14, 2018.

Lori Alhadeff, whose daughter Alyssa was killed in the shooting, said Wednesday, "I feel like someone just punched me in the stomach."

Alhadeff and several other Parkland parents had pushed the governor to remove Israel, a Democrat. Calls for Israel's ouster began shortly after the shooting when it was revealed that Peterson, the school's resource officers, had not gone into the building to confront the shooter, but sought cover outside.

Former student Nikolas Cruz, 21, was arrested shortly after the shooting and faces 17 counts of first-degree murder and 17 counts of attempted first-degree murder.

Israel also came under fire for a shooting at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport in January 2017. A gunman who had flown from Alaska opened fire with a handgun he had brought in checked luggage, killing five people and wounding six others. Esteban Santiago-Ruiz, a diagnosed schizophrenic, eventually pleaded guilty to the shooting and is serving a life sentence.

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