ReportWire

Tag: Orlando Police Department

  • Police surround business on Edgewater Drive and Lee Road in Orlando

    People are being asked to avoid the intersection of Edgewater Drive and Lee Road for an “active investigation,” the Orlando Police Department said on Facebook on Friday afternoon. It involves a barricaded suspect, police said. Chopper 2 is on scene where police have surrounded what appears to be a tattoo shop in a strip mall. Broken windows can be seen in the front of the shop. >> This is a breaking news story and will be updated as more information is released

    People are being asked to avoid the intersection of Edgewater Drive and Lee Road for an “active investigation,” the Orlando Police Department said on Facebook on Friday afternoon.

    It involves a barricaded suspect, police said.

    Chopper 2 is on scene where police have surrounded what appears to be a tattoo shop in a strip mall.

    Broken windows can be seen in the front of the shop.

    >> This is a breaking news story and will be updated as more information is released

    Chopper 2

    Law enforcement surrounds business near Lee Road and Edgewater Drive on Friday, Nov. 14, 2025


    Chopper 2 is on scene where law enforcement has surrounded a building on Edgewater Drive and Lee Road

    Chopper 2 is on scene where law enforcement has surrounded a building on Edgewater Drive and Lee Road

    Chopper 2 is on scene where law enforcement has surrounded a building on Edgewater Drive and Lee Road

    Chopper 2 is on scene where law enforcement has surrounded a building on Edgewater Drive and Lee Road


    This content is imported from Facebook.
    You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

    Source link

  • Orlando police discuss how to stay safe this Halloween

    Orlando police discuss how to stay safe this Halloween

    The Orlando Police Department will hosts its annual trunk-or-treat event on Thursday, Oct. 30 from 4-7 p.m.

    AGENCIES ACROSS CENTRAL FLORIDA ARE GOING INTO OVERDRIVE TO HELP KEEP EVERYONE SAFE AND MAKE THE MOST OF HALLOWEEN. YOU SEE OUR COUNTDOWN TO DAYS 14 HOURS, 17 MINUTES AND 45 SECONDS. BUT WHO’S GETTING SPECIFIC? CORPORAL MICHELLE ROGERS AND SERGEANT RODNEY VANCE FROM THE ORLANDO POLICE DEPARTMENT ARE JOINING ME THIS MORNING. THANKS SO MUCH FOR COMING IN, GUYS. THANK YOU FOR HAVING US. WE’RE HAPPY TO BE HERE. LET’S TALK ABOUT WHAT PARENTS GUARDIANS NEED TO BE THINKING ABOUT. WE IT’S A VERY EXCITING TIME OF YEAR. BUT ALSO WHAT KIND OF CONVERSATIONS MAYBE WE SHOULD BE HAVING WITH OUR KIDS AHEAD OF FRIDAY. IT’S IMPORTANT TO HAVE CONVERSATIONS ALWAYS ABOUT SAFETY, AND SAFETY IS ALWAYS PARAMOUNT WHEN IT COMES TO HAVING FUN, AND SOMETIMES WE GET CAUGHT UP IN THE MOMENT, SO IT’S IMPORTANT TO BE REMINDING YOURSELF ABOUT THINGS OF SAFETY, LIKE WEARING REFLECTIVE CLOTHING, STAYING WELL LIT, THINGS THAT GLOW, MAKING SURE THAT PARENTS ARE CHECKING CANDY IF THINGS ARE UNWRAPPED, MAKE SURE YOU JUST TOSS IT. DON’T EVEN BOTHER FOLLOWING TRAFFIC RULES. THINGS OF THAT NATURE. LET’S TALK SPECIFICALLY WHEN IT COMES TO OUR YOUNGER KIDS, WHEN THEY GO OUT TRICK OR TREATING, MINE ARE SEVEN AND NINE AND THEY ASK, MOM, CAN WE GO OUT BY OURSELVES? I SAID, NO, SORRY, I’M GOING TO BE GOING WITH YOU. WHAT KIND OF CONVERSATION SHOULD WE BE HAVING WITH THAT AGE? SO WITH THAT AGE AND I HAVE LITTLE ONES TOO, SO I CAN RELATE. I USUALLY SIT DOWN WITH THEM AND TALK ABOUT A PLAN. INVOLVE THEM IN YOUR PLAN. PLAN YOUR ROUTE. ALSO TALK ABOUT WE’RE ONLY GOING TO VISIT HOMES THAT ARE WELL LIT, THAT HAVE DECORATIONS OF HALLOWEEN, AND THEY’RE PARTICIPATING IN THE FESTIVITIES. ANOTHER THING TO REMIND OUR LITTLE ONES TOO, IS THAT USE THE SIDEWALK. THEY KNOW. LOOK TO THE LEFT. LOOK TO THE RIGHT. BEFORE CROSSING. USE MOMMY’S HAND. THOSE ARE THINGS THAT ARE IMPORTANT THAT THEY ALREADY KNOW. BUT LIKE I SAID BEFORE, SOMETIMES THEY GET EXCITED AND CAUGHT UP IN THE MOMENT MOMENT. SO STRENGTH IN NUMBERS RELY ON YOUR NEIGHBORS, YOUR FRIENDS, MORE EYES. TRICK OR TREAT. AS A GROUP. IT’S A GREAT THING AND A GREAT TOOL TO HAVE AS YOUR FRIENDS. MINE IS A WEREWOLF AND EVEN HIS MASK. I WAS LIKE, I MIGHT HAVE TO CUT THE HOLES AROUND THE EYES A LITTLE BIT MORE BECAUSE I FELT LIKE HE COULDN’T EVEN SEE, YOU KNOW, WHERE HE WAS WALKING. SO HAVING TO BE CAREFUL. THAT’S A GREAT IDEA ABOUT OUR TEENS. I KNOW OUR TEENS PROBABLY WANT TO GO OUT AND BE BY THEMSELVES. SO WHAT SHOULD WE TELL OUR KIDS THAT ARE A LITTLE BIT OLDER, A LITTLE BIT OF THE SAME TIPS THAT GO ALONG WITH THE YOUNG ONES. MAKE SURE THEY STAY IN GROUPS. MAKE SURE THEIR COSTUMES THAT IF THEY’RE CARRYING ANYTHING THAT MAY LOOK LIKE A WEAPON, THAT THE WEAPONS CLEARLY LOOK LIKE THEY’RE FAKE. SO PEOPLE DON’T CONFUSE THEM WITH BEING REAL. MAKE SURE THAT THEY ALL HAVE PHONES THESE DAYS. SO MAKE SURE IF YOU’RE NOT GOING TO BE WITH THEM THAT THEY HAVE THEIR LOCATION SERVICES ON THEIR PHONE ON. SO IF SOMETHING DOES HAPPEN, YOU KNOW WHERE THEY ARE. AND JUST MAKE SURE THAT YOU HAVE, AS A PARENT, HAVE A GENERAL IDEA OF WHO THEY’RE GOING OUT WITH. DON’T JUST LET THEM GO ON OUT WITH PEOPLE WHO YOU MAY NOT KNOW. THAT WAY, IF YOU CAN’T GET IN CONTACT WITH THEM, THERE’S SOMEBODY ELSE IN THE GROUP THAT YOU CAN GET IN CONTACT WITH. I WAS RAISED BY MILITARY FOLK. THEY SAID, FILE THE FLIGHT PLAN AND STICK TO IT. THAT’S RIGHT. MISCONCEPTIONS, THINGS THAT WE DON’T THINK ABOUT THAT PARENTS SHOULD KNOW, THINGS THAT WE DON’T THINK ABOUT SOMETIMES IS JUST TRICK OR TREATING AS A GROUP. SOMETIMES WE JUST GET SO CAUGHT UP IN THE RUSHING OF GETTING THE COSTUMES ON AND RUSHING AND TRYING TO GO BEFORE IT GETS DARK OUT. BUT ONE THING THAT YOU CAN REMEMBER IS BRING A FLASHLIGHT. A FLASHLIGHT CAN ALSO LIGHT YOUR PATH ONCE THE STREETLIGHTS COME ON, IT DOESN’T MEAN THAT IT’S TIME TO STOP HAVING FUN. IT JUST MEANS THAT WE’RE ALL RESPONSIBLE FOR OUR SAFETY. AND IF WE WORK TOGETHER, IT’S GOING TO BE AWESOME AND YOU GUYS CAN HAVE A SAFE HALLOWEEN. SPEAKING OF SAFE, YOU GUYS HAVE AN EVENT. WHAT ARE THE DETAILS FOR THAT? YES. SO ON THURSDAY AT OUR HEADQUARTERS BUILDING ON SOUTH STREET, WE’LL BE HAVING A TRUNK OR TREAT EVENT FROM 4 TO 7 P.M. WE’RE GOING TO HAVE OFFICERS FROM DIFFERENT PARTS OF THE POLICE DEPARTMENT THAT ARE GOING TO BE SETTING UP THEIR CARS. WE’LL HAVE PLENTY OF CANDY AND EVENTS FOR KIDS AND FAMILIES TO COME OUT AND ENJOY IN THE SAFETY OF THE POLICE STATION. YOU KNOW IT’S SAFE AND YOU GET TO MEET SOME OF YOUR LOCAL HEROES, TOO. THAT IS A GREAT WAY TO DO THAT. WE DID HAVE THE INFORMATION UP ON THE SCREEN. WE’LL ALSO POST A LINK TO THIS ON OUR WEBSITE WESH.COM. SERGEANT VANCE

    Orlando police discuss how to stay safe this Halloween

    The Orlando Police Department will hosts its annual trunk-or-treat event on Thursday, Oct. 30 from 4-7 p.m.

    Updated: 9:24 PM EDT Oct 28, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    Sergeant Rodney Vance and Corporal Michelle Rogers of the Orlando Police Department join WESH 2 to discuss how kids, teens and families can stay safe this Halloween.OPD will hosts its annual trunk-or-treat event on Thursday, Oct. 30 from 4-7 p.m. The free community event will be held at the department’s headquarters on West South Street.Click here to learn more.

    Sergeant Rodney Vance and Corporal Michelle Rogers of the Orlando Police Department join WESH 2 to discuss how kids, teens and families can stay safe this Halloween.

    OPD will hosts its annual trunk-or-treat event on Thursday, Oct. 30 from 4-7 p.m.

    The free community event will be held at the department’s headquarters on West South Street.

    Click here to learn more.

    Source link

  • Only on 9: Family of 16-year-old girl demands answers after police encounter in downtown

    The family of a 16-year-old girl is demanding answers from the Orlando Police Department after a video surfaced showing her being tackled by officers and, moments later, another officer appearing to deploy pepper spray during a chaotic downtown scene.

    The incident happened early Monday morning near the corner of Central Boulevard and Orange Avenue.

    Treasure Gray, 16, says she was leaving downtown with her 22-year-old sister when the situation unfolded.

    In a video shared with Channel 9, Gray can be seen being taken to the ground by an officer. “There was a crowd of people because everyone was getting ready to leave,” Treasure told Channel 9. “Next thing I see, I was getting slammed on the floor, me and my sister.”

    Treasure has been charged with battery on a law enforcement officer and resisting arrest. But she and her family say she never attacked anyone and was confused and scared during the incident. “They sprayed the crowd with mace,” she said. “I started kicking because it was getting in my eyes. That’s when the officer forced himself on my leg.”

    Treasure’s father, Antavious Gray, says his daughters were trying to head home with family after a night out. “It was 3 in the morning, and she’s 16. What was she doing Downtown,” Channel 9’s Geovany Dias asked the father. “They were hanging out with their big sister, sister-in-law and cousin,” he said. “My 22-year-old daughter, who was with them, asked the officers, ‘What are you doing? Why are you doing that to my sisters?’ They told her they didn’t have to explain anything.”

    Another video taken by bystander James Lake shows police shouting at people to get back and clear the roadway.

    In the video, a person appears to comply with the officer’s orders, only to be hit with pepper spray seconds later.

    “We are cooperating,” someone can be heard saying moments before the spray is deployed. Lake, who recorded the video, told Channel 9 he began filming because he was concerned about how the officers were handling the crowd. “I just see the police arresting young people,” he said. “Just wanted to make sure they’re doing their job right.”

    Lake said he ended up in the ER after being sprayed on. “It felt like my flesh was falling off,” he recalled. “Yesterday I couldn’t breathe through either nostril. What if it was his son?”

    Legal Action Underway

    Another bystander, who was also recording the incident, was arrested and charged with obstruction and resisting arrest without violence. He has since been released from jail.

    Both he and James Lake say they are now planning to take legal action against the Orlando Police Department.

    In a statement, Orlando Police told Channel 9 they are aware of the incident and are currently reviewing the matter to determine whether any department policies were violated. We’ve reached out to OPD again for additional comment following our interview with Treasure Gray and her family. We will update this story as soon as we hear back.

    Click here to download our free news, weather and smart TV apps. And click here to stream Channel 9 Eyewitness News live.

    Source link

  • Three more Pulse protesters released from jail after arrests for using chalk at crosswalk

    Three people arrested late Sunday evening for using chalk to protest the state’s removal of the Pulse rainbow crosswalk were released from jail Monday pending charges from the state attorney’s office.

    Maryjane East, 25, Donavon Short, 26, and Zane Aparicio, 39, were arrested and booked by Florida Highway Patrol on Sunday night outside the Pulse memorial in Orlando and charged with defacing a traffic device — a statute that typically covers electronic traffic devices such as lights and signals.

    The arrests come after Orestes Sebastian Suarez was arrested Friday night by Florida Highway Patrol on the same charge. Suarez was also released shortly after he was booked after the judge found no probable cause he committed the crime.

    However, a judge on Monday did find probable cause for the three latest arrests. However, there were no charges pending after they were released on their own recognizance, and any further charges would need to be brought forward by Orange-Osceola State Attorney Monique Worrell.

    Blake Simons, the attorney representing both Suarez and the three arrested late Sunday night, said FHP’s arrest report from Sunday was much more detailed and included allegations of damage of over $1,000.

    “I would argue water-soluble chalk that washes away while you’re being arrested doesn’t amount to over $1,000 worth of damage,” Simons said after appearing before the judge Monday morning.

    FHP and Orlando Police Department have been stationed at the Dunkin Donuts next to the Pulse memorial for over a week, telling protesters they won’t be arrested if they are not impeding traffic.

    Protests initially erupted last month after the Florida Department of Transportation painted over the rainbow crosswalk, meant to memorialize the 49 victims of the 2016 mass shooting, in the middle of the night. Since then, the department has repainted it at least once more due to ongoing protestors coloring the crosswalk with rainbow paint and chalk.

    FDOT has ordered other cities to remove rainbows and other painted designs from their roads.

    DeSantis has defended the state’s actions, saying it’s not political and cited a new state law — a claim lawmakers refute — and that the designs “jeopardize both driver and pedestrian safety.”

    But an Orlando Sentinel analysis of city traffic data shows the opposite. The city’s many decorative crosswalks and murals in Downtown Orlando, including the crosswalk by Pulse, have helped reduce crashes with pedestrians despite increased foot traffic.

    In a statement, FDOT said it conducted a “months-long” update of the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices with input from representatives of state and local governments. The update included a prohibition on “non-uniform” traffic control devices and explicitly “prohibits the application of pavement or surface art on travel lanes, paved shoulders, intersections, crosswalks or sidewalks.”

    The four arrested protesters are part of a larger, coordinated effort to maintain protests against the state’s removal of the rainbow crosswalk. On Reddit’s Orlando forum, one person — who said they had been at the crosswalk all of last week — claimed the three intended to be arrested for the cameras.

    “Do not worry, we planned this for live cameras to see. Now we get to see what a judge says about them violating our first amendment rights, and we hope it leads to us being allowed to continue the chalk,” wrote Reed, who asked to only be identified by their first name.

    Following the arrest of the three protesters at the Pulse memorial Sunday night, the remaining protesters marched to Orlando City Hall downtown where they wrote messages in chalk.

    “You can’t erase us,” one chalk message read.

    “We’re just getting started,” read another.

    Protesters returned to city hall Monday afternoon.

    Source link

  • Use-of-force investigation underway after Orlando cops, pro-Palestine protesters clash downtown

    Use-of-force investigation underway after Orlando cops, pro-Palestine protesters clash downtown

    click to enlarge

    Image via Orlando Police Department

    A use-of-force investigation has been launched and eight people arrested following a clash between officers and pro-Palestine protesters, Orlando Police Department says.

    According to OPD, 20 individuals peacefully demonstrated near Lake Eola around 4 p.m. Saturday. The demonstration was monitored by officers from downtown and Parramore bike units before concluding at 5:15 p.m.

    At around 5:30 p.m., bike officers responded to a “disturbance” near the Publix on East Central Boulevard, where some protesters were arguing with a person of opposing views.

    A video released by OPD Sunday shows a series of clips of one officer’s body-camera footage, covering some of the incident, which appears to have quickly turned into a physical clash between some protesters and officers.

    One bodycam clip shows the arresting officer riding a bike alongside the person arguing with protesters. The officer and opponent are walking along the street, while protesters are walking on the parallel sidewalk.

    A protester is seen taking a phone out of their pocket and stepping toward the woman and the officer seconds, before someone is heard saying, “Back up.” That protester then sprawls on the ground.

    The group of protesters are then seen rushing toward the person on the ground and nearby officers, and an altercation quickly breaks out. The sequence spans about three seconds.

    Another piece of the video shows clips from what seem to be different bodycams, depicting verbal and physical altercations and showing officers handcuffing some protesters. OPD says this footage “shows the level of agitation of the demonstrators and their willingness to physically attack officers while in the process of making arrests and keeping the peace.”

    One protester is seen stepping toward an officer with phone in hand, presumably recording a video, before the officer quickly forces them to the ground.

    Another clips shows an officer attempting to restrain a protester while they’re lying on top of what appears to be another bike officer and his bike on the pavement. Someone is heard saying, “What are you doing?” repeatedly.

    In a release shared Sunday night, OPD stated, “When officers attempted to separate the two parties, a member of the Pro-Palestine demonstration group lunged toward an OPD officer and the opposing citizen in a physically threatening manner.”

    It is not clear which of the depicted altercations this sentence refers to.

    The video ends by saying a use-of-force investigation is underway.

    Eight people were ultimately arrested on various charges, including disorderly conduct, battery on a law enforcement officer, resisting arrest with violence and resisting arrest without violence, OPD says.

    There has been no additional information provided as of early Monday afternoon, including what exactly prompted the investigation or the identities of those arrested.

    Earlier this summer, OPD released body-cam footage of a pro-Palestine rally at Lake Eola, in which officers are seen pepper-spraying, shoving and arresting demonstrators.

    Subscribe to Orlando Weekly newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed

    Chloe Greenberg

    Source link

  • 15-Year-Old Jones High Student Charged for Bringing Gun to Orlando School

    15-Year-Old Jones High Student Charged for Bringing Gun to Orlando School

    A 15-year-old Jones High student was charged for bringing a gun to an Orlando school.

    The Orlando Police Department said it will not hesitate to protect the students and teachers they serve and take all threats seriously.

    After a social media post was shared about a student with a gun at Jones High School, a 15-year-old was swiftly located by the School Resource Officers on campus.

    The student was found with an unloaded BB gun. However, it did not have any markings to distinguish it from a real firearm, according to local law enforcement.

    While there was no threat associated with his social media post, the actions of this student caused unnecessary fear among his peers, their parents and teachers.

    The student was charged with a city ordinance violation: Carrying a Simulated Firearm.

    In light of the recent school shooting in Georgia, the Orlando Police Department expressed its unwavering commitment to vigilance in local schools and to stop any individuals who could be considered a danger to public safety.

    Recently, a 16-year-old Central Florida student was also arrested for threatening a mass shooting at another local school; a 15-year-old Central Florida student was also arrested for making an online school shooting threat at another school; and a 13-year-old student was also arrested for threatening a school shooting in Central Florida.

    Source link

  • Orlando quietly shuts down citizens’ police review board following adoption of preemptive state law

    Orlando quietly shuts down citizens’ police review board following adoption of preemptive state law

    click to enlarge

    Photo by Dave Decker

    Orlando police closely watch protesters during a pro-Palestine rally at Lake Eola Park in May 2024.

    City officials in Orlando have quietly shut down the city’s decades-old citizens’ police review board, following the adoption of a new state law on July 1. The law, approved earlier this year by the Republican-controlled Legislature and Gov. Ron DeSantis, restricts local civilian oversight of law enforcement agencies.

    Such oversight, generally established in the form of a citizen board or panel, was already restricted under Florida law from investigating or disciplining officers for alleged misconduct.

    The law that now further restricts them, or in some cases, is forcing their dissolution, was co-sponsored by Florida Rep. Danny Alvarez, R-Riverview, an attorney by trade who serves as general counsel for the Tampa Police Benevolent Association, a labor union that represents the interests’ of Tampa Police Department officers. The labor union’s state affiliate, the Florida PBA, publicly supported the law.

    A webpage for the Orlando Citizens’ Police Review Board, first established in 1992 through a city ordinance, currently reads as an “Error” page. City spokesperson Ashley Papagni confirmed to Orlando Weekly that, as of July 1, the board has been “disassembled for the time being.”

    A former webpage for the city of Orlando's Citizens' Police Review Board is now an 'Error' page. - City of Orlando

    City of Orlando

    A former webpage for the city of Orlando’s Citizens’ Police Review Board is now an ‘Error’ page.

    “Since the new bill went into effect July 1, we are still currently evaluating the new changes before making any future decisions,” Papagni explained over email. City records show that Orlando City Council voted unanimously last month to adopt an amended version of the relevant ordinance in order to comply with the new state law.

    The amended version fully guts general provisions of the board, and the powers and duties of the board. Another section was amended to acknowledge that the Orlando police chief “may” establish — and have control over — a civilian review board “to review the policies and procedures of his or her department.”

    Under the new state law, only a police chief or a county sheriff are authorized to establish — and subsequently have control over — such a board, including the selection of board members.

    click to enlarge A section of a city ordinance establishing a citizens police review board is repealed with city council's approval in June 2024. - City of Orlando

    City of Orlando

    A section of a city ordinance establishing a citizens police review board is repealed with city council’s approval in June 2024.

    According to a report from the Leroy Collins Institute, there were 21 cities in Florida that had these kinds of citizen review panels, as of December 2021, in addition to panels established by a couple of counties (including Orange). Some were established by ordinance, and others through voter-approved charter amendments, resolution or executive order.

    Many of these boards were created in the aftermath of incidents of police brutality, investigations shining a light on disparities in policing practices, or related calls for police reform.

    The final meeting

    The Citizens’ Police Review Board in Orlando was first established 32 years ago,  following a series of riots that ensued after the brutal police beating of Rodney King in Los Angeles, according to the Orlando Sentinel.  The Orlando community, particularly people of color, are no strangers to police violence themselves, even today.

    Derek Diaz, an unarmed 26-year-old and father, was shot dead by an Orlando police officer in early July 2023. The officer resigned after the fact but will not face charges related to the incident. According to Police Scorecard, a national watchdog project, a Black person in Orlando was 3.1 times more likely to be killed by police as a white person in Orlando, based on their analysis of data from 2013 to 2021, while a Latinx person was 1.2 times as likely to be killed.

    The city of Orlando also reportedly spends an average of over $400,000 per year on police misconduct settlements, a 2021 investigation by FiveThirtyEight and the Marshall Project found.

    The nine-member Citizen Police Review Board’s actual powers and capabilities were admittedly weak, limited primarily to reviewing policies and procedures of the Orlando Police Department, reviewing citizen complaints made against local police, and reviewing findings of closed investigations into cases involving use of deadly force or allegations of “excessive force” by a cop.

    The board (and others like it in the state) was already prohibited from investigating open cases of police misconduct allegations, under the Florida’s pre-existing Police Officers’ Bill of Rights, and lacked subpoena power. The same bill of rights also prohibited board members from questioning officers subject to discipline, and barred board members from participation in disciplinary decisions, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

    Still, at board members’ final meeting in February, several board members and others present — including a police sergeant — reflected on what they considered meaningful work by the board.

    “The board, without a doubt over the years, has great insight and gave us great advice as far as the investigations, good feedback,” said OPD internal affairs manager Dwain Rivers, during the board’s final meeting, conducted over Zoom. “I can’t speak for any other board,” Rivers added.

    click to enlarge Members of the Orlando Citizens Police Review Board meet for the final time on Feb. 7, 2024. - City of Orlando via public records request

    City of Orlando via public records request

    Members of the Orlando Citizens Police Review Board meet for the final time on Feb. 7, 2024.

    “I think the most valuable thing is … bridging that gap, right? Like creating more understanding for people, so that when they see things in the news, or they read articles, that they just have a different perspective of the reality of what we do and how we do things and why we do things,” Orlando police sergeant April McConnell shared on the call.  “They give us the opportunity to at least explain ourselves and to do a better job next time, before making assumptions just based on what they’re presented.”

    Board member Yalanda McCoy echoed McConnell’s sentiment, based on conversations she’d had with local officers during board trainings. “I think that they appreciate having us, and it allows citizens to be able to see a different view of the police department,” said McCoy. “So I think it’s beneficial.”

    Chief Assistant City Attorney Natasha Williams told the board at this time that the city had a lobbyist in Tallahassee who would fight to preserve home rule on the issue. “Our position is basically that we believe that these kinds of decisions should be had at the, and made at the, local level,” Williams explained. “We believe that the government closest to the people are the ones who should make the decision.”

    Effects of the bill “overstated”

    Supporters of the legislation, including representatives of police unions, argued it would create uniformity throughout the state — a common argument made for state preemption — and would help to remove uncertainty for what GOP bill sponsor Brian Duggan described as “a very stressful profession.”

    Opponents of the bill included the American Civil Liberties Union, the Southern Poverty Law Center Action fund, the NAACP and the progressive Florida Rising organization, among others.

    State legislators in the GOP-dominated Florida House ultimately approved HB 601 in a 81–28 vote of approval along party lines in March, following a unanimous vote of approval from the Florida Senate. Gov. DeSantis signed the bill into law the following month.

    The American Civil Liberties Union has been one of the most vocal critics of the new law, as well as local governments’ interpretations of it. The group released a public memo days after DeSantis signed the bill into law, arguing that effects of the bill had been “overstated.” The group attributed blame for that, in part, to inaccurate reporting published by some media outlets.

    Attorney James Shaw Jr., who volunteers with the Greater Tampa ACLU chapter, has seen the impact of this play out in Tampa. Public email records obtained by Shaw show that city staff in Tampa, for instance, initially believed the law would have little impact on their own Citizens Review Board.

    “As our current Citizen’s Review Board is functioning, I do not see this affecting it other than to prevent any future ordinances or rules giving the CRB any oversight or investigative authority over the police department,” chief assistant attorney Megan Newcomb wrote in a November memo to city staff.

    City attorneys later changed their tune, however, leading to the dissolution of the Tampa Citizens Review Board, effective this month. Crystal Clark, marketing and communications manager for the city of Tampa, told Orlando Weekly the November memo was an “initial review of the proposed legislation based solely on the preliminary language available, without the full legislative context.”

    Clark added that, as the bill progressed through the state Legislature and saw adjustments, the city’s legal staff conducted a “comprehensive analysis” of the bill as passed. Staff then provided a “detailed finding” of that analysis to Tampa City Council, which in June voted to dismantle the board. Clark did not further explain which changes made to the bill affected their interpretation of its impact.

    click to enlarge Orlando Police Department officers watch protest marchers on June 2, 2020 - Photo by Dave Plotkin

    Photo by Dave Plotkin

    Orlando Police Department officers watch protest marchers on June 2, 2020

    Unlike in Orlando, the city of Tampa created their board in 2015 through an executive order issued by Mayor Jane Castor, a former Tampa police chief herself. The ACLU argues that the bill explicitly targets civilian boards established through an ordinance or law only, and that those established through other means — such as the board in Tampa — should not be affected.

    The ACLU also maintains that while police chiefs and sheriffs “may” establish a civilian board to oversee their agencies, under the new law, “Nothing in HB601 provides that a city or county may not establish a board of its own in addition to the one established by a sheriff or police chief.”

    Florida Rep. Alvarez, the Tampa-area bill co-sponsor (and general counsel for a police union), however, has argued that the bill was meant to uniformly apply across all civilian review boards. “If you were to find some sort of way that you were going to keep it going, then we’d just have to go back to the dais and tighten it up with
    whatever loophole you might have found,” Alvarez told Tampa City Council last month, as they questioned the board’s future.

    Police unions, including the union that Alvarez works for, have often opposed civilian oversight boards, or at the very least, efforts by some reformers to strengthen them.

    “A lot of the resistance [to civilian oversight boards] happens in unions, although we do see some unions elsewhere in the country who understand that oversight also has a benefit to its members,” Cameron McEllhiney, executive director for the National Association for Civilian Oversight of Law Enforcement, told Orlando Weekly in December. “There are some things, particularly monitor models of oversight, that help to find issues that affect not only [the] community but also the officers who are implementing policy.”

    Police in Orlando “remain committed” to community engagement

    Media relations staff for the Orlando Police Department told Orlando Weekly over email that the department “continues to have many resources in place that ensures transparency with the community.”

    “Chief Smith holds many community meetings city-wide throughout the year, we have expanded our citizen police academies to include other languages, and have internal affairs resources that the community can access on our website,” the unsigned statement reads. “The Orlando Police Department will remain committed to our community engagement efforts.”

    Papagni, the city of Orlando spokesperson, did not respond to our question of when the public can expect further developments on this issue. City staff have, in the past, been complimentary of the board’s work.

    “The investment of your time and efforts have helped this department get better and make it a very professional department,” chief assistant attorney Williams shared, during the board’s final meeting in February. “You don’t have a problem holding them to task, so continue to do the work as long as we can. I believe it helps this community.”

    Subscribe to Orlando Weekly newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | or sign up for our RSS Feed

    McKenna Schueler

    Source link

  • Downtown nighttime parking restriction is no more. City says it was in place for only one weekend

    Downtown nighttime parking restriction is no more. City says it was in place for only one weekend

    click to enlarge

    Image via Google Maps

    Downtown Orlando’s Central Boulevard garage

    The City of Orlando alarmed downtown patrons in early May by limiting nighttime parking as part of ongoing safety measures. Now, the city says the restriction was in place for only one weekend.

    The city, along with the Orlando Police Department, quietly put in place a ban on entry and reentry to downtown parking garages after 11 p.m. starting Friday, May 10.

    City spokesperson Ashley Papagni told Orlando Weekly at the time the city implemented “limited entrance to city parking garages after 11 p.m. on Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights” starting May 10. Downtown business owners and patrons were left to believe the change had no end date.

    Business owners and downtown workers expressed concerns on social media about the change, which they said would worsen traffic and decrease business.

    The move echoed a series of downtown safety policies, including requiring special permits for late-night alcohol sales and adjusting the noise ordinance, passed around the same time.

    But two months later, the restriction is no longer in effect. The city made no public announcement about the change.

    City spokesperson Ashley Papagni told Orlando Weekly Friday the restriction was in place for one weekend.

    “Access was limited to the downtown parking garages for one weekend as part of a measure taken as we work to ensure the safety of downtown,” she said.

    Orlando Police Chief Eric D. Smith said the parking change was an “experiment” that ended after the public voiced its discontentment at a City Hall meeting July 9, Orlando Business Journal reported Wednesday.

    The city did not elaborate on why the change was made for that weekend in May, why it did not clarify the confusion resulting from the policy or why it didn’t publicly announce the lifting of the restriction.

    Earlier this year, the city extended its moratorium on downtown nightclubs and bars for another six months. Prompted by concerns such as a high concentration of nightclubs downtown and safety and security issues, the moratorium was initially enacted as an ordinance in March 2023, then extended for another six months in August.

    City commissioners voted in March to extend the moratorium through Sept. 20, 2024.

    Subscribe to Orlando Weekly newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed

    Zoey Thomas

    Source link

  • Man Exposed Himself to Minor in Orlando, Police Seek Community Help

    Man Exposed Himself to Minor in Orlando, Police Seek Community Help

    The Orlando Police Department Special Victims Unit is asking for the public’s assistance in identifying a suspect that is reported to have exposed himself to a minor.

    On May 3rd, between 8:40am and 9:00am, the victim was walking to school in the area of Summerlin Avenue and Washington Street when an unknown white male with brown hair, approximately 6 feet tall, in a blue sedan approached the victim. He was unclothed and exposing himself while in the vehicle.

    The victim walked away, and the vehicle attempted to follow her until she ran away. The mother of the victim reported the incident to police.

    Patrol officers continue to canvass the area and detectives continue to investigate along with the help of the Crime Center in reviewing surveillance cameras from businesses and residents in the area.

    It is believed the suspect may have been in the area of the 7-11 on Summerlin Ave. prior to encountering the female student.

    There are social media posts circulating of a blue vehicle. According to OPD, the vehicle in the photo has not been confirmed to be the suspect vehicle at this time. The Orlando Police Department did state that the suspect vehicle is possibly a blue sedan, specific model is unknown.

    If vehicle or suspect is located, do not approach. Immediately call police.

    If you or anyone you know may have information that can help police in locating this suspect, please call OPD at 9-1-1 or submit a tip anonymously to Crimeline at 1-800-423-TIPS(8477).

    Source link

  • 18-Year-Old Arrested for 2023 Orlando Woman’s Murder

    18-Year-Old Arrested for 2023 Orlando Woman’s Murder

    The Orlando Police Department recently announced another 18-year-old was arrested for a 2023 woman’s murder at the Jernigan Gardens Apartments.

    Recently, 18-year-old Christian Amari Childs was apprehended by the Orlando Police Department’s Fugitive Investigative Unit in Osceola County.

    On September 22, 2023 at approximately 2:34pm, Orlando Police responded to 1440 Mercy Drive in reference to a large group of people fighting with shots fired in the courtyard at Jernigan Gardens Apartments. According to OPD, three individuals on scene were struck by gunfire and sustained non-life-threatening injuries. A fourth gunshot victim succumbed to her injuries.

    The victim, Macayla Queen Patterson, was transported to the hospital and declared deceased by medical staff.

    On September 22, 2023, 23-year-old Delray Shundale Duncan Junior was arrested for Attempted Homicide and First Degree Felony Murder in connection to this shooting. 18-year-old Gary Lee Williams III was apprehended by the OPD Fugitive Investigative Unit and charged with First Degree Murder with a Firearm.

    According to OPD, Childs is charged with three counts of Attempted First Degree Murder with a Firearm, Shooting at, within or into a Building, Discharging a Firearm on Residential Property and Use of a Firearm in the Commission of a Felony.

    Source link

  • Orlando Police Make Arrest in 2020 Homicide

    Orlando Police Make Arrest in 2020 Homicide

    The Orlando Police Department recently announced an arrest in a 2020 homicide.

    On April 25, 2020, at 11:10pm, Orlando Police Department responded to a drive-by-shooting that occurred in the 5100 block of Else Street, Orlando, Florida. There were multiple victims injured from this shooting.

    Dexter Antonio Rentz Junior was transported to the hospital where he was pronounced deceased.

    Recently, 24-year-old Christopher Burke was apprehended by the Orlando Police Department Fugitive Investigative Unit.

    According to OPD, Burke was charged with Second-Degree Murder and Conspiracy to Commit Second-Degree Murder.

    Source link

  • ‘To protect and to serve:’ Make-A-Wish recipient became Orlando police officer for the day

    ‘To protect and to serve:’ Make-A-Wish recipient became Orlando police officer for the day

    ORLANDO, Fla. – An unforgettable day for 4-year-old Stone Hicks.

    From the moment he got to the Orlando Police Department, he walked in the building and then suited up in his very own police uniform.

    “He’s been battling end-stage kidney disease. Our kids go through so much when they battle their critical illness and we are really here to celebrate him and give him that hope and strength and joy,” said Anne Cuba, president and CEO at Make-A-Wish Central and Northern Florida.

    The Make-A-Wish foundation, along with Orlando police, wanted to grant Stone’s wish of becoming a real police officer for the day.

    “Make-A-Wish, what’s special is the wishes that we grant is it’s not just for the child, it’s really for the entire family because it’s not only the child battling the critical illness, it’s the entire family that has grown into this terrible situation,” Cuba explained.

    After Stone was sworn in by Orlando police Chief Eric Smith, he got the news that a dog named “Rocky” was stolen in Orlando, so he joined the SWAT team for the search.

    Eventually, Stone found Rocky and the “suspect” wanted in the case.

    “I did a good job,” Stone told News 6′s Ezzy Castro.

    The day continued for Stone with more activities and he even got to meet his buddies from his favorite show “Paw Patrol.”


    You can listen to every episode of Florida’s Fourth Estate in the media player below:

    Copyright 2024 by WKMG ClickOrlando – All rights reserved.

    Ezzy Castro

    Source link

  • The Val Demings Gamble

    The Val Demings Gamble

    On a hot D.C. Wednesday in the middle of July, an 11-foot statue honoring Mary McLeod Bethune—carved out of marble extracted from the same Tuscan quarry that Michelangelo used for his David—stood draped in a black cloak in the U.S. Capitol’s National Statuary Hall. A group of distinguished guests had gathered to honor Bethune, the prominent educator and civil-rights activist who founded a college for Black students in Daytona Beach, Florida, and later served as an adviser to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. She is now the first Black American to have a state statue in the hall.

    The group, which included several members of Florida’s congressional delegation, smiled as cameras flashed. Two of those present, Senator Marco Rubio and Representative Val Demings, are opponents in the race for Rubio’s Senate seat—a race that could secure the Democrats’ control of the Senate. Together, they tugged at the sheet, revealing the white-marble figure clothed in academic regalia, holding a black rose—which, in life, Bethune viewed as a symbol of diversity.

    One by one, speakers approached a lectern in front of the statue to offer remarks. “I remember as a little girl listening to my mother and my father talk about a Black woman, a woman who looked like us, who started a college,” Demings told those who had gathered in the amphitheater. “As I listened to my parents tell the story, it seemed impossible. But Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune made what seemed impossible possible.”

    Demings hopes to conjure some of Bethune’s magic. The race has for some time been considered a long shot for the 65-year-old former Orlando police chief; to win she’ll need to make what seems impossible possible in a state where the voter rolls have flipped from a more-than-100,000-voter Democratic advantage in 2020 to a Republican lead of nearly the same size in less than two years. And for months the polls reflected that, showing Demings trailing Rubio; but in recent weeks, a new batch of polls has shown Demings pulling into an effective tie, or even a slight lead.

    If the race does break her way, the Democrats will have the convergence of two separate story lines to thank. The first is the story of Val Demings herself: a centrist Black woman with a background in law enforcement—just the profile the party has placed its bets on in recent years. It’s no coincidence, after all, that Demings joined then-Senator Kamala Harris and former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, who both worked as prosecutors before seeking elected office, on Joe Biden’s shortlist for his running mate two years ago.

    Political moderates could admire her centrism; people of color could identify with her race; women could identify with her gender. Demings has converted that appeal into a fundraising advantage, pulling in millions more in donations than Rubio so far this cycle, and spending more than twice as much as him on television ads.

    And if the national Democratic Party’s unpopularity had been weighing on her fortunes, the events of recent weeks may have buoyed them. In early August, Democrats in Congress passed a mammoth bill on climate change, health care, and taxes. Though the Inflation Reduction Act is by nature full of compromises, as my colleague Robinson Meyer notes, it “will touch every sector of the economy, subsidizing massive new investments in renewable and geothermal energy, as well as nuclear power and carbon capture and removal, and encouraging new clean-energy manufacturing industries to develop in the United States.” Demings has contrasted her own legislative record with that of Rubio, who has one of the worst attendance records in the Senate. With Congress showing that it can actually function, voters might be more receptive to that argument.

    Demings watches the House Intelligence Committee’s impeachment hearings in 2019. (Damon Winter/The New York Times/Redux)

    Demings likes to say she’s living the American dream. In 1957, when she was born, her family lived in a three-room shack in Mandarin, Florida—a rural part of Duval County, just south of Jacksonville. Her father worked as a janitor, and her mother was a housekeeper. A year later, they upgraded to a two-bedroom house, but the roof leaked and for several years it lacked working bathrooms.

    In the sixth grade, Demings helped integrate Loretta Elementary School, which she used to ride past to get to the Black elementary school 15 miles away. Shortly after enrolling, Demings was chosen to serve on the school patrol. She loved it. “You had to have good citizenship and good grades—and I was selected. I had my little orange belt, and I just fell in love,” she told me in July. “It was such an honor to be selected, because it was a big deal.”

    As soon as she was old enough to get a real job, she did: first washing dishes at a retirement home, and later working fast-food gigs. After high school, she went off to Florida State University to study criminology, with an eye toward becoming a lawyer. “My dad used to say, ‘You’re a pretty good talker. You need to make some money talking,’ and he thought being a lawyer was a pretty cool thing,” she said. But scraping her way through college meant she needed a job—not law school—after graduation. “I was broke broke,” she quipped. So she moved back to Jacksonville, where she became a social worker with the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services. But she soon grew disillusioned, doubting how much good she’d ever be able to do with so little power.

    “I had this 10-year-old boy on my caseload,” Demings said. “He started having some problems, exhibiting behavior that made him really a threat to himself.” She went to her supervisor to see if she could get a psychological evaluation for him, but was told it would be roughly three weeks before a referral could be made; the panel that made those decisions met only once a month.

    Demings was shocked. “This kid would be dead by then,” she recalled telling her boss. So she went around her supervisor to the juvenile judge—waiting outside his chambers until she was able to plead his case. To Demings’s relief, the judge granted an emergency order. She saw it as a small victory in a tough system, until it backfired: Demings was reprimanded by her supervisor for subverting their structure. She felt deflated by the experience, and began to think about what she wanted to do next.

    In 1983, Demings got word that the Orlando Police Department was recruiting at Edward Waters College, the historically Black college in Jacksonville, and she figured that she would go down to speak with someone. That ultimately led to a 27-year career at the department, where Demings worked her way through its ranks: patrol officer, juvenile-crime detective, community-relations officer, public-information officer, hostage negotiator, then supervisor of the patrol, investigations, and airport units. (Some aspects of her career were less deliberate: She always told herself that she’d never date a fellow officer—then she ended up marrying one.)

    As a police captain, she developed a reputation as a tough-on-crime enforcer on everything from traffic violations to violent infractions. “The message has to be clear for the violators: There are no deals,” she said in 2005 after a string of dangerous-driving incidents.

    But that approach, which continued after she was promoted to deputy chief, drew criticism from members of the Black community in the city. She was lambasted after an Orlando Sentinel story examined the department’s overuse of tasers and aggressive traffic stops and she told the paper that her officers were “kicking butt” in the historically Black neighborhood of Parramore. “If that [vehicle or pedestrian] stop results in something greater and leads to drugs or drug paraphernalia, I call that good police work,” she said at the time.

    Still, by late 2007, her policing record, and a succession of departures, led to her being selected as Orlando’s chief of police. She was the first woman and second Black person—after her husband, Jerry, who left that role in 2002 to become the county’s public-safety director—to lead the department.

    From the start, she took an aggressive approach to the job. “We will be courteous to law-abiding citizens but relentless in our efforts to disrupt violent criminals who have no respect for the police, citizens or their property,” she wrote in a New Year’s Day Orlando Sentinel op-ed in 2008. Later that year, Jerry won his race for county sheriff, making the duo the first Black husband and wife to serve as sheriff and chief of police in the same county at the same time.

    Demings often cites the fact that under her leadership, Orlando experienced a 40 percent drop in violent crime. But a string of excessive-force complaints—including a 2010 incident in which an officer broke an 84-year-old man’s neck by flipping him upside down—revealed some of the clear dangers of the aggressive policing tactics that were employed during her tenure. “Apparently it’s perfectly acceptable to break old men’s necks for no reason,” John Kurtz, the founder of the blog Orlando CopWatch, said at the time. Demings initially defended the officer’s actions in the incident, but eventually modified the department’s use of the technique that led to the octogenarian’s fractured vertebrae. In 2011, after 27 years with the department, Demings stepped down and set her sights on a new challenge.

    Elected office wasn’t something Demings had initially been interested in. But as she was about to retire, Mayor Buddy Dyer called her to let her know that the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee thought she would be a good candidate to run for the House seat that represented Orlando. “I just burst out laughing,” she told me. “And the mayor’s like, ‘Chief, are you okay?’” She thought he must have been joking. “You know your police chief. I’m a little rough around the edges,” she recalls telling him. “And I don’t know if I’d make a good politician.” Still, she met with Representative Steve Israel, who was the committee chair at the time—and ultimately decided that running for Congress was a logical next step.

    She lost her first campaign and suspended another run for mayor two years later. But her defeats only raised her public profile. By 2016, court-ordered redistricting meant that the Tenth District was significantly more Democratic than it had been when she first ran for office—which meant that her biggest hurdle would be her primary opponent. She won 57 percent of the vote in a four-person primary—and received 15,000 more votes than her nearest competitor. She then won in the general election by nearly 100,000 votes.

    Thirty-three years after Demings had packed everything she owned in the trunk of her Oldsmobile Firenza and headed to Orlando for her new job with the police department, she would be taking her tough-on-crime bona fides to Washington.

    Across two terms, Demings has sponsored or co-sponsored dozens of bills that have become law—though a divided Congress means she does not have a signature piece of legislation to hang her hat on. But her most significant moment came when, in January 2020, she served as an impeachment manager during the first Senate trial of then-President Donald Trump. Though the Senate ultimately acquitted Trump—voting along party lines except for the sole defection of Senator Mitt Romney—Demings’s prominence continued to grow. She was profiled by The Washington Post, NPR, and other national outlets. “Was it worth it? Every day it has been worth it,” she said of the trial after its conclusion. “Just like when I was a law enforcement officer, when I saw someone breaking the law, I did not stop and think about, well, my goodness, what will the judge do? … I did my job to stop that threat and then go to court and plead my case.”

    After that, she landed on Biden’s shortlist for vice president—evidence of both her meteoric rise and the Democratic Party’s relentless search for its next phenom who can capture the national imagination the way Barack Obama did.

    Val Demings
    Demings makes phone calls to constituents from the Pinellas County Democratic headquarters in Florida. (Octavio Jones / Getty)

    “Florida, vota por la jefa de la policía, no por el politiquero,” Demings’s first Spanish-language ad, aired in June, said. Vote for the chief of police, not the politician. Demings is trying to define herself for voters she hopes will form her coalition—particularly the Latino voters who have been tilting Republican in recent years She’s on the defensive: The Rubio campaign has tried to pin the Democratic Party’s most left-wing sensibilities on her.

    In a campaign ad of his own, Rubio touts his endorsement from Florida’s Fraternal Order of Police and 55 sheriffs, and suggests that Demings supported the “Defund the Police” movement—or, at the very least, did not reject it fiercely enough. “Senator Rubio has not only tried not to defund the police; he’s defended the police,” Al Palacio, the Miami Dade public-schools Fraternal Order of Police president, says in the ad. “And we’re here to defend him.” Rubio’s campaign believes that this is a winning issue; an October 2021 Pew Research Center survey found that 47 percent of Americans want to see more spending on police, compared with 15 percent who would like to see budgets reduced.

    Demings dismissed the ad out of hand, responding with a brief statement: “I am the police. This is ridiculous.”

    Though Florida has not seen the same jumps in crime rates as some other parts of the country over the past two years, the race has focused on policing and crime issues. The irony is, were she running as a Republican, Demings would be seen as emblematic of the tough-on-crime policies some voters say they want.

    But because she’s running in a state that is turning redder and redder, Demings has to strike the right balance of being the police enforcer she’s always been while appearing open to reform, and being unrelentingly liberal on issues such as access to abortion while emphasizing her Christian faith so as not to isolate Catholic voters. And she has to highlight her identity—her family’s economic status growing up and, perhaps most important, her race—while not making it the central plank of her campaign. Over the past several years, Florida Republicans have passed laws that limit discussions of identity in classrooms and other public spaces—a bit of a contrast with the political campaign Demings has run, explaining to voters how being a Black woman has shaped her life and informed her policy preferences.

    That’s been a difficult sell: How do you convince voters that you’ll be a senator who can get stuff done if the Democrats can manage to keep their Senate majority, when the Democrats had—at least in the public’s view—gotten so little done? But with the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act, the party’s chances look different now, and maybe, just maybe, Demings will be the beneficiary. If Demings pulls off an upset, it will be not solely because she’s a Black woman, but because the Democrats finally figured out how to rack up some wins in D.C. And what could be a greater crowd-pleaser than that?

    Adam Harris

    Source link