Gov. Ron DeSantis, in a sometimes blistering legal filing with the Florida Supreme Court, argued Tuesday there are no grounds for the courts to overturn his suspension of Broward Sheriff Scott Israel.
At one point, the governor’s filing belittles Israel’s attempt to get the courts to intervene, accusing him of “grasping at straws.” He also criticized Israel’s “continued delay tactics.”
“[Israel] was suspended from office for his failures as the Sheriff of Broward County,” the governor’s legal team wrote. “Under his leadership as Sheriff, mass shootings resulted in the tragic deaths of seventeen innocent students and faculty on February 14, 2018, at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, five deaths on January 6, 2017, at the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport and dozens of injuries that resulted from a botched response from the Sheriff’s Office.”
DeSantis suspended Israel on Jan. 11, just three days after the governor took office. He said lessons from the 2017 shooting were not implemented, contributing to a disorganized response in Parkland that cost lives and eroded trust in the Broward Sheriff’s Office.
In a separate motion, also filed Tuesday, DeSantis’ attorneys argued that the case is so clear that the justices should “expedite disposition” and decide based on the written filings — without hearing oral arguments from each side. Israel wants oral arguments before the Supreme Court justices.
If the court agrees with Israel and orders oral arguments, DeSantis wants them scheduled as quickly as possible.
In Israel’s argument, filed with the Supreme Court on Saturday, his attorneys argued that “the actual reason for the suspension was a brazen, partisan political usurpation of the electoral decision of the Broward County voters to choose Scott Israel as their Sheriff” and accused the governor of “political pandering intended to fulfill a campaign promise to the National Rifle Association and various Marjory Stoneman Douglas parents.”
Israel’s side said the governor exceeded his constitutional authority and that the mass shootings weren’t his fault. “The horrors of those two days [of mass shootings], none of which resulted from any action or inaction on the part of Sheriff Israel … could not have been avoided by any means, and serve merely as a political ploy.”
The governor’s attorneys said that the January suspension of the sheriff “lists specific grounds of suspension” required in the Florida Constitution, and “it supports the grounds with factual allegations.”
In another section, the governor’s office dismissed Israel’s contention that DeSantis couldn’t suspend him because the governor didn’t list a failure to comply with specific state statutes.
If Israel’s “argument is to be taken seriously,” the governor’s filing states, the court would have to “conclude that sheriffs throughout Florida have no legal duty to: set up command centers, hire competent deputies, train their deputies with sufficient regularity, dictate policies governing the office, etc. But common-sense dictates there is a legal duty to complete the tasks and functions of their constitutional position as sheriffs.”