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  1. #101
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    ED has a great a$$. One of the best at the department!

  2. #102
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    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    ED has a great a$$. One of the best at the department!
    Like jrod , when ED leaves this job, she has a career in porn because her a$$ is so nice

  3. #103
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    Got a lawyer yet?

    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    Yes it is funny but true, it's not hard to find a lawyer the question is the out of pocket $$$ to pay for all this nonsense. Special Ed shot herself in the foot. I will not stop or move on until this all blows up in thier faces which will be sooner than later.

    https://www.winknews.com/2020/02/20/...d-audit-pages/

  4. #104
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    Call Morgan and Morgan 😇

    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    Yes it is funny but true, it's not hard to find a lawyer the question is the out of pocket $$$ to pay for all this nonsense. Special Ed shot herself in the foot. I will not stop or move on until this all blows up in thier faces which will be sooner than later.
    https://www.winknews.com/2020/02/20/...d-audit-pages/

  5. #105
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    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    Get your facts right there’s a female sergeant behind this shit show and she used ED

  6. #106
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    Is a 3-year police misconduct investigation connected to the murder of a federal drug informant?
    By: Lauren Sweeney

    https://www.winknews.com/2020/02/20/...rug-informant/

    February 20, 2020

    A cloud of secrecy has surrounded an investigation that led to four Fort Myers Police Department officers to be placed on administrative leave three years ago. Nobody will speak about it, and few will even acknowledge it – until now.

    The president of the Gulf Coast Police Benevolent Association said the officers are under investigation as part of a federal case against an accused drug trafficker who is charged with ordering the murder of a drug informant.

    But, he says there’s no evidence those officers are involved in the case.

    Four members of the police department: Captain Melvin Perry, Sergeant Rick Notaro, Sergeant Michael Forbes, and Officer Jason Jackson were placed on paid administrative leave in February 2017.

    The next day, the city released an audit report of the department that discussed officer misconduct. But portions of the audit were heavily redacted before release.

    Those pages left words like “officers leaking information” and “subsequently murdered” visible.

    Chief Derrick Diggs sent the full audit to the Department of Justice to request an investigation into misconduct at the agency.

    But for three years, there has been silence surrounding the investigation and the officers. Perry, Forbes, and Notaro have since retired, but Jackson remains on the payroll.

    In total: the city has spent around $670,000 in pay and benefits for the officers.

    Matt Sellers, who worked as a homicide detective at the department before becoming the president of the union, said the federal government is investigating the officers in connection to the murder of a federal drug informant.

    A federal indictment claims that Robert Ward, a known drug trafficker, ordered a hit on Kristopher Smith.

    Smith was a 27-year-old who was gunned down in the Dunbar area of Fort Myers after dropping his child off at school in 2013.

    Sellers said he was the lead detective on that case.

    “I was assigned to this case, from day one, from the day it happened up to three years there were never any officers, not these officers that were ever suspected in this case,” said Sellers.

    The indictment into Ward also details a drug trafficking conspiracy that dated back to the 1990s and strung from Panama City down to Tampa and Fort Myers.

    A codefendant, Dalton McGriff, is named in the alleged conspiracy.
    Sellers said he had no information on McGriff or the drug conspiracy count of the indictment but said he’s certain there is no way the officers were involved.

    “I don’t know what the federal government thinks. All I know is the parts I’ve read, the bits and pieces of a heavily redacted report, which says officers leaked information. Well, not during the three years that I investigated it did officers leak information or was there any evidence of that,” he said.

    But another murder victim comes up within the redaction pages. Victor Johnson was gunned down in 2016 and his case is still unsolved.

    The same year as Johnson’s murder an internal affairs investigation was launched into the lead homicide detective on his case for talking about leaks at the department.

    Detective Emily Destefanis can be heard on audio recordings as part of the IA saying she was in fear for her safety and the safety of witnesses into Johnson’s murder.

    She claimed that witnesses were reporting to her that information was getting out through her supervisor Captain Melvin Perry.

    Perry was allegedly telling his wife about the case who was related to the victim.

    “Number one, there’s a matter of safety here. There are people who are reporting this to me and they are frantically afraid for their safety,” said Destefanis in an April 2017 interview.

    An attorney for Captain Perry said he “vehemently denies” that the Captain was leaking information.

    “It’s difficult to defend when you don’t know what you are defending against,” said Stephen Webster who said he has no information on what the federal government is investigating.

    Attorneys for the other officers echoed the same. None would confirm Sellers claim that the investigation is related to the federal case against Robert Ward.

    “This all started from rumors,” said Steve Dobson, an attorney for Officer Jason Jackson.

    Detective Emily Destefanis was given counseling for what she said about Perry and other officers in front of her coworkers. She did not wish to comment.

    An attorney for Michael Forbes said Forbes was not involved in the investigation of Ward or McGriff.

    “I have no idea what the federal government is investigating,” said Jack Fernandez.

    Fernandez said that Forbes has had to sell his house because he cannot get another job amid this investigation.

    “From everything we have seen and heard about Mike in our own investigation, he was an exemplary police officer,” said Fernandez.

    Attorneys for Jackson and Perry echoed similar sentiments that their client’s reputations have been sullied and there is no evidence of wrongdoing.

    WINK News reached out to an attorney for Rick Notaro but did not hear back at the time of publication.

    The Florida Police Benevolent Association filed suit against the city of Fort Myers for the full release of the audit documents. The city has not filed a response.

    The police department cited an active criminal investigation exemption when WINK News requested the documents be provided without redaction.

    The department continually refuses to discuss the investigation into the officers.

    “As we have repeatedly stated, we cannot comment on an ongoing investigation, especially one being conducted by another agency. This is not a matter of not wishing or wanting to comment. We have complete faith in our law enforcement partners that this investigation is being conducted in the most effective, efficient and thorough manner, and will be concluded at the appropriate point,” said Fort Myers police Deputy Chief Jeffrey Meyers.

    The case against Robert Ward and Dalton McGriff is ongoing. Their attorneys did not respond to a request for comment.

    The United States Attorney will not confirm the existence of an investigation or comment in any way.

  7. #107
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    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    Is a 3-year police misconduct investigation connected to the murder of a federal drug informant?
    By: Lauren Sweeney

    https://www.winknews.com/2020/02/20/...rug-informant/

    February 20, 2020

    A cloud of secrecy has surrounded an investigation that led to four Fort Myers Police Department officers to be placed on administrative leave three years ago. Nobody will speak about it, and few will even acknowledge it – until now.

    The president of the Gulf Coast Police Benevolent Association said the officers are under investigation as part of a federal case against an accused drug trafficker who is charged with ordering the murder of a drug informant.

    But, he says there’s no evidence those officers are involved in the case.

    Four members of the police department: Captain Melvin Perry, Sergeant Rick Notaro, Sergeant Michael Forbes, and Officer Jason Jackson were placed on paid administrative leave in February 2017.

    The next day, the city released an audit report of the department that discussed officer misconduct. But portions of the audit were heavily redacted before release.

    Those pages left words like “officers leaking information” and “subsequently murdered” visible.

    Chief Derrick Diggs sent the full audit to the Department of Justice to request an investigation into misconduct at the agency.

    But for three years, there has been silence surrounding the investigation and the officers. Perry, Forbes, and Notaro have since retired, but Jackson remains on the payroll.

    In total: the city has spent around $670,000 in pay and benefits for the officers.

    Matt Sellers, who worked as a homicide detective at the department before becoming the president of the union, said the federal government is investigating the officers in connection to the murder of a federal drug informant.

    A federal indictment claims that Robert Ward, a known drug trafficker, ordered a hit on Kristopher Smith.

    Smith was a 27-year-old who was gunned down in the Dunbar area of Fort Myers after dropping his child off at school in 2013.

    Sellers said he was the lead detective on that case.

    “I was assigned to this case, from day one, from the day it happened up to three years there were never any officers, not these officers that were ever suspected in this case,” said Sellers.

    The indictment into Ward also details a drug trafficking conspiracy that dated back to the 1990s and strung from Panama City down to Tampa and Fort Myers.

    A codefendant, Dalton McGriff, is named in the alleged conspiracy.
    Sellers said he had no information on McGriff or the drug conspiracy count of the indictment but said he’s certain there is no way the officers were involved.

    “I don’t know what the federal government thinks. All I know is the parts I’ve read, the bits and pieces of a heavily redacted report, which says officers leaked information. Well, not during the three years that I investigated it did officers leak information or was there any evidence of that,” he said.

    But another murder victim comes up within the redaction pages. Victor Johnson was gunned down in 2016 and his case is still unsolved.

    The same year as Johnson’s murder an internal affairs investigation was launched into the lead homicide detective on his case for talking about leaks at the department.

    Detective Emily Destefanis can be heard on audio recordings as part of the IA saying she was in fear for her safety and the safety of witnesses into Johnson’s murder.

    She claimed that witnesses were reporting to her that information was getting out through her supervisor Captain Melvin Perry.

    Perry was allegedly telling his wife about the case who was related to the victim.

    “Number one, there’s a matter of safety here. There are people who are reporting this to me and they are frantically afraid for their safety,” said Destefanis in an April 2017 interview.

    An attorney for Captain Perry said he “vehemently denies” that the Captain was leaking information.

    “It’s difficult to defend when you don’t know what you are defending against,” said Stephen Webster who said he has no information on what the federal government is investigating.

    Attorneys for the other officers echoed the same. None would confirm Sellers claim that the investigation is related to the federal case against Robert Ward.

    “This all started from rumors,” said Steve Dobson, an attorney for Officer Jason Jackson.

    Detective Emily Destefanis was given counseling for what she said about Perry and other officers in front of her coworkers. She did not wish to comment.

    An attorney for Michael Forbes said Forbes was not involved in the investigation of Ward or McGriff.

    “I have no idea what the federal government is investigating,” said Jack Fernandez.

    Fernandez said that Forbes has had to sell his house because he cannot get another job amid this investigation.

    “From everything we have seen and heard about Mike in our own investigation, he was an exemplary police officer,” said Fernandez.

    Attorneys for Jackson and Perry echoed similar sentiments that their client’s reputations have been sullied and there is no evidence of wrongdoing.

    WINK News reached out to an attorney for Rick Notaro but did not hear back at the time of publication.

    The Florida Police Benevolent Association filed suit against the city of Fort Myers for the full release of the audit documents. The city has not filed a response.

    The police department cited an active criminal investigation exemption when WINK News requested the documents be provided without redaction.

    The department continually refuses to discuss the investigation into the officers.

    “As we have repeatedly stated, we cannot comment on an ongoing investigation, especially one being conducted by another agency. This is not a matter of not wishing or wanting to comment. We have complete faith in our law enforcement partners that this investigation is being conducted in the most effective, efficient and thorough manner, and will be concluded at the appropriate point,” said Fort Myers police Deputy Chief Jeffrey Meyers.

    The case against Robert Ward and Dalton McGriff is ongoing. Their attorneys did not respond to a request for comment.

    The United States Attorney will not confirm the existence of an investigation or comment in any way.
    ED and CP much sooner than later 💩

  8. #108
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    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    TOO FUNNY (actually pathetic) how much she lives in your head. Shut up and move on.
    I guess i know what i am talking about retard

  9. #109
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    US Attorneys subpoenaed 4 FMPD officers as part of drug, murder, public corruption case
    Published:March 3, 2020 6:50 PM


    Four Fort Myers Police Department officers who were put on paid administrative leave in 2017 were subpoenaed by the Offices of the United States Attorneys in November 2018.

    The subpoenas requested the officers appear to testify in front of a grand jury as targets of a drug, murder and public corruption case.

    Sources close to the officers tell WINK News none of them actually appeared before the grand jury to testify.

    The department placed Captain Melvin Perry, Sergeant Rick Notaro, Sergeant Michael Forbes and officer Jason Jackson on paid administrative leave following a needs assessment of the agency by the Freeh Group.

    The Freeh Group’s findings were released in February, a day after Chief of Police Derrick Diggs placed the officers on leave. A section of the findings known as appendix A and B were provided heavily redacted.

    For three years, the department has said the pages cannot be released in their entirety because they are part of an ongoing criminal investigation.

    The department also continually refuses to comment about the officers on leave, citing an ongoing criminal investigation.

    In February, a WINK News report revealed the investigation is potentially connected to a drug trafficking and murder case.

    The U.S. attorneys office will not confirm the existence of any investigation into the officers or provide any comment.

    Perry, Notaro and Forbes retired amid the misconduct investigation. Jackson remains on leave collecting full salary and benefits.

    An attorney for Melvin Perry said the captain did not appear to testify in front of the grand jury in December 2018 at the advice of legal counsel.

    “We could not allow him to testify about something we knew nothing about,” said Louis Baptiste, a Tallahassee-based attorney.

    However, a day after an on-camera interview with WINK News, Baptiste claimed he did not actually have knowledge of a subpoena.

    But sources close to the officers, including the former interim police chief confirmed to WINK News that all four officers received federal subpoenas.

    Dennis Eads was at the helm of the police department immediately prior to the release of the Freeh report and the hiring of Chief Diggs.

    He said he received complaints about Perry during that time from officers within the agency, but could not find any evidence that the captain had engaged in any wrongdoing.

    In August 2016, Eads said the FBI asked to meet with him to discuss Perry but the meeting never happened. He said he never heard anything else about it.

    Chief Diggs was sworn in shortly afterward. Eads said he made Diggs aware of complaints about Perry and Jackson from within the agency, but he felt that there was not any evidence of misconduct.

    “I can’t say what Chief Diggs has,” Eads said. “If it’s maybe just those redacted pages that we can’t see what it says, maybe it was compelling enough for him to take the action.”

    The Florida Police Benevolent Association filed a lawsuit against the City of Fort Myers to release the audit appendices in their entirety, but, so far, the city has not responded to the suit.

    “There’s an old saying you can either put up or shut up … but it’s now time for the City of Fort Myers to put up,” Baptiste said.

    Attorneys for the other officers did not comment on the subpoenas.

    Reporter: Lauren Sweeney

    https://www.winknews.com/2020/03/03/...rruption-case/

  10. #110
    Unregistered
    Guest
    Eads looks great! That big pension and extra $$$ at the Academy he friggin' looks better than when he worked here. If you listen to what eads said, Special ED is who he referred to as the complainant lol and added there was nothing but baby gorilla looked at the same facts and enabled CP and ED 💩

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