Friday, August 10, 2012

The Kingdom of Sheriff Ric Bradshaw

Who is Ric Bradshaw? He must be royalty, because no one ever sees him, and you can't get him on the phone. He doesn't talk to anybody. His people operate behind very thick walls and throw out little bits to keep the lazy regional media happy.

But the Lake Worth Sun is not happy. We're ticked at the unwillingness of the Sheriff's office to provide basic, public information about crimes happening here in Lake Worth.


Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw


At District 14, the Lake Worth substation of the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office, they have a media book. It's a binder, and in it are a spattering of write-ups of incidents -- mostly car thefts. A couple burglaries.

"Where's everything else?" I ask.

You have to get that from headquarters, the woman tells me.

I call headquarters on Gun Club Road. The media relations person, Teri Barbera, puts me on the media list. She indicates that she's very busy and constantly working and sending things out. So I'm thinking I'm going to get a large file every day of everything going on in Palm Beach County, which I can search to find out what's happening here in Lake Worth.

But over the course of the next four days, all I get are press releases saying what good things deputies are doing -- donating school supplies for the kiddos, and so forth. I get one press release each day. At the bottom of the e-mails are links to 175 videos promoting the sheriff's office. I'm not kidding. The one I just opened shows a deputy competing in a motorcycle event where he's maneuvering around orange cones.

I e-mail Teri, asking where the crime log is. She says go to District 14. I tell her I did, and there are only on average three incidents for each day in the media log. There must be over 100 calls for service every day in Lake Worth, I tell her in the e-mail. Where is this information??

I wait, and wait. Many hours later I get a response, with text copied from a query she sent along to District 14, saying YES, we have about 150 calls for service every day.

So that doesn't answer the question at all!

Meanwhile, I've met with Captain Silva, who is the equivalent of Lake Worth's police chief. Except he reports to Bradshaw, and can't really talk about anything that's going on in Lake Worth.

At our meeting, Lieutenant David Moss, who works under Silva, came in and showed me how to access the crime mapping program, which is linked from the Palm Beach County Sheriff's web site, www.pbso.org. There's a map of America, you can put in Lake Worth and see about where crimes are happening here. But not exactly. It says there was a robbery on the 400 block of North "E" Street on Aug. 6, for instance. But where, exactly? And who was robbed? An old lady? Was the robber armed? Is he on the loose? I would call Captain Silva, but he told me when I met with him that he doesn't have time to talk to a reporter about what's happening here.

So it's all extremely unsatisfactory from the point of view of the public's right to know what's happening in their community.

There seems to be a complete lack of understanding, perhaps because the air is thin behind those very thick walls of Bradshaw's, that all of this is public information. The basics -- who, what, where, when (and maybe why) -- of crime in this city is not presumed to be privileged. It is public information, with some exceptions (names of minors, names of victims SOMETIMES but not always) And people want to know. So next week, The Lake Worth Sun will submit lots of public information requests, and letters with lots of CCs. I think Lake Worth Sun readers would be interested to know what kind of information is being kept from them and why. I'll find out.

Capt. Rolando Silva, head of the Palm Beach Sheriff's Office "District 14" -- Lake Worth

4 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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  2. Wow - this is great! You are brave too! Thanks Lynn for the link! (TP2)

    Try to get Bradshaw's budget? You will need help getting all the paper to the car!
    All totaled he hogs nearly 2 Billion of the 4 B we spend in PB county!
    Here's a link you might like. See the Sheriff is like Santa, he only cares
    about the busts that have 'forfeiture funds'. Murders and robberies don't pay.
    They actually seem like a bother to even get you the info! How much do we pay for said services? States Attorney - Palm Beach Post - Sheriff

    http://cache.trustedpartner.com/docs/library/BizPacReview2010/PBPost-McAuliffe.pdf

    The pill mills came with a final line to COUNT and limit everyone's medication.
    The money has dried up because a lot of the pill mills went online! Snook Islands we are told will be maintained w/forfeiture funds!

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  3. This is easy..... go to www.crimereports.com put in your address, change the date range to 30 days and then use the incedent buttons to look up all you want. Also you can go to www.pbso.org and use the booking blotter and find arrests street by street or even by name. Its all in there unless there is an ongoing investigation. Hope that helps you! - Robert Waples

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  4. Robert -- Thanks. I looked at this site, and see that it's similar to the crime mapping site that I mention above, and has the same basic problem in that the information is too vague to be really useful. This site tells me, for example, that there was a burglary on the 300 block of J on August 10. But where? And what was stolen? I can take the case number and go get the offense report, which often is not filed for many days. But a more normal disclosure by a law enforcement agency would give the exact address (this is public information) and give at least a very brief account of what happened.

    Also, there are on average 7 incidents a day listed on this site when District 14 responds to about 150 calls a day. So again, where is everything else?

    PBSO just needs to make available a more complete log of incidents or calls for service. I'm also concerned about their redacting of all names of all victims from all reports. This is not permissible Article 1, section 24 of Florida's constitution.

    Also, basic information on what happened to whom and where cannot be witheld even with a pending investigation. State law is very clear on this.

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