? 11 . 14

The Broward Centurion
A Publication of the Broward County Police Benevolent Association
?
11.14
Volume 18, Issue 10
Handcuffed by Encryption
WM PD Contract, Ink Think
We Gather: Happy Thanksgiving
Contents
IN THIS ISSUE
President’s Message
3
Vice President’s Vision 4
Member Connections 4
The Data Dilemma
5
Wilton Manors PD
6
School Board News
7
B.S.O. Update
7
Toy Drive Dates
7
Meet the Sheriff 8
PBA on the Case
8
Hollywood PD Notice 9
A View from the Bench 9
MailBag
10
Member Marketplace 11
The Official Publication of the
Broward County PBA
(A Charter of the Florida PBA)
2650 West State Road 84
Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33312
Telephone: 954-584-7600
Fax: 954-583-0405
Editor: Tina Koenig
Email tkoenig@bcpba.org
The Broward Centurion is
published by the Broward County
Police Benevolent Association for
the sole benefit of its members.
The Broward Centurion is
dedicated to the advancement of
the law enforcement profession
through better and stronger
community relations. The opinions expressed in the publication
of The Broward Centurion are not
necessarily those of the Broward
County PBA, its staff, Executive
Board or the Board of Directors.
Get in Touch
Write
Letters to the Editor
Broward County PBA
2650 West State Road 84
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33312
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reserves the right of the Executive
Board or Editor to amend or to add
an editor’s comment to any article
or letter submitted.
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Page 2 - The Broward Centurion November 2014 - bcpba.org
On the Cover:
Is the new iPhone default
encryption setting us up for a
public threat? Will it
allow users to hide, placing
themselves above the law?
Meet Your PBA Staff
Office Manager/Detail Coordinator
Kim
Receptionist
Maryann
Membership
Ann
Legal Assistant
Irene
Director of Communications
Tina
General Counsel
Julio
Office hours: 8:30 am - 4:30 pm
Prices are for b/w; add 10% per
month for color. An advertising
agreement must be signed and all
ads prepaid before insertion. The
minimum agreement period is three
(3) issues; maximum is twelve
(12) issues.
Member Marketplace $100/year.
Executive Board
President
Jeff Marano
President’s Message
Senior Vice President
Debbie Reggio
Members:
By the time this newsletter reaches you many members and friends
will have already voted. You may
have received a palm card that listed
candidates we support. Candidates
we support are from different parties and some races are non-partisan,
like Judges and municipalities. The
bottom line is the PBA endorses the
candidates who we feel will support,
or have previously demonstrated
support for, the men and women in
law enforcement.
Despite our best efforts, members
of the public continue to attack the
benefits packages Deputies and Municipal Officers enjoy. In September,
the School Board’s ROC (Residence
on Campus) program came under attack. The battle was begun by a lone
blogger. The PBA met with School
Board Superintendent, Mr. Runcie.
We discussed the program as well as
the Broward School District bond issue on the November 4, 2014 ballot.
Mr. Runcie was open for discussion
and input on the ROC program and
we asked our friends and family
members to support the bond initiative and vote yes.
For BSO members, Sheriff Israel will be at the Broward PBA on
November 18 from 6:00 PM to 7:30
PM. He will give us an update on the
office and answer questions. We plan
to have a recorded version of the
event available on our website for
those BSO members on shift.
Thanks,
Vice President
Rodney Skirvin
Treasurer
Drew Brooks
Secretary
Lee Martin
Don’t be a Stranger.
Continue your PBA
membership after
retirement. Call today
for more details.
Jeff Marano
Board of Directors
BSO – At Large (LE)
Kevin Bolling
Meghan Brooks
Jim Harrison
Bob Lahiff
Vince Marlin
Chris Palamara
Ralph Romb
Jerry Vosburgh
BSO – District (LE)
Marc Berman
Christopher Bradley
Anthony Cenno
Kelli Covet
Armand Demosthenes
Rich Engels
Mike Hencken
Dean Mirra
James Pedre
Art Perry
Robert Petoskey
John Randazzo
Aimee Russo
Eric Swenson
BSO (Lts)
Jeff Morse
Broward County District School
Board Police
Rich Orzech
Coconut Creek
Dan Eberly
Joe Gallman
Coconut Creek (Sgts)
Fred Shelton
Coconut Creek (Lts)
John Leonard
Hallandale Beach
Todd Crevier
Marc Dady
Mike McKenzie
Pietro Roccisano - Alt.
Hillsboro Beach
David Clark
Hollywood
Derik Alexander
Steven Bolger
Dan Bromley
Richard Losenbeck
Tony Fernandez - Alt.
Lauderhill
Greg Solowsky
Pembroke Pines
Dan Donato
Adam Feiner
Chris Grant
Sea Ranch Lakes
Ron Stabile
Sunrise
Joel Schiller
Lighthouse Point
Chris Oh
Carmen Roldan
Sunrise (Lts)
Craig Cardinale
Margate (Lts & Captains)
Jonathan Shaw
Wilton Manors
Nicholas Fiacco
Bonnie Owens
Frank Pilewski
Miramar
George Mankowski
Lonnie Nix
Thomas Tiberio
Lawrence Calicchio - Alt.
Osvaldo Gomez - Alt.
Adam Lerner - Alt.
Legislative Coordinator
Chris Palamara
Immediate Past President
Pat Hanrahan
Past Presidents
Dick Brickman
Steve Bias
bcpba.org - The Broward Centurion November 2014 - Page 3
The
V.P.’s
VISION
November brings many changes.
Afternoon storms start to calm down,
the temperature gets cooler, we look
toward the upcoming holidays, and we
begin plans to close
out another year.
Regrettably, hurricane season isn’t
over. There is still a
storm brewing. It is the use of body
cameras and the tempest of how departments will implement them. Be
aware that departments will view the
videos and will certainly issue discipline for any policy violations that
are observed on the videos--even if it
is not pertinent to a complaint. Using
citizen-supplied video, members of
the news media are making stories
out of non-stories. This has pressured
departments and politicians into
forcing the body cam issue. Please be
mindful that on every call and every
traffic stop, citizens may be recording you without your consent. Don’t
count on the State Attorney’s Office
to prosecute them as quickly as they
will prosecute you for a perceived
mistake that you might or might not
have made.
I hope some of the changes that
take place will be in the governor’s
office. We hope members let Rick
Scott know that we will never forget
the cuts he made to our pensions
when it wasn’t needed. We know
he is not done taking benefits from
us. If he is elected to another term
he has several more items on his law
enforcement hit list.
With that said, November is the
month to give special thanks. At the
end of a hard shift, we still have a lot
to be thankful for. Members…you
are doing a great job
that goes unnoticed
on a daily basis. I
trust that citizens
will be grateful for
the tough jobs that
you do daily, and
realize the toll that it
takes on you and
your families. All of
us at the PBA office
offer our thanks to
you!
Please take a little
extra time this month to share what
you are thankful for with your families and coworkers. Let them know
how appreciative you are to have
them around. Happy Thanksgiving.
Have a safe day,
Rod Skirvin
Pictured (standing from left to
right) are Sgt. Christopher
Chadwick; Commander of
Operations, Gary Blocker;
Broward County PBA Vice
President, Rodney Skirvin; and
Wilton Manors Commissioner
Scott Newton
New & Reinstated Members
Eric Boyian
Jhullian Donawa
Gasner Dolcine
Tamara Encina
Vanessa Encina
Carlos Ferrufino
Christian Flores
Nezar Hamze
DennisRolle
Steven Serphos
Ryan Yancey
Alexander Cabrera
Daniel Farrell
Michael Beauchamp
Michael Daly
Kristy Del Salto
Joshua Grotenhuis
John Guzman
Henry Lumpkins
Yansel Martinez
Marlin Peiffer
Munick Soriano
Corey Williams
Allen Stotler
- Broward Sheriff’s Office
- Broward Sheriff’s Office
- Broward Sheriff’s Office
- Broward Sheriff’s Office
- Broward Sheriff’s Office
- Broward Sheriff’s Office
- Broward Sheriff’s Office
- Broward Sheriff’s Office
- Broward Sheriff’s Office
- Broward Sheriff’s Office
- Broward Sheriff’s Office
- Coconut Creek P.D.
- Coconut Creek P.D.
- Hollywood P.D.
- Hollywood P.D.
- Hollywood P.D.
- Hollywood P.D.
- Hollywood P.D.
- Hollywood P.D.
- Hollywood P.D.
- Hollywood P.D.
- Hollywood P.D.
- Hollywood P.D.
- Sunrise P.D.
Retired Members
Cal Harrison
Page 4 - The Broward Centurion November 2014 - bcpba.org
Seminole Tribe P.D.
The Data Dilemma
T
echnology companies may be
putting an end to legal debates
over privacy rights and the ability of
law enforcement to have easy access to
possibly incriminating digital evidence.
The new Apple iPhone 6 operating
system (iOS 8) promises a higher level
of encryption that even they won’t be
able to unlock.
In a statement released by the
Cupertino, California-based company,
it said that with the release of iOS 8
photos, email, contacts and other information will now be encrypted with
users’ passcodes, meaning “it’s not
technically feasible for us to respond to
government warrants for the extraction
of this data” from the phone. Apple
CEO Tim Cook told journalist Charlie
Rose that Apple has already been encrypting iMessages and FaceTime calls
with users’ passcodes.
Google announced a day later that
its new Android software will include
the same protections.
The new protections are a way for
John Roman, a senior fellow in
the Justice Policy Center at the Urban
Institute, suggests that encryption will
pose a huge hurdle for law enforcement cases as smartphones are often a
By Tina Koenig
convenient option for a local officer to
jump-start a case.
Although Apple will not be able
to provide users’ passcode to unlock
a phone, some suggest that suspects
may volunteer the information.
“Hardened criminals have been
through the system,” says former
homicide detective and Broward
County PBA Vice President, Rodney
Skirvin. “They are unlikely to give
up any information.” Presently, law
enforcement may obtain a warrant to
unlock a phone. Detectives can view
text messages, phone calls, and lists of
contacts that help crack cases.
“The inability to have this information will impede the timeframe
technology companies to underscore
during which cases are investigated.
their commitment to users’ privacy
And, it could lead to cases being left
but it has triggered concern from law
unsolved--especially homicides where
enforcement officials, including FBI
suspects often flee. As it stands now,
Director James Comey.
even requesting a subpoena delays
Despite some restrictions, Apple
cases by weeks. With encryption, we
can still share data that people backup
won’t even know what information to
from their devices to
request in a subpoena.”
Internet-based iCloud
Scott Greene, a
Smart phones
accounts. Carriers
Senior Digital Evidence
have been a
may give investigaExaminer with Evigoldmine of
tors call logs and
dence Solutions, Inc.
other information
information
says law enforcement
obtained from cell
will still have some
for law
phone towers.
ways to obtain data.
enforcement.
Obtaining infor“If the iPhone owner
mation from compauses their iCloud email
nies like Apple has
That’s about
account as their primary
never been easy. Its
email, then it may also
to change.
Bay Area neighbors
be possible to retrieve
in law enforcement
email from their comreport difficulties in
puter if they used their computer to
getting compliance while executing
send and receive iCloud email. That
search warrants involving its custominformation could be found either
ers—including lengthy backlogs in refrom browser artifacts or from an
sponding to law enforcement requests.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 10
bcpba.org - The Broward Centurion November 2014 - Page 5
Gather
Feast
Updates
Hot Apple Cider
Tradition
Count
Your
Blessings
FAMILY
Pumpkin Pie
Pictured (standing from left to
right) are Wilton Manors Commissioner Scott Newton; Sgt.
Christopher Chadwick; Sgt.
Nick Fiacco; Wilton Manors
Commissioner Ted Galatis;
Broward County PBA Vice
President, Rodney Skirvin;
Wilton Manors Chief of Police
Paul O’Connell; (seated from
left to right) are Mayor Gary
Resnick and Broward County
PBA President Jeff Marano.
Way to Go Wilton Manors
Wilton Manors city officials,
members of the police department and the Broward County
PBA were all in attendance for the
signing of the Wilton Manors’ PD
new 3-year contract. Mayor Gary
Resnick looks forward to this being
a positive step for the city and its
residents stating, “The new 3-year
contract between the city and police
department is the most important
thing we can do for the public
safety of our residents. It will alow
us to continue to recruit and retain
highly qualified men and women
for our police department.”
Wilton Manors city officials attend the contract signing. Pictured (standing from left to right) are Broward County PBA President Jeff Marano;
Wilton Manors Commissioner Ted Galatis; Wilton Manors Mayor Gary
Resnick, Broward County PBA Vice President, Rodney Skirvin; Wilton
Manors Commissioner Scott Newton; Wilton Manors City Manager,
Joseph Gallegos; and Sgt. Nick Fiacco.
Page 6 - The Broward Centurion November 2014 - bcpba.org
BSO Deputies
attend a BCPBA
regular Board
Meeting held in
September.
Pictured (standing from left to
right) are Ralph
Romb; Meghan
Brooks; BCPBA
Secretary, Lee
Martin; Tony
Cenno; Marc
Berman; and
Armand
Demosthenes.
Mold at BSO District #5
A letter was sent from Broward
County PBA President Jeff Marano
to Broward County Mayor Barbara
Sharief and County Commissioners regarding the air quality issues at
B.S.O. District Office #5. According
to reports, there are air conditioning moisture issues as well as leaks
that are causing mold throughout the
building. The health and well-being
of our members and others who work
in the building is a top priority.
On October 8, 2014, County
Administrator, Bertha W.
Henry responded with a
letter detailing the steps
being taken to address
the concern. A copy
of the letter may be
read at the bcpba.org
website.
Visible Tattoos
The PBA and BSO met in
September to discuss the issue of
concealing visible tattoos on uniformed members with some type of
garment. Five members have agreed
to participate in a selection committee
designed to test and evaluate garments
which will address the objectives of the
Sheriff’s Office. It was further agreed
that BSO would provide the garment
and that the BCPBA will be permitted
to review the garments. Members who
have volunteered are:
School Board
Deputy Davis Acevado, K-9
Deputy Matt Robinson, Dania
Deputy Sean Cook, Oakland Park
Deputy Daniel Lovallo, D-7
Deputy James Ottinger, Pompano
NCTC and NSA issued warnings about “Lone Wolf” terrorist attacks by individuals who
use a technique called “Google
Dorking” to discover sensitive
information and vulnerabilities
on websites and social media.
Please check your social media
accounts and family members’
to remove personal information.
Turn off the “current locations”
function on your mobile devices
to prevent apps from checking you into places. Take down
any photos of you in uniform.
Practice good OPSEC. An article about
the technique may be
found here: https://publicintelligence.net/fedsgoogle-dorking/
We will report back to
membership
as the evaluation moves
forward.
PBA Hall
BCPBA President Jeff Marano met with Broward School
Superintendent, Robert Runcie
over the school bond issue for
Nov. 4 and the ROC’s Program.
Safety ALERT
Drop off Dec. 13 11am-2pm
bcpba.org - The Broward Centurion November 2014 - Page 7
Greetings to BSO retirees,
DROP participants, and
those getting close...
Presenting ... An Update from
the Sheriff’s Perspective
with Sheriff Scott Israel
B.S.O. Members
Only Event
November 18, 2014
6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
Broward County PBA Hall
2901 SW 26th Terrace
Dania Beach
Refreshments will be provided by Aflac.
The BSO Retirees Association (BSORA) is open to all retirees and DROP
participants from the entire agency.
So whether you are civilian or sworn,
and from any division of Fire/DOD/
DLE, we want you to be a member of
the BSORA. Dues are only $20 per
year per BSO family. We are here to
help our members in several ways information distribution, scholarships,
or benevolence. Please check out our
website at www.bsoretirees.com and
join us. The more members we have the
louder our voice and the more impact
we can have. Most recently our major
issue has been insurance, a very expensive aspect of retirement. For those of
you ready to join now, please send your
yearly $20.00 dues to BSORA, PO Box
494727, Port Charlotte, FL 33949.
Best Regards,
Your BSORA Executive Board
w
PBA
on the
Case
On average the Broward
County PBA receives one call
per day from an officer needing
legal assistance.
The Broward County PBA
opened 15 new cases in September and closed that same number. As of September 29, 2014
there were a total of 190 cases
pending.
These cases range in nature
from preliminary investigative
inquiries to civil litigation cases.
Notice to All Hollywood Police Department Members from
Julio Gonzalez, Broward County PBA General Counsel
As a part of your official duty, you
are required to submit as to any
actions you may have taken while
in the performance of your official
duties. If you are advised prior to
submitting any written reports that
you are the subject of an investigation the provisions of F.S. 112.532
shall be followed. When you are
ordered to produce a work product
without consultation from Counsel
or a PBA representative; please
incorporate the following at the top
of the report:
Page 8 - The Broward Centurion November 2014 - bcpba.org
“This report is being authored pursuant to a supervisory order. It is
my understanding that this report
is made for administrative, internal
police department purposes only
and will not be used in an investigation. It is further understood
that my failure
to comply with this
order can subject
me to discipline
for insubordination and can result
in my termination
of employment.”
follow us on Twitter
@goBCPBA
TECH TIP: Get news and updates from us on Twitter. Sign up for an account at
Twitter.com or download the app to your mobile device. Search BCPBA and
click the follow button. Messages from those you follow will show up in a
readable stream on your Twitter homepage, called your “Timeline.”
A View
from
the Bench
Judge Carlos Rebollo
Appointed a Broward Circuit Judge
in 2007, Judge Carlos Rebollo was
re-elected to a six year term in 2010.
He is currently assigned to the Juvenile Delinquency division.
Judge Rebollo grew up in Newark,
New Jersey and attended Rutgers
University where he earned a degree
in political science. He attended the
Drake Law School in Des Moines,
Iowa, graduating in 1984.
Judge Rebollo’s legal career began
in 1984 with the general practice law
firm of Summerville, Radding and
Campbell in Jersey City, NJ. He later
clerked for Essex County Superior
Court Judge John J. Dios, before
becoming an Assistant Essex County
Prosecutor.
Judge Rebollo moved to South
Florida in 1988 where he worked as
Broward Assistant State Attorney.
He spent 19 years in the State Attorney’s Office. During his time there
he was promoted to Senior Supervisor in the Felony Trial Unit, Career
Criminal prosecutor, Organized
Crime and Gang prosecutor and
ultimately, Homicide Prosecutor.
In August 2007, he opened a general practice law office before being
appointed to the 17th Circuit Court.
Judge Rebollo has presided over
Juvenile Dependency cases dealing with children who have been
abandoned, abused or neglected.
He also has presided over Criminal
cases dealing with those accused of
felonies from possession of cocaine
to first degree capital murder.
Q. How is juvenile court different
than adult court?
Golden Rule #3: Don’t argue.
A. The main difference between
adult court and juvenile court is that
cases are tried before a judge only.
When testifying in court officers are
trying only to convince the judge
and not 6-12 jurors.
Listen to the question. Answer only
the question. Sometimes defense
attorneys will say “answer yes or
no.” An officer may want to explain.
Don’t get frustrated. Remember,
there will be a redirect by the prosecutor.
Q. You have a series of “Golden
Rules for Court.” What are they?
Golden Rule #4 – Don’t volunteer
information.
A good prosecutor will give an
officer the opportunity to explain
Be sure to tell the good, the bad and what they meant when they gave an
the ugly. Let’s say there was a home answer. Volunteering information
burglary. What if it was a crazy day can cause a mistrial. Let’s say an
and the officer had a lot to attend to? attorney asks, “What color was the
car?” You say, “The car was red and
What if the P.D. was swamped that
the brother was in the back seat.”
day and didn’t have any ID techs
that could come out and take finger- The judge might then say, “I am not
going to allow that.” The prosecutor
prints? The officer shouldn’t try to
skirt the issue by not mentioning it. should let the officer know not to
testify about a particular thing. Any
It will come out on cross examinaadditional information can bring up
tion by the defense attorney. And
a can of worms and mistrial.
then the officer may look less than
truthful.
Golden Rule #5 – Don’t volunteer
prior bad acts.
Golden Rule #2: Meet with the
prosecutor before the trial.
Never talk about a defendant’s prior
record. It WILL cause a mistrial.
Officers need to know what they
Let’s say a defendant is on trial for
will be testifying to when they are
robbery. An officer is on the stand
called to the stand. Be prepared.
and the defense attorney asks, “How
Meet with the prosecutor. Know
do you know that this is the defenyour police report backwards and
forwards. Officers can have multiple dant?” The officer says, “I caught
hearings they need to keep track of. him on a drug deal a few months
ago.” That statement will cause an
If a case is coming up, stop by the
prosecutor’s office and get copies of immediate mistrial.
any depositions. I had to testify at a
If the defendant has prior bad acts,
hearing several weeks ago. I made
sure that I read the transcript just to or has done time, there are different rules that may or may not allow
make sure I knew it off the top of
information to come out at trial.
my head.
Golden Rule #1: Tell the truth.
bcpba.org - The Broward Centurion November 2014 - Page 9
MailBag
August 30, 2014
September 15, 2014
Dear PBA Scholarship Committee,
Dear Broward County PBA:
Thank you for awarding me this
generous scholarship, which will
help pay for the books and supplies
I need for my degrees in Aerospace
and Mechanical Engineering at
the University of Florida. With my
education I hope to make the world
a better place through new technologies and through a world-wide
cooperation in the name of science
and discovery.
I just wanted to let you know
again how much I appreciated your
support during the campaign.
Thanks to our collective efforts,
my lifelong dream of joining our
judiciary will become reality when
I take office in January.
“Thank you” does not adequately begin to convey my appreciation
but I only hope you have some idea
of how much it meant to have your
support.
Thank you,
Pierce Vaccaro
All the best,
Stacy
Stacy Schulman
Circuit Court Judge Elect
THE DATA DILEMMA
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
Sunrise Rep. Joel Schiller
and his wife welcomed a
baby girl on October 9, 2014.
Mom and baby are doing great.
email client such as Microsoft Outlook
or Mozilla Thunderbird. It also may
be possible for forensic applications to
access data using a PC that has been
used to transfer data to and from the
iPhone. “
The new protections come on the
heels of other restrictions, this time
by the court. In June, the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the 11th Circuit ruled
Page 10 - The Broward Centurion November 2014 - bcpba.org
that the data pulled off a cell phone
tower was unconstitutional in the case
against Quartavious Davis, who was
on trial for a series of armed robberies
in Miami. The court stated that cell
phone information is protected by the
Fourth Amendment.
It set a strong precedent for future
cases. “This opinion puts police on
notice that when they want to enlist people’s cell phones as tracking
devices, they must get a warrant from
a judge based on probable cause. The
court soundly repudiates the government’s argument that by merely using
a cell phone, people somehow surrender their privacy rights,” Freed
Wessler, an ACLU lawyer who
argued the case, said in a statement.
Whenever a search warrant is
needed, it causes delays for law enforcement. “Much of the paperwork
required to search has been modernized to allow for electronic authorization using PDF files and an iPad.
Unfortunately, there is a loophole in
the law that says we can’t use electronic search warrants for computers
and cell phones. The PBA is working
hard to lobby in Tallahassee to change
that,” added Skirvin.
By eliminating the ability to bypass
users’ passcodes, Apple says it is making customer data safer because there
won’t be a back door for hackers.
Eric Sun, a product specialist with
PublicEye, feels communities need to
get used to public safety being run on
mobile devices—which need security.
“Although the enhanced iOS encryption means a phone’s data is better
protected against police with warrant
access, it will provide the same protection to officers in the field armed
with iPhones and iPads. Similarly,
hackers will have a harder time accessing unauthorized data on a stolen/
compromised device.”
Assisted with Reporting from San Jose Mercury news.
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Military and Other First Responders
susannemealer@susannemealerLCSW.com
12555 Orange Drive, Suite 265, Davie, FL 33330
(954) 642-6776
Custom Embroidery
Screen Printing
Steve Adelman
Phone: (954) 345-8337
Fax: (954) 753-9121
Email: steve@logoshirts.com
1440 Coral Ridge Drive
Suite 135
Coral Springs, FL 33071
bcpba.org - The Broward Centurion November 2014 - Page 11
Broward County
Police Benevolent Association
2650 West State Road 84
Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33312
©2014 Broward County PBA
NONPROFIT ORG.
U S POSTAGE
PAID
WEST PALM BEACH, FL
PERMIT NO. 1946