By Joel Malkin
Apr 27, 2021
The Broward County Sheriff s Office is reportedly instructing deputies to limit their use of Florida s new, so-called anti-riot law.
That s according to an internal email obtained by
It s addressed from Colonel David R. Holmes, Executive Director of BSO, and states We already have enough laws on the books to do our job effectively without the new law.
The email directs captains to meet with their deputies and tell them the law can only be used in certain scenarios.
According to the email, a deputy must first consult their district captain before charging someone under the Combating Public Disorder law, in order to prevent any unnecessary and/or inappropriate actions by our deputies.
Report: Broward County Sheriff s Office To Limit Use Of Anti-Riot Law iheart.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from iheart.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Tyara Amie, 27, was visiting Miami Beach from Nevada before she went missing, police said. Amie told her mother she was staying at the Fountainbleau Hotel and last corresponded with her mother on Sunday, April 18th. Amie is 5 3 and weighs 110 pounds. She may be in the company of an unknown male, police said. Anyone with information about Amie s whereabouts are asks to call the Miami Beach Police Department at 305-673-7900.
No. 3 - Federally-supported vaccination sites in the state of Florida, like one located at Miami Dade College, resumed administering the Johnson & Johnson vaccine starting Sunday.
The Florida Division of Emergency Management said sites will open at 7 a.m. and will have the capacity to administer 3,000 doses of the vaccine every day. People will be able to choose between the Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson vaccines at the North Campus site. The announcement comes after officials with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration
Deputies in a South Florida county are being instructed not to enforce an anti-rioting law signed by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis last week, unless it's absolutely necessary.