Be yourself; Everyone else is already taken.
— Oscar Wilde.
This is the first post on my new blog. I’m just getting this new blog going, so stay tuned for more. Subscribe below to get notified when I post new updates.
Be yourself; Everyone else is already taken.
— Oscar Wilde.
This is the first post on my new blog. I’m just getting this new blog going, so stay tuned for more. Subscribe below to get notified when I post new updates.
Please contact Deborah Cooney at cooneyforsheriff@mail.com to schedule an appointment, if you would like to participate.
Deborah Cooney, Candidate for Indian River County Sheriff, is offering various outreach programs to help to solve urgent needs in the community. As she went out talking with folks around the County, she discovered an epidemic of homelessness. Although some charities are addressing the problem, there are still a lot of folks falling through the cracks. For example, there is no shelter for homeless women, other than the battered women’s shelters. Some people don’t qualify for assistance because their income level is too high to qualify, but too low to rent a home.
Wouldn’t it be great if everyone could own their own home? We can make this happen! Deborah Cooney is a former bank Vice President and loan officer. She is offering her expertise, free of charge, to counsel and assist people in getting financing for home ownership.
Let’s all work together to lift up our beautiful beach community!
Please contact Deborah Cooney at cooneyforsheriff@mail.com to schedule an appointment, if you would like to participate.
Deborah Cooney, Candidate for Indian River County Sheriff, is offering various outreach programs to help to solve urgent needs in the community. As she went out talking with folks around the County, she discovered an epidemic of homelessness. Although some charities are addressing the problem, there are still a lot of folks falling through the cracks. For example, there is no shelter for homeless women, other than the battered women’s shelters. Some people don’t qualify for assistance because their income level is too high to qualify, but too low to rent a home.
Wouldn’t it be great if everyone could own their own home? We can make this happen! Deborah Cooney is a former bank Vice President and loan officer. She is offering her expertise, free of charge, to counsel and assist people in getting financing for home ownership.
Let’s all work together to lift up our beautiful beach community!
Deborah Cooney
Candidate for Sheriff of Indian River County
P O Box 700013
Wabasso, FL 32970
cooneyforsheriff@mail.com
July 13, 2020
Governor Ron DeSantis
State of Florida
The Capitol
400 S. Monroe St.
Tallahassee, FL 32399-0001
Dear Governor DeSantis,
I am following up on the enclosed letter sent on May 14, 2020 requesting an extension of the May 11 deadline for candidate petitions or in the alternative, a waiver of the filing fee. I am still awaiting your response. Please respond at your earliest convenience.
My campaign collected 945 verified petitions by the May 11 deadline. We continued to collect petitions for the next two weeks. On May 25, we submitted 215 petitions for verification, but the Supervisor of Elections has not yet verified them because we are still awaiting your response regarding the extension. It is likely that we met the requirement of 1,132 verified petitions within two weeks of the May 11 deadline and well before our requested extension date of June 1. On June 10 we paid the $5,568.44 filing fee.
At this time, we are requesting that the additional 215 petitions be verified and accepted for qualification through the petition process, and a refund of the filing fee. In the alternative, we request a waiver of the filing fee, and a refund. As I explained in the May 14 letter, we are entitled to relief because of the impact of the shutdown ordered by the Governor. The Governor not only has the authority to mitigate the harm his executive order wreaks on our elections, but also has a duty to do so. We are asking that this accommodation be afforded equally to all of the candidates who are in a similar predicament.
Thank you for your consideration.
Sincerely,
Deborah Cooney
Candidate for Sheriff of Indian River County
Cc: Laurel M. Lee, Secretary of State
R.A. Gray Building
500 South Bronough Street
Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250
Leslie Rossway Swan
Indian River County Supervisor of Elections
4375 43rd Avenue
Vero Beach, FL 32967Sent: Thursday, May 14, 2020 at 5:41 PM
From: “Deborah Cooney” <cooneyforsheriff@mail.com>
To: governorron.desantis@eog.myflorida.com, SecretaryofState@DOS.MyFlorida.com, lswan@voteindianriver.com
Subject: Request for Extension of May 11 Petition Deadline
Deborah Cooney
Candidate for Sheriff of Indian River County
P O Box 700013
Wabasso, FL 32970
cooneyforsheriff@mail.com
May 14, 2020
Governor Ron DeSantis
State of Florida
The Capitol
400 S. Monroe St.
Tallahassee, FL 32399-0001
Dear Governor DeSantis,
Due to the coronavirus pandemic and shutdown, I am requesting an extension of the May 11 deadline for submitting the candidate petitions. This can be accomplished by an executive order, amendment, or other rule-making authority. This request was previously made in emails sent on May 10. It is my understanding that other candidates have made similar requests.
State of Florida Executive Orders Nos. 20-91, 20-83, 20-52, and 20-51 declare a public health emergency due to COVID-19 and require voters to stay at home. Thus, voters have been unavailable to participate in the election process set forth in Florida Statute 99.095. The virtual petition process, Rule 1SER20-2 approved by the Secretary of State is a nice gesture, but it does not accommodate voters without access to printers and scanners or candidates without in-depth technical abilities.
Many voters have expressed the desire to sign my petition but they are afraid of contamination from the virus. It has also been difficult to speak with voters who are shut in under the safer-at-home orders. Most meetings and gatherings, where voters would have been available to sign petitions, have been cancelled. Door-to-door canvassing has been prohibited. My campaign does not have the technical resources to build a complex website that would enable e-signatures. While some voters have expressed interest in signing remotely, these voters were unable to do so because they do not have access to printers and scanners.
I have made a bona fide effort to collect petitions before the May 11 deadline, but due to circumstances beyond my control, namely a state and national emergency, I have fallen short. As of the deadline, I have collected 945 of the required 1,132 verified petitions.
An extension through June 1 would be warranted under the circumstances to ensure a fair election process. Such an extension would not impact or delay the elections or the qualifying periods. In the alternative, please waive the qualifying fees for myself and all candidates who have been impacted by the COVID-19 emergency.
Thank you for your consideration.
Sincerely,
Deborah Cooney
Candidate for Sheriff of Indian River County
Cc: Laurel M. Lee, Secretary of State
R.A. Gray Building
500 South Bronough Street
Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250
Leslie Rossway Swan
Indian River County Supervisor of Elections
4375 43rd Avenue
Vero Beach, FL 32967
To the Candidates,
Would you please answer the following questions at your earliest convenience? I am deciding who to vote for in the Republican primary, and I will be making my choice public. Your response will be a deciding factor.
What is your position on the Sheriff’s involvement in drug trafficking, a fact which the State Attorney admitted in court in 2016?
What actions are you taking or have you taken to shut it down?
What are you doing to address the false arrests of Fred Luongo and others?
What are you doing to address the killing of Alteria Woods, Susan Teel, Vincent Savastano, Byruss Green, Mitchell Martinez, and others at the hands of IRC deputies?
What is your position on the Save Vero Beach sunshine requests? Would you grant the requests as required by law, or would you continue to defend against the lawsuit?
What is your position on the institutionalized graft in the Sheriff’s office, as exposed in the Adam Bailey case? What are you doing to address this?
What are you doing or have you done to stop law enforcement officers from falsely arresting or threatening to falsely arrest people for trespass, when they are in a public place such as a library, a park, a government office, a bank, or a store which is open to the public?
Do you support police unions? Please list all of your union memberships, present and past.
Thanks,
Deborah Cooney
The three-part question we would like you to address is: 1. What are your beliefs regarding the importance of supporting early literacy and learning In our community, in your current work and in the elected position for which you are running? (Early literacy refers to a child from birth through the end of third grade.)
Teaching the youth is one of the most important things we do as a society. That is why I founded the Academy of the Stars in 1994, and I have been teaching the youth ever since. Over the years, we have taught thousands of students. Unlike many others in the industry, the Academy of the Stars accepts very young students. We have taught several 3-year-olds, and we are willing to accept even younger students, although none have applied. Although the younger students don’t learn as fast as the older ones, they build a solid foundation of understanding that places them ahead of the pack as they get older. Electing a Sheriff who has extensive experience in education may be beneficial to the community and may further the objectives of Moonshot Moment and the Learning Alliance.
2. Do you understand the science of literacy and learning, such that you are able to support it or would you be willing to participate in trainings to learn more?
Yes, I understand the science of literacy and learning, and yes, I support the independent, peer-reviewed science. Yes, I would be willing to participate in trainings to learn more. 3. How can you, in your elected position, create sustainable stewardship for an early literacy culture in our homes, schools and/or community?
First, we must stop the school-to-prison pipeline. Students have a First Amendment right to disagree with educators and authorities, or even throw temper tantrums. They must not be arrested or Baker Acted for just being kids. Juveniles should be kept out of the criminal justice system as much as possible. There is no reason to terrorize our youngsters with excessive policing, just to pad the pockets of defense attorneys, bailbondsmen, prison suppliers, and other police union cronies.
Second, and a related initiative, is to stop enforcing the Baker Act. The Baker Act is unconstitutional. It violates the Fourth Amendment prohibition of arrest without probable cause of a crime, as well as the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment liberty interest. Citizens are arrested under the Baker Act even though they have not committed any crime, nor is there evidence of any crime. Our constitution protects us from these excesses. I am the only candidate who has worked to restore constitutional rights.
The Baker Act targets women, children, dissidents, and people of color. Children should never be arrested under the Baker Act, for obvious reasons. Parents, not the state, should be allowed to make health care decisions for their own children. Women should never be arrested under the Baker Act, or falsely arrested at all, because their children and families need them at home. We must end racial profiling, and reinstate the First Amendment rights of expression and religious practice.
Third, we must end the practice of false arrest without probable cause. I am the only candidate that has opposed the practice of false arrest, which is not only unconstitutional, but also wastes valuable public resources. In our outreach efforts, we have found that approximately 40-50% of all arrests in Indian River County are without probable cause or any evidence of a crime. This is shameful! False arrest destroys people’s lives and tears families apart. Children suffer when their parents and caretakers are falsely arrested and taken away.
Fourth, I have proposed a 50% reduction in the Sheriff’s $55 million budget. We can achieve this by simply ending false arrest, which accounts for 40-50% of all arrests in the County. But we will do more than this. We will not arrest drug addicts and small time drug dealers. They will be sent to rehab. We will not make any arrests for marijuana, which is legal in Florida. We will not make any non-violent misdemeanor arrests. If warranted, offenders will simply be summoned to court, without being taken into custody. We will reduce or eliminate unnecessary new equipment purchases. We will sell off some of the unusable equipment; for instance, stingrays, surveillance equipment which contravenes the Fourth Amendment, and lethal “non-lethal” weapons such as tasers, tear gas, etc. We will end the systemic graft and misappropriation of funds, as exposed in the Adam Bailey case. We will honor all requests for records under Florida Sunshine laws, including those from Save Vero Beach. We will withdraw the unwarranted legal defense in this case, which is costing taxpayers thousands of dollars. The $28 million in savings can be redirected toward education or other important investments in the community.
Fifth, I am the only candidate who openly opposes the law-enforcement assisted drug cartel, which is committing crimes against our community. I am the only candidate who has prosecuted police misconduct in courts of law, and who has secured an admission by the State of Florida that our Sheriff is trafficking narcotics (2016). I am the only candidate who is committed to shut it down and bring the perpetrators to justice. When our community is flooded with narcotics, it affects parents who are at risk of becoming addicted. Drug addiction interferes with their child-rearing duties. The drug pushers also target school children, in high school and even elementary school. This criminal activity stops with me.
Finally, we must protect students’ health. We will reduce EMF exposure by working with school administrators to replace harmful Wi-Fi with safe wired Ethernet. We will work with FPL to remove all harmful wireless Smart Grid equipment. We will work with the telecommunications companies to prevent 5G installations and remove some of the most harmful 4G equipment.
We will not enforce mask or vaccine mandates, which are unconstitutional. Students and adults have a right to breathe. Masks reduce oxygen levels below OSHA standards. Students learn better when they can breathe clean air. The Supreme Court has found that vaccines are “unavoidable unsafe”. Bruesewitz v. Wyeth LLC, 562 U.S. 223 (2011). The US government has paid out over $4 billion in compensation for vaccine injuries through the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program. We will not subject our students, nor anyone else, to this harm.
Sent: Friday, June 12, 2020 at 8:46 PM
From: “Deborah Cooney” <cooneyforsheriff@mail.com>
To: “Ray McNulty” <ray32963@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Update: More Foul Play in the Sheriff’s Race
Dear Ray,
Yes, George Floyd’s murder at the hands of police and the subsequent protests already are an issue in the sheriff’s race here, because I have made it an issue. Yes, of course it should be an issue here. I have not only spoken out against the racism and police misconduct in the George Floyd case and other cases, but I have also petitioned various officials (lawmakers, prosecutors, courts, etc.) to properly address these issues. I have a long history of working with Black Lives Matter, Color of Change, the Brennan Center for Justice, and others groups working for racial justice in policing.
We have just scored a huge victory in disbanding the Minneapolis police and busting their mafia police unions. The Fraternal Order of Police, Police Benevolent Society, various Police Chiefs Associations and Sheriff Associations, and other police unions have had a literal stranglehold on our communities for decades. The first step in addressing police misconduct is to ban these unions, which have supported and participated in the crimes committed by the police against the citizens. I have a long track record of working to eliminate police unions.
I support Black Lives Matters call to defund the police. I have proposed slashing the Sheriff’s $55 million budget in half within the next few years. When you get the Sheriff out of the business of trafficking narcotics, you reduce crime rates and you don’t need as much policing. I am the only candidate who openly opposes the law-enforcement assisted drug cartel and who has been working to shut it down. We will reduce expenditures by reducing or eliminating equipment purchases and by firing the deputies who have been committing crimes against our citizens. We will give the good deputies and employees a 20% raise, and we will pay reparations to victims of crimes perpetrated by our deputies, because that is just.
The Sheriff has been decimating our African-American community here in Indian River County. Take a drive through Gifford, and you will see the effects. The Sheriff’s drug cartel has been flooding our community, especially our African-American community with harmful narcotics, including crack, cocaine, meth, heroin, and more. They have been actively pushing these drugs on our vulnerable population, getting folks addicted, and then either arresting them or forcing them to do the drug cartel’s bidding. This is slavery and entrapment. It is the modern-day Jim Crow.
When you read in the news about a big drug bust in Vero Beach, you see a black face posted with a small quantity of drugs. This black man is a victim of the Sheriff’s drug cartel. He is a small time addict who is selling a little on the side to fund his habit. He is not a drug kingpin. We know who the real druglords are. They are usually white males in uniforms, robes, or suits. We used to have Coast-to-Coast Landscaping, as the Mexican face of the Sheriff’s drug cartel. That operation attracted too much attention and has since been moved.
If we can all start telling the truth about what is happening here, then we can begin to identify the issues and the steps that must be taken to correct the problems. To that end, I support Save Vero Beach in its efforts to access Sheriff Dept. documents under Florida Sunshine Laws. As Sheriff, I would immediately hand over the documents and stop wasting taxpayer money to defend against the lawsuit. The path to healing our community is to ground ourselves in truth, stop the abuses, bring about justice, and live in peace. The Sheriff has a duty to keep the peace. Sheriff Deb says “Yes justice, yes peace.”
Thanks,
Deborah Cooney
PS I am honored to be speaking at a Juneteenth (Emancipation Day) event in Gifford at 5 pm June 19. Would you like to attend?
Sent: Friday, June 12, 2020 at 9:39 AM
From: “Ray McNulty” <ray32963@gmail.com>
To: “Deborah Cooney” <cooneyforsheriff@mail.com>
Subject: Re: Update: More Foul Play in the Sheriff’s Race
Deborah:
One more thing: Do you think the George Floyd murder in Minneapolis and the subsequent protests will be an issue in the sheriff’s race here? Should it be? And what are your thoughts on the relationship between our Sheriff’s Office and local black community?
Thanks again.
Ray McNulty
THE CONSTITUTION
Both the Florida Constitution and the Constitution of the United States are the basis of our government and the highest law of the land. The Constitution grants us precious rights, such as the right to life, liberty, and property. We must start to honor it. The sheriff is a constitutional office with the duty to “keep the peace” or enforce the laws. It is time for the Indian River County Sheriff to start doing this.
DRUG POLICY
Small time drug addicts should be given the option of private rehabilitation rather than arrest and criminal prosecution.
Law enforcement should no longer be involved in trafficking narcotics in violation of state and federal laws. Law enforcement should start obeying the law as well as enforcing it, as is their sworn duty.
Members of drug cartels should be arrested and prosecuted on both the state and federal level. Law enforcement personnel who are also members of drug cartels should also be charged with honest services fraud, dereliction of duty, civil rights violations, and other crimes of betraying the public trust.
FACTS:
1. The US is in the throes of an opioid crisis.
2. The US is flooded with illegal and harmful drugs.
3. These drugs are harming our community. They are harming drug addicts and users, as well as non-users. There are thousands of innocent victims.
4. Illegal drugs enter the US through the Mexican border as well as by sea.
5. Law enforcement officers, judges, prosecutors, and other public officials are involved in narcotics trafficking. There are numerous witnesses and some have testified under penalty of perjury.
6. If our public officials were acting responsibly, our communities would not be flooded with illegals and harmful drugs.
7. The media refuses to publish information regarding official misconduct because, as one journalist stated, “I have kids. I don’t want to be found face down in a ditch.” There are standing threats to media, whether express or implied.
8. We the people have the power to solve this problem by voting, running for office, communicating with our representatives, reporting misconduct, and taking legal action.
FAIR PAY FOR DEPUTIES AND EMPLOYEES
There should be an across-the-board pay raise for all staff, whether sworn or not. Law enforcement personnel deserve a living wage.
POLICE UNIONS
Police unions are NOT labor unions. Labor unions are organizations that stand up for workers’ rights through collective bargaining. Some labor unions are corrupt, such as the Teamsters under Jimmy Hoffa.
Police unions, such as the Fraternal Order of Police, the Police Benevolent Society, etc., are mafia protection rackets. They are open to corporations, management, non-employees, and the general public. A donation to a police union is an illegal payment for police protection or a bribe to induce police to look the other way when a crime is committed. Police have a duty to protect everyone equally under the law. Police unions are unlawful organizations that run afoul of the RICO Act, the Civil Rights Act, and the Constitution. They are sometimes involved in narcotics trafficking, real estate scams, and other crimes as well. Law enforcement employees should not be allowed to join such criminal organizations.
COMMUNITY POLICING
Law enforcement officers should be respectful, courteous, upstanding, model citizens. They should never lie, cover up the truth, or try to deceive the public. They should end the practice of false arrest or arrest without probable cause. They should end the practice of illegal stop and frisk. They should end the practice of entrapment. They should endeavor to create trust in the communities they serve.
GUN POLICY
Attempting to ban or confiscate guns is misguided policy. Background checks are not the answer. Guns are not the problem. Instead, we should be addressing the root cause of officer misconduct and mass shootings.
FACT:
1. The total number of shootings has been falling steadily for over a decade, yet police shootings and mass shootings are becoming more ubiquitous.
2. Psychotropic drugs, pharmaceuticals, and illegal drug use has been connected to many mass shootings. EMF radiation has been shown to exacerbate the effects of these drugs and other toxins.
3. The CIA has produced mass shooters through disreputable secret programs such as MK Ultra, Project Monarch, and others. These programs use drugs and EMF radiation for mind control. The CIA continues to unlawfully operate these secret programs.
4. EMF exposure has been increasing rapidly since the 1990s. Incidents of mass shooting and police shootings have mirrored this growth.
5. The number of guns owned by civilians does not correspond with the trend in gun violence. Most civilian gun owners are law abiding.
6. The number of police shootings is climbing rapidly, keeping pace with the increase in EMF exposure. Police endure high EMF exposure emitting from their equipment. Police are also at a higher risk of drug addiction because of police agencies’ involvement in drug cartels.
This is an example post, originally published as part of Blogging University. Enroll in one of our ten programs, and start your blog right.
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