A state investigation discovered no proof of wrongdoing in reference to the explosive allegations introduced by Florida’s former coronavirus information skilled, who had accused high state well being officers two years in the past of firing her for refusing to govern COVID-19 information to help the push to reopen Florida after months of quarantine.
Particular allegations raised by former company information supervisor Rebekah Jones — who gained nationwide media consideration together with her sensational accusations towards the DeSantis administration — have been both “unsubstantiated,” which means there was inadequate proof to show or disprove, or “unfounded,” concluding the alleged conduct did not happen, in accordance with the findings.
The investigation was carried out by the Florida Division of Well being’s Workplace of Chief Inspector Common, Michael J. Bennett, who investigates whistleblower complaints. Bennett experiences to Chief Inspector Common Melinda Miguel inside Gov. Ron DeSantis’ workplace.
The OIG report helps the DeSantis’ administration which stated there have been no makes an attempt to falsify the information the governor relied on to start reopening the state financial system in April 2020 following a quick, statewide COVID-19 lockdown.
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Jones was fired a month later after she stated she refused to falsify virus information. When she went public, DeSantis lashed out at Jones over her skilled credentials and portrayed her as a disruptive worker and felony.
Jones is now a Democratic candidate for Congress, working to unseat U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fort Walton Seaside. Jones stated Friday that she has not but acquired a replica of the ultimate OIG report.
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She plans to sue the state in federal court docket for wrongful dismissal now that the state investigation is full.
“”It is one thing that is been a life-defining expertise,” Jones stated of her confrontation with the DeSantis administration over the COVID-19 information.
“It is not one thing I’m ever going to overlook or really each recover from….In some methods it is a aid to have this factor over after two years.”
She added, “I do not assume it was ever life like for them to come back out and be like, ‘yeah, every thing she stated is true, we’re sorry, my dangerous.’”
DeSantis spokeswoman Taryn Fenske declined additional remark, saying, “The report speaks for itself.”
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The OIG findings, dated March 9, 2022, was first reported by NBC Information late Thursday afternoon. The 27-page report and Jones’s 70-page rebuttal, was obtained by USA Right now Community-Florida.
Jones, who was granted whistleblower standing to pursue her costs, filed the unique criticism on July 16, 2020, with the Florida Fee on Human Rights. It was later forwarded to the OIG.
Investigators regarded into 4 allegations raised by Jones towards high well being division officers solely months after the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.
These named have been Courtney Coppola, the company’s former Chief of Workers; Dr. Shamarial Roberson, the previous deputy secretary; Carina Blackmore, director of the company’s Medical and Well being Companies, throughout the Division of Illness Management and Well being Safety; and, Patrick “Scott” Pritchard, who labored within the Bureau of Communicable Illnesses, which is a part of the Division of Illness Management and Well being.
Investigators stated Jones’s declare that Roberson directed her and different DOH employees to falsify COVID-19 positivity charges as “unsubstantiated.” A second declare that Coppola “pressured” her to falsify COVID-19 positivity charges was additionally deemed “unsubstantiated.” A 3rd allegation that Roberson and Dr. Blackmore directed her to misrepresent the company’s COVID-19 Information and Surveillance Dashboard was “unfounded.”
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On the fourth allegation, OIG investigators decided that Dr. Roberson, Dr. Blackmore, and Pritchard did inform Jones to limit entry to underlying information that supported what appeared on the state’s COVID-19 Information and Surveillance Dashboard. However the motion was “not discovered to be a violation of
any governing directive.”
Jones, whose 70-page rebuttal was hooked up to the OIG’s 27-page report, went at size to dispute the OIG’s findings, point-by-point, writing that “administrators of a number of state companies and directors throughout the DOH (well being division), AHCA (Company for Well being Care Administration) and DEM (Division of Emergency Administration) expressed frustration and even worry about how the pandemic was dealt with, and thus a worry in telling the reality.”
“Statements from different state officers present that the complete weight and energy of the state authorities of Florida was used to subsequently goal me for persevering with to talk out and report COVID-19 information, together with the Governor himself,” she instructed the OIG.
Jones additionally introduced proof of emails and different communication, together with a textual content message change with Wesley Payne, then-director of inside communications for the Well being Division, who had approached the OIG with “related complaints” about deceptive COVID-19 information.
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Jones’s lawyer Rick Johnson instructed NBC Information that his consumer would go to court docket to argue that she was wrongly dismissed from her job. “It is easy: She was fired for refusing to govern Covid information,” Johnson instructed NBC.
Jones was fired because the Florida Well being Division’s geographic info techniques supervisor in Could 2020 after publicly accusing state officers of asking her to wrongly manipulate COVID-19 information, which the federal government disputed from the start.
She then launched her personal dashboard monitoring circumstances in June and stored accusing the DeSantis administration of falsifying information to make Florida look higher.
At one level, Jones stated her workplace had directed her former coworkers to “change the numbers and start slowly deleting deaths and circumstances so it seems like Florida is bettering subsequent week.”
When pressed for proof, she identified that the state’s official tally didn’t embody out-of-state residents who died of COVID-19 in Florida — though the determine in query was described as “deaths in Florida residents.”
Marketing campaign path:Rebekah Jones launches marketing campaign web site saying she’s working towards U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz
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Political candidate:Democrat Rebekah Jones says she will win in Northwest Florida
The allegations she raised towards the DeSantis administration and high state well being officers positioned her within the nationwide media highlight. She appeared on CNN, CBS Information, MSNBC and different main tv networks, sounding the alarm in regards to the Florida authorities’s dealing with of the pandemic.
Florida Democrats seized on Jones’ claims. Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, who’s now working for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, demanded Jones be allowed to talk for herself to the Florida Cupboard at its assembly in Could 2020. It did not occur.
Extra controversy and intrigue adopted in December 2020 when Jones posted a video of armed Florida Division of Regulation Enforcement brokers raiding her Tallahassee residence.
State investigators have been executing a search warrant that they’d possible trigger to imagine Jones was behind an nameless message despatched final November to Jones’ former colleagues on the well being division utilizing the emergency operations ReadyOps system. The investigation is pending.
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Jones has different authorized points. She faces a pending misdemeanor cost of cyberstalking pre-dating her work on COVID-19 that has been utilized by lots of Jones’ critics to assault her credibility.
The difficulty arose out of a 2017 relationship Jones had with a school pupil whereas Jones was a doctoral candidate at Florida State College.
The incident was detailed in a greater than 300-page doc Jones wrote and posted on-line, which was submitted in her court docket case.
Jones misplaced her graduate assistant instructing place at FSU over the affair, and her on-line publish in regards to the relationship resulted within the cost of stalking. When she was employed by the state well being division in 2019, her hiring paperwork famous the pending costs, however she was cleared to be employed.
Jones, who now lives within the Panhandle metropolis of Navarre, is working within the August 23 Democratic major within the closely Republican First District represented since 2017 by Gaetz, a detailed ally of former President Trump.
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Sergio Bustos is Enterprise/Politics Editor for Florida’s Gannett/USA Right now Community. He is primarily based in South Florida. E mail: floridapolitics@gannett.com
John Kennedy is a reporter within the Capital Bureau, USA Right now Community-Florida. He may be reached at jkennedy2@gannett.com, 850-321-0572, or on Twitter at @JKennedyReport
Western Carolina Catamounts (2-2) at Florida State Seminoles (6-1)
Tallahassee, Florida; Tuesday, 7 p.m. EST
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BOTTOM LINE: Western Carolina plays Florida State after Cord Stansberry scored 20 points in Western Carolina’s 82-69 loss to the Wake Forest Demon Deacons.
The Seminoles are 3-1 on their home court. Florida State is 5-1 when it wins the turnover battle and averages 12.4 turnovers per game.
Western Carolina finished 11-8 in SoCon action and 10-6 on the road a season ago. The Catamounts averaged 11.3 assists per game on 28.2 made field goals last season.
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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
It’s been a good couple weeks for the Florida Gators.
First, they take down No. 22 LSU, 27-16, with a bend but don’t break approach. Then, they follow that up by upsetting No. 9 Ole Miss, 24-17. With that latter win, heads really began to turn. It was one thing to put up fights against Tennessee and Georgia, but now, they’re beginning to take down these formidable opponents.
The analysts are starting to talk them up. ESPN’s College Gameday analyst Kirk Herbstreit is ready to hand head coach Billy Napier the award for coach of the year. He made sure to include that he thinks quarterback DJ Lagway is going to be something special.
“Can a guy with a team that will finish 7-5 win the coach of the year award? He should!!” Herbstreit said in a tweet. “Billy Napier and [the Florida Gators, after being 4-5 and losing two straight, have beaten LSU and Ole Miss. So impressive to see this fight from the Gators and their fans after having a tough year. And, oh yeah, DJ Lagway is the REAL DEAL!”
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Big Cat from Barstool Sports jumped on X (formerly Twitter) and said, “The Florida Gators may need a playoff berth.”
Now, that can be written off as two guys getting excited, but key writers are noticing too. Florida received votes in the latest AP Poll.
Brian Brian Fonesca of the NJ.com/Star-Ledger and Ian Kress of WLNS-TV (a CBS affiliate in Lansing, Michigan) ranked them No. 25. David Paschall of the Chattanooga Times Free Press ranked them No. 24. It’s only four points, but they’re the only five-loss team to receive votes.
Unofficially, they’re ranked No. 33 in the country. If they had beaten Tennessee or Georgia to have that slightly better 7-4 record, could very well be in the top 25 right now. It’s hard to vote for a 6-5 team, that’s totally fair, but the willingness to do so by a handful of writers is a good starting point. If they win out, including a quality bowl win, to finish 8-5, finishing ranked is realistic.
Those who are signing on now are seeing what could be on the horizon in 2025. This is how they are playing now. This team might have won eight or nine games had this been yearlong. Wait until they play the portal some more this summer to bring in more talent, Napier gets that offensive coordinator and Lagway comes in with nearly a year of play under his belt.
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The Florida Gators have put the country on notice. They gave Napier the time to rebuild after Dan Mullen’s collapse, and that time is beginning to pay off.
GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Florida players eager to celebrate their latest victory, the one that made them bowl eligible for the first time in two years, found a suitable prop on the sideline.
Ole Miss left behind its basketball hoop, which the Rebels use to salute big plays during games.
The Gators set it up, grabbed some footballs and held their own dunk contest near the end zone. It provided an apt stage — perfect for showcasing finishing moves — after they closed out another ranked opponent.
Florida (6-5, 4-4 Southeastern Conference) dominated the second half for the second consecutive week and got to party in the Swamp following a 24-17 victory over then-ninth-ranked Mississippi on Saturday.
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Not only did the Gators knock the Rebels (8-3, 4-3) out of the College Football Playoff picture, they won their fourth consecutive home game and raised expectations for coach Billy Napier’s fourth season in Gainesville.
And the manner in which they accomplished it mattered. Napier has been preaching about “finishing,” something that had mostly eluded the Gators in the past two years.
Florida lost four games in 2023 after leading in the second half, including three — against Arkansas, Missouri and Florida State — in the fourth quarter.
And no one following the program has forgotten how close the Gators were to upsetting Tennessee and Georgia earlier this season, losing 23-17 to the Volunteers in overtime and fading against the Bulldogs after being tied at 20 with five minutes to play.
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Napier hoped all those gut punches would ultimately lead to something better, and they finally did — with late-game knockouts against LSU and Mississippi.
“Eventually you get sick of that,” receiver Chimere Dike said. “To be able to get these last two wins is huge for our team and our program. I’m proud of the resilience the guys showed, the way that we performed.”
Florida held Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin’s high-scoring offense to three points in the second half. The Rebels turned the ball over twice — interceptions by Bryce Thornton on the final two drives — punted twice and got stuffed on another fourth-down run.
“I thought we were better on both sides up front, and short-yardage defense is a big component,” Napier said. “Those are identity plays. I think we had guys step up and make plays.”
Added defensive tackle Cam Jackson said: “Everybody just pinned their ears back. That was great.”
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It was reminiscent of the previous week against then-No. 21 LSU. Florida held the Tigers to six points in the second half and forced a fumble, a punt and a turnover on downs in a 27-16 victory.
“We just all came together and wanted to change how Florida was looked at,” Thornton said. “That’s the biggest thing with us, just trying to show everybody that we can do it.”
The Gators ended the afternoon showing off their basketball moves.
Cornerback Trikweze Bridges, receiver Marcus Burke, defensive end Justus Boone, tight end Tony Livingston and linebacker Shemar James delivered monster dunks. Aidan Mizell passed a football between his leg in midair before his slam, and fellow receiver Elijhah Badger bounced it off the backboard before rousing teammates and fans with his finish.
“Belief is the most powerful thing in the world,” Napier said. “At some point there, midseason, we figured (that) out and we started to believe. Look, we can play with any team in the country.”