But before the court deadline, Robinson met with two DeSantis advisers. The conversation grew contentious, and Robinson asked Desguin to join the meeting. He later briefed Carpenter on the meeting, according to her email.
DeSantis’s staff favored stonewalling The Post, withholding the documents and taking a chance in court, which they thought would be “friendly,” according to the email. Earlier this year, Dempsey ruled that the governor can withhold information from the public on the basis of “executive privilege'' — a decision that critics say is unsupported by prior Florida law, and is being appealed to the Florida Supreme Court.
Robinson argued that she and Desguin had helped draft the travel records exemption, and the intent was not to keep all information hidden from the public. She was “extremely upset” and had already alerted news organizations that records were coming, Carpenter’s email said.
After the meeting, DeSantis’s staff lashed out, according to Carpenter’s account. In a call to Desguin, the governor’s deputy chief of staff,Anastasios Kamoutsas, told him to deny a pending raise and promotion request for Robinson because she “is not on our team.” When Desguin asked whether he could give her another position, he was told, “No, she is lucky she even has a f---ing job.”
The FDLE never delivered the spreadsheet Robinson said the agency was preparing for The Post. One day before the Oct. 13 deadline, Robinson filed a notice in court asserting that the FDLE had complied with the judge’s order by releasing the annual costs of protecting the governor and his family. Additional travel information was exempt from disclosure under the new law, she argued.
Two weeks later, The Post pushed back with a new argument: The law is overly broad and unconstitutional.
“The exemption sweeps from public view every record relating in any way to the expenditure of millions of taxpayer dollars each year, including the most basic information needed to inform the public about what those services are for, when they were provided, who received them, and why,” the court filing states. “And it does so regardless of whether a given public record implicates the stated security concerns purportedly justifying the exemption’s passage.”
Meanwhile, the turmoil inside the FDLE continued. Dismayed about the denial of Robinson’s promotion and raise, Carpenter appealed to human resources officials in a Nov. 9 email. Less than 30 minutes later, Desguin received a phone call from the governor’s chief of staff. Carpenter wrote in her email that she could overhear the conversation, in which Desguin was instructed again to retract the recommendation for the promotion.
A few hours later, Carpenter and Desguin were placed on administrative leave and escorted out of the building. Carpenter said an FDLE official told her they were suspended because of the email about promoting Robinson.
More than a week later, Desguin was told by a top FDLE official that he could retire or be dismissed, according to Mattox. After 20 years with the agency, he chose retirement.
“Based on the above facts, I am asking for protection as a whistle blower under Florida law,” Carpenter wrote in the Nov. 28 email to Glass, the FDLE commissioner appointed by DeSantis last year. She said Robinson was “being retaliated against for arguing over what FDLE was being asked to do with public records by the (governor’s office) and I could not allow this to occur or be a part of this.”
Three days later, Carpenter was fired.
In what she described as continued signs of retaliation, Mattox said Carpenter and Desguin have been unable to retrieve their belongings from the office, while colleagues have been told not to have any contact with them. Mattox said she filed a whistleblower retaliation complaint with the Florida Commission on Human Relations — a first step before filing a lawsuit — on behalf of Desguin on Dec. 1 and expects to file a similar claim for Carpenter this week.
A court hearing is scheduled for Jan. 10 on The Post’s demands for the governor’s travel records.
Isaac Stanley-Becker contributed to this report.
Is he claiming "state secrets" and "qualified immunity" and "executive privilege yet? So much for "don't tread on me and Florida" because that's exactly what Mini Mussolini does.
ReplyDeleteDeSantis claims that "the left" is destroying the country. They've been saying that for 15 years and nothing has been destroyed. To the contrary, Republican empty suits and their advocacy for greed is holding America back from being a happier, healthier place for the greatest amount of people possible.
ReplyDelete