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Police


FLORIDA POLICE DEPARTMENTS SPENT THOUSANDS ON TRAINING SEMINARS BANNED IN 9
STATES


A NEW JERSEY GOVERNMENT WATCHDOG SAID STREET COP TRAINING INSTRUCTORS GLORIFIED
VIOLENCE, MADE DISCRIMINATORY REMARKS, AND OFFERED UNPROFESSIONAL AND
UNCONSTITUTIONAL ADVICE TO OFFICERS.

C.J. Ciaramella | 5.1.2024 3:46 PM

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(Illustration: Lex Villena | Reason)

Police and sheriff's departments across Florida spent thousands of dollars
sending officers to training conferences that have been banned in nine other
states after being accused of promoting unconstitutional tactics and glorifying
violence.

Reason obtained invoices through public records requests showing that a dozen of
Florida's largest law enforcement agencies spent $31,377 on training seminars
hosted by Street Cop Training, a New Jersey-based company, between 2020 and
2023.

The company has been under intense scrutiny since the New Jersey Office of the
State Comptroller issued a scathing report in December detailing a 2021 Street
Cop Training conference in Atlantic City where instructors made discriminatory
and unprofessional remarks. At the conference, one instructor flashed a picture
of a monkey when talking about an elderly black man, and the founder of the
company said that refusing to consent to a police search was justification for
prolonging an investigation. Since then, New Jersey has ordered retraining for
all officers who attended Street Cop conferences, and the company has declared
bankruptcy.

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The Florida invoices shed light on Street Cop's foothold in one of the most
populous states. Despite the turbulent times for the company, it is soldiering
on in the Sunshine State. As Florida Today's John Torres noted in a recent
op-ed, Orlando is hosting the 2024 Street Cop Conference this week.

Not only that, but Brevard County Sheriff Wayne Ivey is a speaker at the
conference.

Torres noted with disdain that taxpayers were footing the bill to send officers
to these conferences.

"Locally, at least one Melbourne officer is attending the training with the
department paying for it," Torres wrote. "Palm Bay and Cocoa have none and the
Brevard County Sheriff's Department did not respond to my inquiry about how many
deputies were attending. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement could not
tell me how many officers were attending."

It would probably not surprise Torres to learn that the Brevard County Sheriff's
Office spent the most out of any agency that has so far responded to Reason's
records requests. Street Cop invoices to the agency total $7,825 between 2020
and 2023.

The next biggest spender was the Osceola County Sheriff's Office with $7,085,
followed by the Seminole County Sheriff's Department at $6,604.

Six Florida Highway Patrol officers attended Street Cop training seminars during
that time period, according to records.

To compile this report, Reason filed 28 public records requests to the largest
police departments and sheriff's offices in Florida. Nine agencies said they had
no responsive records. Seven requests are still pending, including from populous
jurisdictions such as Broward and Orange County.

Street Cop Training was founded in 2012 by Dennis Benigno, a former New Jersey
police officer. It runs training conferences for thousands of police officers
around the country, but flew under the radar until New Jersey Comptroller Kevin
Walsh's December report. The report documented dozens upon dozens of lewd and
discriminatory remarks by instructors and comments glorifying violence.



More concerning than the constant middle-school jokes about penis size, though,
were the substance of the presentations. For example, Benigno and other
instructors at the Atlantic City conference insisted that refusing to consent to
a search of one's vehicle—a constitutional right under the Fourth Amendment—was
suspicious and should be used as justification for prolonging a search or
detention.

The comptroller investigation found that there was "an entire section of
Benigno's training during the Conference dedicated to an 'I Do Not Consent
Game,' during which Benigno shows a montage of people refusing consent in an
attempt to illustrate that a motorist's refusal to consent is a suspicious
factor that justifies further prolonging an investigative detention."

The comptroller's office found that multiple instructors told officers to use a
"reasonable suspicion" checklist to decide whether to find a reason to pull
someone over or extend a traffic stop. The checklist included a long list of
vague and contradictory behavior, including the driver not looking at a police
car when passing, looking too long at a police car when passing, wearing a hat,
removing a hat when an officer approaches, looking back at their vehicle,
leaning against their vehicle, smoking, stretching or yawning, and licking their
lips.

"Because none of these factors are more consistent with guilt than innocence, a
stop based on a combination of those factors alone—without some additional
factor that suggests criminality—would be unconstitutional," the New Jersey
Comptroller's Office concluded.

Benigno also mocked people who record the police during traffic stops, saying
that person was about to "get pepper sprayed, fucking tased, windows broken out,
motherfucker." Recording the police is a First Amendment right.

One Street Cop instructor in Louisiana livestreamed himself shooting at a
fleeing vehicle and later bragged about it at the Atlantic City conference. "Run
from me, somewhere along the chase becomes, pow, pow, pow, pow, pow, pow, pow,"
he said. The deputy has since been charged with illegal discharge of a firearm
and obstruction of justice.



The report found that at least New Jersey spent at least $75,000 in public funds
sending officers to the Atlantic City conference.

Benigno said in the wake of the report that he was tightening professional
standards for the conferences and making other changes, but he denied that the
company promoted unconstitutional tactics.

In a lengthy statement to Florida news outlet WESH last week, Benigno said in
part: "The context of the Fourth Amendment training at the October conference
and the implications that the training was unconstitutional is completely
baseless. Officers in attendance have already completed police academy and
understand the context in which the training is provided."

Not all of the public records identify which seminars officers attended, but at
least some of them involved traffic stops and interdiction. One officer from the
Tallahassee Police Department attended a 2021 Street Cop Training class titled
"identifying criminal vehicles and occupants," and a Duval County Sheriff's
deputy attended "interdiction mastermind."

The Volusia Sheriff's Office paid for five deputies to attend seminars that
included "unmasking facial expressions" and "body language for law enforcement."

The ability to reliably detect lies or guilt by reading facial expressions and
body language has never been replicated in controlled studies. It's
pseudo-science, but it has nevertheless remained popular among law enforcement
because it gives officers a wide-ranging and often contradictory list of cues to
confirm their suspicions. (Walsh's report also notes that "some other
controversial factors [on the checklist] are observing 'micro-expressions' as
taught through free online videos and assessing 'blink rate.'")

The controversy over Street Cop Training has led some Florida sheriff's offices
to distance themselves from the company.

A spokesperson for the Seminole County Sheriff's Office says none of its members
will be presenting or attending this year. The Volusia County Sheriff also told
local media that he wouldn't be sending deputies to the conference.



Meanwhile, Brevard County Sheriff Wayne Ivey remains a staunch defender of the
company.

"This is all a bunch of crap," Ivey said of Walsh's report. 

Ivey was a paid consultant at a Street Cop conference last year in Nashville.

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NEXT: California Cops Locked an Innocent Man in a Sex Offender Unit for 3 Days

C.J. Ciaramella is a reporter at Reason.

PoliceMilitarization of PolicePolice AbuseFloridaPublic recordsFOIAFourth
AmendmentCriminal Justice
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