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Grand jury wants 4 Broward school board members removed over Parkland shooting

Broward County School Board member Donna Korn raises her hand during a school board meeting on March 5, 2019. Then-Superintendent Robert Runcie sits to her left. Korn is now running for re-election even as a grand jury report investigating the School Board remains secret.
Amy Beth Bennett / South Florida Sun Sentinel
Broward County School Board member Donna Korn raises her hand during a school board meeting on March 5, 2019. Then-Superintendent Robert Runcie sits to her left. Korn is now running for re-election even as a grand jury report investigating the School Board remains secret.

A Florida grand jury empaneled after a 2018 school massacre has recommended that Gov. Ron DeSantis remove from office four members of the Broward County school board, saying they and district administrators displayed “deceit, malfeasance, misfeasance, neglect of duty and incompetence” in their handling of a campus safety program.

In the 122-page report released Friday, the panel recommended that DeSantis suspend board members Patricia Good, Donna Korn, Ann Murray and Laurie Rich Levinson. A former member, Rosalind Osgood, was also targeted, but she is now a member of the Florida Senate.

The grand jury began meeting 15 months after 14 students and three staff members were gunned down on Feb. 14. 2018, at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, a Broward County suburb. The shooter, Nikolas Cruz, pleaded guilty in October and is now on trial to decide whether he will be sentenced to death or life without parole.

Former Broward Superintendent Robert Runcie resigned last year after he was indicted for allegedly lying to the grand jury. He has pleaded not guilty and is awaiting trial. The district is the nation's sixth-largest, with more than 270,000 students.

The grand jury said that Runcie's and the accused board members' “uninformed or even misinformed decisions, incompetent management and lack of meaningful oversight” has led to massive cost overruns and delays in a school safety program approved by county voters in 2014. The report says the $1 billion program that was supposed to be completed in 2021 is now projected to cost $1.5 billion when it is finished in 2025 — estimates the jury called “wishcasting.”

“This doubling of time and almost 50 percent increase in cost did not happen overnight,” the grand jury wrote. “It was a slow-boiling frog that resulted from years of mismanagement from multiple (district) officials whose mistakes were compounded by the Board, which has....refused to hold (district) leadership to account.”

The accused school board members and Osgood did not immediately respond Friday to calls and emails seeking comment. Runcie’s attorney did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

DeSantis also had no immediate comment. He fired former Broward Sheriff Scott Israel just after he took office in January 2019, saying Israel's lack of leadership contributed to the Stoneman Douglas shooting.

The grand jury report says the Broward school district seems to be more focused on how it is viewed publicly than on actual accomplishment.

"Broward County has provided a cornucopia of examples of an almost fanatical desire to control data and use it to manipulate public perception, including that surrounding safety," the grand jury wrote. Runcie and the accused board members “are seemingly obsessed with the optics of any situation and control of public impressions of their activities.”

“The District produces training materials on ‘Building the Brand’ as though the district were all important while its students were mere commodities and instructs employees to always consider how situations might affect the perception of the District as opposed to the reality," the jury wrote.

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Terry Spencer | the Associated Press
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