The Florida Department of Law Enforcement runs a database called ATMS. Automated Training Management System. It tracks every certified law enforcement officer in Florida. Their training. Their exams. Their certifications. Their professional-compliance complaints.
I pulled the extract dated June 20, 2024.
The Broward Sheriff’s Office sits at agency number 120 in that database. 8,491 officers with state employment records. 845 professional-compliance cases across the agency’s history. 770 officers with at least one case to their name.
One of those officers is Sheriff Gregory S. Tony.
Person number 194726. Male, Black, born 1978. Certificate #253017, active, expires June 30, 2026. Recertified June 3, 2022. Mandatory training boxes for Human Diversity, Domestic Violence, Sex Offender, Traffic Stops, and Electronic Database all checked.
The wellness flag is not set.
Maybe Tony needs an
Emotional Support Dildo Dog
The Open-Cases Sheet
ATMS produces a list of currently-active open BSO cases (as of the pull of this archive, 2024). Cases with no closing date as of the extract date. Stub records excluded. Fourteen names on the list.
I will reproduce them in the order the database returns them.
Case #51135. Asiel Dominguez-Cabrera. Marijuana, test positive. Informal hearing pending.
Case #50723. Tamara L. Young. Petit theft. Administrative complaint issued.
Case #50406. John A. Marra. Urine testing, fraudulent practices. Dismissed by Commission.
Case #50170. Kevin G. Fanti. Excess force by LEO. Placed on probation by Commission.
Case #49009. Richard S. Sinclair. Unprofessional relationship, romantic association. Formal hearing pending.
Case #48928. Gregory S. Tony. Fraud. Formal hearing pending.
Case #48355. Thomas B. Spear. DUI, BAC .15 or higher. Formal hearing pending.
Case #48285. Selena Mullins. Petit theft, false statement. Formal hearing pending.
Case #47835. Kahrique D. Herring. DUI, BAC .15 or higher. Personal service pending.
Case #45640. Willard Miller. Excess force by LEO. Formal hearing pending.
Case #44938. Scot R. Peterson. Culpable negligence, neglect child. No caused by staff.
That’s the school resource officer who didn’t go in at Stoneman Douglas. One row below the Sheriff on the open-cases sheet.
Same agency code. Same database. Same line item structure. Same status field. The form treats them the same way because the form treats every officer in BSO the same way. It has no field for “elected.” It has no field for “appointed by the governor.” It has no field for “the man who runs the agency.” It has a field for case number. It has a field for offense. It has a field for status.
Case #48928. Fraud. Formal hearing pending.
What the Case File Says
The case opened March 11, 2022. FDLE reference EI-14-0173. Source: FDLE Staff Documentation. Category: Disciplinary.
Offense code 2600. Fraud, Unlawful Acts in Relation to Driver License. Eight counts. Alleged on or between March 15, 2002 and February 1, 2019.
Status timeline runs two entries. Administrative Complaint issued June 21, 2022. Formal Hearing Pending as of July 6, 2022.
The activity log adds four more.
March 11, 2022. Case opened. Moved to CP, the case-prep stage.
April 22, 2022. Prepared for PC, the probable-cause review.
June 29, 2022. Administrative Complaint packet emailed to Webster and Baptist Law. Original sent by certified mail to the address Tony’s attorney supplied. The address on file is the BSO address.
The Sheriff’s lawyer gave FDLE the Sheriff’s office as the service address.
July 6, 2022. EOR received. Election of Rights, the document where the respondent picks formal hearing or informal disposition. Tony picked formal hearing. The file went to FDLE legal.
The case has sat in formal-hearing-pending status for a little under four years.
Discipline Numbers Across the Agency
The same extract carries the agency’s discipline outcomes across all 845 cases.
Revocation. 169.
Voluntary relinquishment. 47.
Suspension and probation. 38.
Probation. 27.
Dismissed. 27.
Suspension. 11.
Roughly two-thirds of BSO cases that reach a final order at the state level result in revocation or voluntary surrender of certification. 216 of approximately 329 dispositions.
The top offense codes carry their own pattern. False statement leads at 154 cases. Assault, 63. Battery, domestic violence, 42. Perjury, 40. Official misconduct, 38. Larceny, 37. DUI, 31. Fraud, 25. Tony’s offense code lands in the top ten.
Recent Revocations
Since 2020, BSO has lost nine officers to certification revocation or voluntary relinquishment at final-order status.
Delroy L. Rose. Battery. Revoked November 27, 2023.
Shonte Antoinette Samuels. False statement, welfare fraud. Voluntary relinquishment June 6, 2023.
Nevoy Etherton Haye. False statement. Revoked March 2, 2023.
Kimberly Joseph. Marijuana, test positive. Revoked November 16, 2022.
Brian K. Kmiotek. Perjury, unprofessional relationship. Voluntary relinquishment August 31, 2022.
Justin D. Lambert. Battery. Revoked August 26, 2021.
Troy D. Wilkins. Perjury, unlawful compensation. Revoked May 20, 2021.
Anthony J. Dlugos. Cocaine, test positive. Revoked November 19, 2020.
Scottie Mc Clary. Battery, domestic violence. Revoked November 19, 2020.
Each of those names belonged to a deputy or a corrections officer or a sergeant. Each of those cases produced a final order. Each of those final orders pulled a state certification. The Commission did the math, named the offense, signed the paper.
Two of those final orders are for false statement. Three for testing positive on a substance the officer was sworn to enforce against. One for perjury and welfare fraud, which is a useful pairing because welfare fraud is the federal corollary to driver-license fraud, both being false attestation to a state agency for purposes of obtaining a benefit.
The numbers are not large. They are not supposed to be large. State certification revocation is the floor of the discipline well, the place a case lands when the agency could not, would not, or did not handle it. Most BSO discipline never reaches FDLE. The 845 cases in the extract are not the universe of BSO misconduct. They are the residue.
Tony is a residue case.
What the File Does Not Show
The ATMS extract has scope. It tracks state-level certification proceedings. It does not track the BSO Internal Affairs file on the same conduct. It does not track the Florida Commission on Ethics docket. It does not track the Brady List entry. It does not track the Office of Inspector General review. It does not track the State Attorney’s declination. It does not track the executive order transferring prosecutorial review to the Twentieth Judicial Circuit. It does not track the dissertation methodology contradiction at page 38. It does not track the bound volume submitted to ProQuest in May 2024 with Tony’s signature on the Statement of Original Work.
It tracks one thing.
The state of Florida, through its Criminal Justice Standards and Training Commission, has had an open professional-compliance case against the sitting Sheriff of Broward County since March 11, 2022, for fraud committed in connection with eight unlawful driver-license acts spanning seventeen years.
Status: Formal Hearing Pending.
Last activity: July 6, 2022.
Discipline imposed to date: none.
Expenses recorded to date: none.
What Sits Where
The Sheriff sits one row above the Stoneman Douglas school resource officer on the same open-cases sheet.
The Sheriff sits in the same fraud offense category that produced revocations against Petron in 2015 and Rose in 2023.
The Sheriff sits in the same false-statement-adjacent offense family that produced 154 BSO cases across the agency’s history, with revocation as the modal outcome.
The Sheriff sits in formal-hearing-pending status, which is where the Commission parks a case while the respondent and the respondent’s counsel wait for a calendar that never quite materializes.
The Sheriff is in the database.
The deputies he supervises are in the same database.
The form treats them the same way because the form is the form.
The case number is 48928.
I wrote it down so neither of us forgets.
Filed from Deerfield Beach, where the database is the database and the queue is the queue.
Chaz Stevens is a First Amendment practitioner and constitutional stress tester based in Deerfield Beach, Florida. His work has produced legislative rewrites, policy reversals, and one governor who had to put his own name on the reason he changed his own law. He is the founder of REVOLT Training.
One More Thing
I’ve been doing this work for thirty years. Pro se lawsuits. Records requests. Bible challenges in 63 school districts. An FDUTPA injunction against an ESA letter mill, obtained without a lawyer. Statutes rewritten because I filed the wrong kind of paperwork the right way.
None of it has ever had an institution behind it.
No legal defense fund. No nonprofit board. No foundation grant. I fund the work myself. Filing fees, service, transcripts, records costs—it all lands on me. When a records custodian quotes $1,326.08 to produce documents the statute requires them to produce, that’s a bill I either pay or the work stops.
I’ve filed against Donald Trump, the Broward County School Board, State Representative Chip LaMarca, and ESA letter mills as indigent. Court-recognized. Sworn financials. Judges reviewed and approved every time.
This is the work. It produces results.
HB 1467 was rewritten, with the administration of Ron DeSantis naming me in the revision. The ESA injunction is a replicable enforcement model. The Wisconsin State Capitol approved a permit in 48 hours for an installation that normally takes ten business days to process.
The work works.
The math doesn’t.
I’m looking for paid work in three areas—defined by outcomes, not categories.
Accountability & Records
I identify exposure points in agencies and organizations using public records, then force resolution—through compliance pressure, media, or litigation.
Media & Narrative Engineering
I design stories that land. Not pitches that get ignored—events and documentation that reporters have to cover.
Technology & Infrastructure (Ecomm, GEO/SEO, Systems)
I’ve spent thirty years building systems that move money and control visibility.
Helped launch Disney.com and Blockbuster.com
Sold 60,000 vehicles through eBay—full pipeline, not theory
Worked inside NASA, IBM, and Microsoft
What I do now:
Build e-commerce systems that convert, not just attract traffic
Implement GEO/SEO so AI and search engines represent you accurately—and defensibly
Diagnose and fix structural issues in digital infrastructure that suppress performance
If your organization has traffic but no conversion, visibility but no control, or systems that “work” but don’t scale—I fix that.
If you run a nonprofit, newsroom, law firm, municipality, university, or company that needs any of this, contact me.
chazstevens@gmail.com
954-901-0971
If you don’t, forward this. One introduction changes the month.
If neither applies, the Consent Can funds the work. Women In Distress gets a cut.
I’ve spent thirty years making it expensive for corrupt people to stay corrupt.
I intend to keep doing that—and get paid for it.



