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New page: thumb|right|Sheriff Ron McNesby '''H. R. "Ron" McNesby''' (nicknamed '''Ronnie Mac''') is the current Escambia County Sheriff. He was first elected in 2000...
[[Image:RonMcNesby.jpg|thumb|right|Sheriff Ron McNesby]]
'''H. R. "Ron" McNesby''' (nicknamed '''Ronnie Mac''') is the current [[Escambia County Sheriff]]. He was first elected in [[2000]] and again in [[2004]].
Born [[May 22]], [[1944]] in Pensacola, McNesby attended [[Pensacola Junior College]] and Troy State University before joining the [[Escambia County Sheriff's Office]].<ref>http://www.flsheriffs.org/sheriffs/escambia.htm</ref>
==Awards==
*Martin Luther King Civil Rights Award, Good Schools for All, 2002
*Guard and Reserve Employer of the Year, Pensacola Chamber of Commerce, 2002
==Controversies==
During his tenure, McNesby and the Sheriff's Office have faced a number of controversies.
===Taser abuse & jail deaths===
Critics claim that fifteen inmates have died in the [[Escambia County Jail]] since McNesby was elected in 2000, though only twelve deaths occurred since he took office in January [[2001]]. Two of the deceased inmates, [[Robert Boggan]] and [[Jerry Preyer]], were mentally ill and were physically retrained, including multiple uses of a Taser, before their deaths.
In an April 6, 2007 viewpoint for the ''[[Pensacola News Journal]]'', McNesby defended his administration, citing the jail's accreditation in security operations and health care: "Less than 1 percent of the 3,600 jails in America can claim they are accredited in security and health care. Escambia is among that small, select group because of the caring professionals who go to work everyday in a place most Americans would never consider as a profession. The demonstrated commitment of my detention deputies and detention staff to improved jail conditions has resulted in my appointment to the Florida Corrections Accreditation Commission."<ref>[http://www.pensacolanewsjournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070406/OPINION/704060312/1020 Escambia County Jail is doing its job] - Pensacola News Journal, April 6, 2007</ref>
Other incidents of taser abuse:
*[[Michael J. Montgomery]] received a $62,500 settlement from the ECSO for being shot with a Taser. Montgomery had been visiting a friend's apartment complex and was shot by Deputy [[James Sullivan]] (who "had a smile on his face" at the time) after commenting that the deputies were using unnecessary force in making an arrest.
*On [[June 19]], [[2004]], Deputy [[Shedrick Cleon Johnston, Sr.]] used a Taser to shoot [[Harold Bernard Fountain]] in the face, blinding Fountain's left eye. The State's Attorney's Office announced the Taser use was justified on [[June 30]], [[2006]].
*Deputy [[Charles Dix]] shot [[Martha Bledsoe]] with a Taser five times in a Wal-Mart parking lot on [[February 3]], [[2004]]. He was suspended for 30 days and in 2007 was ordered to pay a $3,000 fine and sentenced to five years probation. The Sheriff's Office paid Bledsoe a $250,000 settlement.
*Deputy Dix also used a Taser to shoot [[Chad Baxter]] four times in a motel parking lot when Baxter was comforting his wife following a traffic accident. Dix did not face criminal charges in that incident, but the Sheriff's Office paid a $150,000 settlement to Baxter.
===Abuse of power at Arety's Angels===
In early [[2004]], [[Arety Sievers]], owner of [[Fairfield Drive]] strip club [[Arety's Angels]], publicly accused McNesby of trying to pressure her into forgiving nearly $6,000 in charges by [[Richard Touart]] made to credit cards he stole from his father, [[Escambia County Administrator]] [[George Touart]].
"It was just an act of bullying and intimidation, plain and simple," said Sievers.<ref>[http://www.sptimes.com/2004/03/27/State/2_grand_jury_inquirie.shtml 2 grand jury inquiries set in Escambia] - St. Petersburn Times, March 27, 2004</ref>
On [[June 10]], 2004, a grand jury found that McNesby had called Sievers, but that the action was neither improper nor unlawful.<ref name="teflon">[http://inweekly.net/article.asp?artID=70 Teflon Ron] - Independent News, June 18, 2004</ref>
===Sale of mobile trailers===
In the summer of [[2003]], the Sheriff's Office sold a number of trailers to [[Don Livingston]] of [[Communication Engineering Service]] for $3,100. The trailers had been purchased four years earlier to house work-release inmates at a cost of $134,000. Livingston later sold the trailers to [[Joe Doyle]], one of McNesby's political contributors. McNesby was cleared of wrongdoing on [[June 2]], 2004.<ref name="teflon"/>
===Grand jury conflict of interest===
After a grand jury cleared McNesby in June 2006 of the Arety's Angels and mobile trailer allegations, a story by [[WEAR]] revealed that the wife of one of the grand jurors was employed by McNesby.
A two-page statement from the 21-member jury indicated that, "in an abundance of caution," the juror disclosed the relationship to McNesby and sat out deliberations involving him. It added, "To imply that one person could exert such an influence over the other 20 of us demonstrates an ignorance of the process, diminishes us all and casts doubt upon the entire grand jury system."<ref>[http://inweekly.net/article.asp?artID=78 Nice Watchdog] - Independent News, June 25, 2004</ref>
==References==
<references/>
{{bio-stub}}
[[Category:Escambia County Sheriffs]]
'''H. R. "Ron" McNesby''' (nicknamed '''Ronnie Mac''') is the current [[Escambia County Sheriff]]. He was first elected in [[2000]] and again in [[2004]].
Born [[May 22]], [[1944]] in Pensacola, McNesby attended [[Pensacola Junior College]] and Troy State University before joining the [[Escambia County Sheriff's Office]].<ref>http://www.flsheriffs.org/sheriffs/escambia.htm</ref>
==Awards==
*Martin Luther King Civil Rights Award, Good Schools for All, 2002
*Guard and Reserve Employer of the Year, Pensacola Chamber of Commerce, 2002
==Controversies==
During his tenure, McNesby and the Sheriff's Office have faced a number of controversies.
===Taser abuse & jail deaths===
Critics claim that fifteen inmates have died in the [[Escambia County Jail]] since McNesby was elected in 2000, though only twelve deaths occurred since he took office in January [[2001]]. Two of the deceased inmates, [[Robert Boggan]] and [[Jerry Preyer]], were mentally ill and were physically retrained, including multiple uses of a Taser, before their deaths.
In an April 6, 2007 viewpoint for the ''[[Pensacola News Journal]]'', McNesby defended his administration, citing the jail's accreditation in security operations and health care: "Less than 1 percent of the 3,600 jails in America can claim they are accredited in security and health care. Escambia is among that small, select group because of the caring professionals who go to work everyday in a place most Americans would never consider as a profession. The demonstrated commitment of my detention deputies and detention staff to improved jail conditions has resulted in my appointment to the Florida Corrections Accreditation Commission."<ref>[http://www.pensacolanewsjournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070406/OPINION/704060312/1020 Escambia County Jail is doing its job] - Pensacola News Journal, April 6, 2007</ref>
Other incidents of taser abuse:
*[[Michael J. Montgomery]] received a $62,500 settlement from the ECSO for being shot with a Taser. Montgomery had been visiting a friend's apartment complex and was shot by Deputy [[James Sullivan]] (who "had a smile on his face" at the time) after commenting that the deputies were using unnecessary force in making an arrest.
*On [[June 19]], [[2004]], Deputy [[Shedrick Cleon Johnston, Sr.]] used a Taser to shoot [[Harold Bernard Fountain]] in the face, blinding Fountain's left eye. The State's Attorney's Office announced the Taser use was justified on [[June 30]], [[2006]].
*Deputy [[Charles Dix]] shot [[Martha Bledsoe]] with a Taser five times in a Wal-Mart parking lot on [[February 3]], [[2004]]. He was suspended for 30 days and in 2007 was ordered to pay a $3,000 fine and sentenced to five years probation. The Sheriff's Office paid Bledsoe a $250,000 settlement.
*Deputy Dix also used a Taser to shoot [[Chad Baxter]] four times in a motel parking lot when Baxter was comforting his wife following a traffic accident. Dix did not face criminal charges in that incident, but the Sheriff's Office paid a $150,000 settlement to Baxter.
===Abuse of power at Arety's Angels===
In early [[2004]], [[Arety Sievers]], owner of [[Fairfield Drive]] strip club [[Arety's Angels]], publicly accused McNesby of trying to pressure her into forgiving nearly $6,000 in charges by [[Richard Touart]] made to credit cards he stole from his father, [[Escambia County Administrator]] [[George Touart]].
"It was just an act of bullying and intimidation, plain and simple," said Sievers.<ref>[http://www.sptimes.com/2004/03/27/State/2_grand_jury_inquirie.shtml 2 grand jury inquiries set in Escambia] - St. Petersburn Times, March 27, 2004</ref>
On [[June 10]], 2004, a grand jury found that McNesby had called Sievers, but that the action was neither improper nor unlawful.<ref name="teflon">[http://inweekly.net/article.asp?artID=70 Teflon Ron] - Independent News, June 18, 2004</ref>
===Sale of mobile trailers===
In the summer of [[2003]], the Sheriff's Office sold a number of trailers to [[Don Livingston]] of [[Communication Engineering Service]] for $3,100. The trailers had been purchased four years earlier to house work-release inmates at a cost of $134,000. Livingston later sold the trailers to [[Joe Doyle]], one of McNesby's political contributors. McNesby was cleared of wrongdoing on [[June 2]], 2004.<ref name="teflon"/>
===Grand jury conflict of interest===
After a grand jury cleared McNesby in June 2006 of the Arety's Angels and mobile trailer allegations, a story by [[WEAR]] revealed that the wife of one of the grand jurors was employed by McNesby.
A two-page statement from the 21-member jury indicated that, "in an abundance of caution," the juror disclosed the relationship to McNesby and sat out deliberations involving him. It added, "To imply that one person could exert such an influence over the other 20 of us demonstrates an ignorance of the process, diminishes us all and casts doubt upon the entire grand jury system."<ref>[http://inweekly.net/article.asp?artID=78 Nice Watchdog] - Independent News, June 25, 2004</ref>
==References==
<references/>
{{bio-stub}}
[[Category:Escambia County Sheriffs]]