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Jenne: How star became target



CAREER PATH



  • 1973-1974: Assistant Broward state attorney. Along with Bob Butterworth, the two prosecutors probed corruption in the county building department, earning the nickname "Batman and Robin."

  • 1974: With the help of Sheriff Ed Stack, Jenne became executive director of the first Broward County Charter Commission, a group of civic leaders who drafted the county's modern-day form of government. A wrinkle in the new charter was to add two seats to the County Commission, and Jenne got elected to one of the seats. * 1975-1978: Broward County commissioner.

  • 1978-1988, 1990-1998: Florida state senator (Senate Democratic Leader 1994-1998). (Jenne took a two-year hiatus to run for state treasurer in 1988). Committee chairmanships included Appropriations, Rules and Calendar, Judiciary, Judiciary Criminal, Executive Business and Finance, Taxation and Claims.

  • Jan. 20, 1998: Appointed sheriff of Broward County by Gov. Lawton Chiles to replace Ron Cochran, who died of cancer in office.

  • September 1998: Elected sheriff.

  • 2000 and 2004: Reelected sheriff.





WHAT THEY'RE SAYING



  • Al Milián, former Broward prosecutor: "I think [Jenne is] facing a political crisis which could represent some significant problems for him down the road."

  • Jeffrey Weiner, past president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers: "The whole thing reeks of impropriety and maybe illegality."

  • Robert Jarvis, Nova Southeastern University law professor who teaches ethics: "If I was Ken Jenne, I would be very concerned."

wdemarzo@MiamiHerald.com

For years, Ken Jenne sidestepped the ethical sinkholes of Tallahassee in a stellar political career.

But as Broward sheriff, he's suddenly under siege for conduct in - and outside - his elective office.

Both the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and Broward State Attorney's Office this month launched twin investigations into public corruption.

FDLE agents and prosecutors are trying to determine whether Jenne broke the law when he moonlighted as a private consultant for at least two security companies - one worked for the Seminole Tribe in Hollywood, the other has sold hundreds of thousands of dollars in equipment to his agency.

Jenne received about $60,000 from one client and $4,000 from the other, through a company called Havloc LLC that he set up with two BSO employees, Undersheriff Tom Carney and Lt. Col. Tom Brennan.

Legal and ethical experts say the sheriff's conduct has been troubling - and surprising - in view of his previous, largely unblemished tenure in the State Senate.

"The whole thing reeks of impropriety and maybe illegality, " said Miami-Dade attorney Jeffrey Weiner, a past president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.

"The people of Broward County have every reason to be concerned about the integrity of his department, " Weiner said. "To be fair, there are at least two sides to every story. If he has some answers, that's fine. But if he doesn't, that's cause for concern." Said former Broward prosecutor Al Milián: "I think he's facing a political crisis which could represent some significant problems for him down the road."

'NOTHING WRONG'

Jenne's lawyer, prominent criminal defense attorney David Bogenschutz, declined to talk about specific allegations and has instructed the sheriff to keep quiet during the state probes. He said the sheriff met last week with an FDLE investigator in Fort Lauderdale.

"We believe he's done absolutely nothing wrong, and we're confident at the end of this hydra-headed investigation that he will come out and move on with the business of being sheriff of Broward County, " Bogenschutz said.

In Tallahassee, Gov. Jeb Bush told reporters Friday that he had not heard any updates on the FDLE investigation, saying: "It may take a while."

ETHICAL MISCONDUCT

Jenne, who makes $156,395 as sheriff of the 6,100-employee agency, faces possible civil ethics violations. The penalties: no action, suspension, removal or fines up to $10,000.

Among the allegations:

  • The managing directors of Jenne's consulting firm, Carney and Brennan, did an assessment of the Seminole tribe's police force in 2003 before the opening of its new casino - raising conflict of interest questions about the sheriff's dealing with a client in BSO's jurisdiction. The tribe's security firm, T&M Protection Resources, paid about $60,000 to Havloc, which Jenne reported on his income tax return.

    The state ethics code states that no public officer can be employed by or contract with any business that "is subject to the regulation" of his agency.

  • The following year, Jenne recommended to a BSO vendor, Innovative Surveillance Technology Inc., that it hire his consulting firm. Innovative asked Carney and Brennan to develop anti-terrorism training courses for Caribbean law enforcement agencies. Innovative, a Coral Springs firm that has sold BSO about $230,000 in equipment and services during the past five years, paid Jenne's firm $4,000 last year.

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