BenchRecon Data · Florida officer discipline
Lee County Sheriff's Office: officer-discipline records
26 FDLE/CJSTC certification-discipline records for Lee County Sheriff's Office, 2012–2026, covering 26 distinct officers. 2 involve a crimen-falsi (truthfulness) offense — the conduct that Brady, Giglio, and FRE 608(b) make impeachment material.
Aggregate analysis, data as of 2026-06-17. Reproducible from public records. No individual officer is named.
What the records show
Within the crimen-falsi group for Lee County Sheriff's Office (records can list more than one offense), the most frequent offense strings:
- 1 Perjury (in Official Proceeding), Perjury (by contradictory statements)
- 1 Excess Force by LEO, False Statement, Perjury (in an Official Proceeding)
Why this matters in a courtroom
A CJSTC discipline record carrying a crimen-falsi offense reflects the administrative record on an officer's character for truthfulness. Under Brady and Giglio, courts have addressed the disclosure of impeachment evidence bearing on a government witness's credibility. For the legal framing and the statewide figures, see the full Florida officer-discipline study.
Methodology & limitations
- Source: public Florida FDLE/CJSTC officer certification-discipline records, grouped by the employing-agency value FDLE itself records, here Lee County Sheriff's Office. Snapshot: 2026-06-17. Every figure is reproducible from a published script against the source data.
- Crimen-falsi classification: verbatim offense text matched for truthfulness offenses (perjury, false statement/report, falsifying, forgery, fraud); any clause carrying a dismissal, nolle prosequi, acquittal, exoneration, or cleared marker is removed before classifying.
- What the data does NOT show: a discipline record is not proof of guilt in any individual matter and does not reflect current certification status. These are statewide certification-discipline records, not local internal-affairs files. This page reports aggregates only and identifies no individual officer.
- Small sample: with 2 crimen-falsi records, percentages (including the revocation share) are omitted as noisy — the raw counts are indicative, not rates, and should not be read as a misconduct rate for the agency.
Check a specific Lee County Sheriff's Office officer
Officer Lookup searches the FDLE/CJSTC discipline records for a named officer, with every entry cited to the underlying public record.