Florida Officer Incident Ledger
Florida officer use-of-force and incident rows — source-backed, cited.
The live preview tool surfaces incident-ledger rows for Florida officers: use-of-force entries and misconduct records drawn from the Florida incident dataset, each entry citing the underlying public record. Run the officer testifying against your client and see what the record shows before you draft the suppression motion or prepare cross.
What the free preview returns.
The live Officer Lookup tool searches the Florida incident ledger and returns source-backed rows for the officer name you enter. Each result includes:
- Incident rows — use-of-force and misconduct entries classified by event type, with the event label and available outcome shown.
- Source appendix — every row links to the public-record source it was drawn from, so you know what you can pull directly and what still requires a records demand.
- Identity confidence — the tool scores the name match and flags multiple-agency hits so you can verify identity before attaching anything to a motion.
- Boundary notice — Florida results currently show FDLE/CJSTC certification discipline and incident-ledger rows only, not local-agency internal affairs complaints or Brady/Giglio lists. Those require a Chapter 119 records demand.
Full report — $147
What the paid Officer Lookup brief adds.
The $147 brief compiles every source-backed incident-ledger row, certification-discipline entry, and records-demand roadmap for the officer you name into a citable PDF and DOCX. Sections:
- Candidate Match Summary
- Public-Record Event Rows
- Records Demand Roadmap
- Identity Verification Checklist
- Drafted Records Request Letter
- Source Appendix
- Methods and Limits
The drafted records-request letter is pre-filled with the officer's identifiers and cites Article I, section 24, Florida Constitution; Chapter 119, Florida Statutes — the demand path for IA files and Brady/Giglio lists the incident ledger does not hold.
Records reflect public complaint filings and certification-discipline entries. A complaint record is not a finding of misconduct. All data is drawn from the named public source. BenchRecon makes no finding regarding the conduct of any individual officer.
Florida incident-ledger records — common questions.
- What is in the Florida officer incident ledger?
- Source-backed use-of-force and misconduct incident rows drawn from the Florida incident dataset, each entry citing the underlying public record with its event type, label, and available outcome.
- Does the preview include internal affairs files or Brady/Giglio lists?
- No. Florida results currently show FDLE/CJSTC certification discipline and incident-ledger rows only, not local-agency internal affairs complaints or Brady/Giglio lists. The paid brief includes a drafted Chapter 119 records-request letter for those layers.
- How do I confirm the incident is the right officer?
- Every match carries an identity-confidence level and multi-agency name hits are flagged. Verify name, agency, and appointment date against your case discovery before attaching any row to a motion.
- Is an incident row a finding against the officer?
- No. A public incident or complaint record is not, by itself, a finding of misconduct. The tool surfaces public-record leads for attorney review; it does not make a legal conclusion.