 TALLAHASSEE,
Fla. (AP) - A judge told lawyers Thursday that former Lt. Gov. Jennifer
Carroll can provide information in a case against an ex-employee
charged with illegally releasing taped conversations from the lieutenant
governor's office.
Circuit Judge Frank Sheffield released Carroll from his previous
order giving her some protection from answering questions from defense
attorneys.
"That was because you were concerned about them asking questions
that would somehow impinge upon her office as lieutenant governor of
the state of Florida,'' he told prosecutor John Hutchins. "Well, she's
not anymore. So she's subject to (questioning) the same as anybody
else.''
The defendant, Carletha Cole, was arrested in 2011 and accused of
giving a reporter a surreptitiously recorded conversation between Cole
and Carroll's chief of staff. She was later fired.
Carroll stepped down Tuesday in the wake of an investigation into
an alleged gambling operation that netted nearly 60 arrests. Carroll
provided public relations work to the company before being elected.
The recording at the center of the criminal case was placed on
the website of The Florida Times-Union. On it John Konkus, the chief of
staff for Carroll, can be heard saying that Steve MacNamara, Gov. Rick
Scott's former chief of staff, is afraid of Carroll. Konkus also
complained that Scott ``is not leading.''
Cole's attorneys have asserted that their client was being set up
because she witnessed unprofessional behavior by Carroll and other
employees, including walking in on Carroll and a female aide in a
"compromising position.'' Carroll, a former Navy officer who is
married, has denied the allegations.
It is against Florida law to record someone without consent, but
there have been questions about recordings made in public buildings.
Cole is charged with a third-degree felony and faces a maximum five-year
sentence if convicted.
Steve Andrews, Cole's lawyer, also complained to Sheffield about
evidence against his client, particularly the metadata on the recording.
Metadata are descriptions of digital information, akin to a
label on a jar, in this case, the date, time and duration of a
recording and where it was variously stored. Andrews said the metadata
is contradictory.
"I think we're entitled to better answers,'' Andrews said. "The
court should consider disposing the case because it's impossible to
defend.'' Sheffield declined the request.
Andrews also submitted copies of emails that he said suggested other evidence had been tampered with.
One email from the information technology section of the
governor's office referred to doing a "final manicure'' of Cole's email
records in response to a reporter's public records request.
The email's author, Bob O'Lary, then in charge of fulfilling
record requests for the governor's office, said it was just a reference
to how to filter records for specific requests out of a massive amount
of data.
"There was nothing nefarious about it,'' he said.
In another email purportedly from Carroll, she responded to Cole about a reporter's phone call.
"What does he want to interview me about?'' Carroll wrote.
"Always get details about what any reporter wants ... This determines
if I call them back or not.
"We always need our guards up with any Times-Union reporter,'' she wrote.
*Pictured above is Carletha Cole, left, and former Lt. Gov. Jennifer Carroll, right.
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