Public Safety Department on successive days last October and placed in jail, a high-ranking officer told a caseworker during an interview."He was crying. I was getting the response I expected from him," Lt. Michael Schoenbrod told the Department of Children and Families caseworker, body-cam footage from a Volusia County Sheriff's Office deputy shows.It is unclear whether Schoenbrod and another high-ranking Daytona Beach Shores officer, Det. Sgt.
In that May 18 filing, Schoenbrod and Long petitioned the court for a writ of mandamus − essentially legalese that means they are asking a judge to impose an order on Larizza. What kind of order? That is unknown. A public records advocate challenged the city officials' assertion that the motion for confidentiality precludes them from making the internal-affairs documents public.
Schoenbrod said he had asked the boy whether he had hit a girl and the boy said yes. So Schoenbrod then told the boy he puts people in jail when they hit other people. Also, a Florida Department of Law Enforcement spokeswoman said she received a June 6 News-Journal request for any investigation of Schoenbrod and Long agents may have completed and that the request has been forwarded to the public records department for processing, which is apparently ongoing.