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Senate committee postpones anticorruption bill

in Statewide/Top Headlines by

A Florida Senate committee Tuesday postponed a bill that seeks to lower the burden of proof in public corruption cases and expand the law’s reach to more state-related groups such as contractors.

As reported by Lobby Tools, bill SB 582 came under harsh criticism from lawmakers on the Senate Governmental Oversight and Accountability Committee, who felt the measure was too broad

The foundation of proposed legislation came from several recommendations of a 2010 grand jury report requested by former Gov. Charlie Crist, which looked at possible ways to crack down on ethical abuses by public officials.

Also supporting the anticorruption bill was Gannett Co., publisher of the Tallahassee Democrat.

If passed, prosecutors would have to prove that broadly defined “public servants” acted “knowingly and intentionally” in accepting bribes. Public servants include politicians as well as private and semi-public entities working governmental bodies.

As it stands now, prosecutors are subject to a higher standard of proof to convict; they must demonstrate that public servants acted “corruptly.”

Among the critics of the bill were Clearwater Republican state Sen. Jack Latvala, who argued that the legislation was excessively broad. Latvala asked the committee if it was possible to “tighten this down” so to prevent Innocent small businesses from being forced into expensive legal battles.

Phil Ammann is a St. Petersburg-based journalist and blogger. With more than three decades of writing, editing and management experience, Phil produced material for both print and online, in addition to founding HRNewsDaily.com. His broad range includes covering news, local government and culture reviews for Patch.com, technical articles and profiles for BetterRVing Magazine and advice columns for a metaphysical website, among others. Phil has served as a contributor and production manager for SaintPetersBlog since 2013. He lives in St. Pete with his wife, visual artist Margaret Juul and can be reached at [email protected] and on Twitter @PhilAmmann.

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