Chief's Chat #18: School Threats & Why Police Can't Always Charge What You Expect
Description
What happens when police identify a school threat but face unexpected legal barriers to filing the charges the public expects? Chief Anthony Sizemore sits down with Host Lisa Greenberg and takes listeners behind the scenes of a recent case that sparked community confusion and outrage.
When two young adults were involved in the creation and posting of a disturbing video where one specifically threatened to shoot up a local elementary school with an AR-15, the resulting charges left many people questioning why the punishment didn't seem to match the crime. In this candid discussion, Chief Sizemore breaks down the complex legal framework that governed our response, explaining why only the person who posted the video—not the one who made the verbal threat—could be charged under Florida's mass shooting threat statute.
The conversation reveals the often-frustrating gap between what feels right and what's legally possible in law enforcement. "There are times when a law and common sense part ways," Chief Sizemore explains, detailing how this statute, born from the Parkland tragedy, wasn't written to address every scenario police now encounter (through no fault of lawmakers). Rather than simply accepting these limitations, learn how the Cape Coral Police Department is actively working with state representatives, neighboring agencies, and the Florida Police Chiefs Association to close this dangerous loophole.
This episode offers rare insight into how police departments navigate complex legal constraints while still finding ways to protect public safety—in this case through alternative charges and the application of Florida's risk protection order to remove firearms from the suspect. For anyone who's ever wondered why police "didn't do more" in a high-profile case, this conversation pulls back the curtain on the legal realities that shape law enforcement responses to threats in our communities.



