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Disgraced Florida COVID Data Critic Reaches Agreement on Felony Charge


A fired Florida health department data manager charged with illegally accessing state computers after she publicly accused officials of wanting to make COVID-19 statistics look less dire has reached an agreement with prosecutors that should result in the case being dropped.

Rebekah Jones, who helped design the state’s coronavirus website, signed an agreement with prosecutors admitting guilt to a charge of illegally accessing the state’s computer system and requiring her to pay $20,000 to cover the investigation’s costs, perform 150 hours of community service and see a mental health counselor monthly. If she completes those requirements, the charge will be dropped within two years. The agreement was filed late last week at Tallahassee’s circuit court.

Jones, who lost a bid for Congress last month, was charged in January 2021 with one count of offenses against users of computers, computer systems, computer networks and electronic devices. Investigators say that in late 2020, months after she was fired, Jones illegally accessed a state emergency-alert messaging system known as ReadyOp.

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement said Jones downloaded and saved confidential data and sent a message to 1,750 state employees that urged them to “speak up before another 17,000 people are dead” — the number of Floridians who had died of COVID-19 by that point.

“You know this is wrong. You don’t have to be a part of this. Be a hero,” the message said.

A month before she was charged, armed FDLE agents raided her home and seized her computers.

Prosecutor Georgia Cappleman said Monday that Jones’ charge was “relatively minor” and that the agreement was one “everyone can live with.”

“We try to resolve most cases outside of trial,” she said. If convicted at trial, Jones would have faced up to five years in prison, though any significant time behind bars would have been unlikely.

Jones, who has denied sending the message, posted a lengthy statement criticizing her plea agreement, saying “no justice would be served by continuing the charade.” She accused Gov. Ron DeSantis of personally ordering the raid, and said agents pointed guns at her two young children.

“In a judicial system adversarial to empathy, truth and human decency, I win a total dismissal — for a fee,” she wrote. “I continue to remind myself to be grateful. Certainly this is not the outcome DeSantis and his thugs wanted. And while an agreement to dismiss the charges isn’t the outright dismissal I wanted, it’s a dismissal none-the-less.”

The governor’s press office did not immediately respond to a phone call and email seeking comment.

Jones, 33, received national attention in early 2020 when she sowed doubt about the information being reported by the state when Florida was an epicenter of the pandemic.

She publicly suggested that she pushed back when health department managers wanted her to manipulate information to paint a rosier picture as DeSantis pushed to reopen Florida businesses earlier than most other states and keep restrictions light in small, rural counties.

DeSantis, a possible 2024 Republican presidential candidate, raised his national profile by criticizing COVID lockdowns, most mask wearing and hiring a health department chief who is skeptical of coronavirus vaccines.

Health department officials denied Jones’ allegations and she was fired for violating regulations barring employees from making public statements without permission. About six months later, the computer message was sent, starting the investigation that led to her arrest.

Jones was the Democratic challenger to Republican U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz last month. In the heavily GOP district, Gaetz won by a 2-to-1 margin.

(AP)



2 Responses

  1. Following is an interesting tidbit from Wikipedia. While under the Trump administration Jones was not banned from Twitter, things changed under Biden and in June 2021 (before Elon Musk got involved) Jones was suspended from (the extremely “woke”) Twitter for spam and platform manipulation. Also of interest is that even previously she faced charge of cyberstalking a former student (with whom she had had a romantic relationship). And the following gem: “She was fired from her Florida State University teaching position for threatening to give a failing grade to her romantic partner’s roommate”. As early as 2016 she was in legal trouble in Louisiana for battery on a police officer after refusing to leave her office when she was fired from her position in the state university. So let us be clear, this is hardly a person who had pristine record before she wsa hired in 2018 to help set up the Florida dashboard on hurricanes and COVID.

  2. To continue, Jones came out publicly accusing the police of barging into her house and pointing gun at her (small) children (they were executing a search warrant). But the police later released the body cam video (with sound), and I watched it myself. It shows the police knocking for more than 20 minutes with no response, calling her in the phone, seeing her “peeping” out through a windows, and finally banging non stop to force them to open the door. Almost immediately as she walks out and one police enters, she screams – don’t point a gun at my children, he is pointing a gun at my children. Then she (contradicts herself) and states her children are upstairs. So by her own words in the body-cam video it was physically impossible for the police to have pointed a gun at the children because (as the video shows clearly) the police were still downstairs (in fact, barely entered the threshold of the house) while she stated that the children were (still) upstairs.

    And seeing (from video) that she was married with children, one wonders about her romantic involvement with a student. And indeed a search turns up the report that she was married at the time that she had the affair with her student. Further she threatened the student with “revenge porn” (despite the fact that she was the one who was married – he was 21 but she was 30) and that she wrote a 342-page “manifesto” on her sex life with the student and posted 60 pages of that (as well as naked photos of the student) on her web site (and sent the link to her site to woke web sites).

    Yet there is no mention of charging her with “revenge porn” (merely charging her with a bland cyber-stalking), which is a crime in Florida (Section 784.049)

    Seeing as she got her government job after most of these incidents took place, how did such a person even get a job with the state government in the first place? BUT THE MAIN POINT IS WHAT THE FOLLOWING THAT THE ARTICLE LEAVES OUT: She was using her new position with the government to continue stalking her former student.

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