D'agastino v. the City of Miami , 189 So. 3d 236 ( 2016 )


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  •        Third District Court of Appeal
    State of Florida
    Opinion filed March 16, 2016.
    ________________
    No. 3D10-2704
    Lower Tribunal Nos. 09-40869, 09-46161
    ________________
    Freddy D'Agastino, et al.,
    Appellants,
    vs.
    The City of Miami, et al.,
    Appellees.
    An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Amy Steele
    Donner, Judge.
    Ronald J. Cohen (Fort Lauderdale), for appellants.
    Victoria Méndez, City Attorney, and John A. Greco, Deputy City Attorney;
    Charles C. Mays; Weiss Serota Helfman Cole & Bierman, P.L., and John J. Quick,
    for appellees.
    Before WELLS, SHEPHERD, and ROTHENBERG, JJ.
    SHEPHERD, J.
    ON MOTION FOR REHEARING AND CERTIFICATION
    Appellant’s motion for rehearing and for certification are denied. On our
    own motion, however, we withdraw our previous opinion issued on January 23,
    2013, and substitute the following corrected opinion for the original.
    This is an appeal from a final judgment entered on cross motions for
    summary judgment.       Appellants contend, as they argued below, that section
    112.533(1), Florida Statutes (2007), provides the exclusive means to investigate
    allegations of police misconduct, and the City of Miami Ordinance creating a
    Civilian Investigative Panel (CIP) to oversee the sworn police department directly
    conflicts with the statute and therefore must fall. For the reasons set forth below,
    we disagree.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    This case arises out of a civilian complaint lodged with the CIP that alleged
    professional misconduct during a traffic stop conducted by City of Miami Police
    Lieutenant Freddy D’Agastino.       After the City of Miami Police Department
    concluded its investigation,1 the CIP subpoenaed Lieutenant D’Agastino to testify
    before its Complaint Committee regarding the allegations. In response, Lieutenant
    D’Agastino filed a petition in the trial court seeking to quash the subpoena and
    obtain a protective order against his having to testify. He alleged that section
    1 The Internal Affairs department ultimately determined the allegations in the
    complaint were “inconclusive.”
    2
    112.533(1) granted the police department exclusive authority to investigate
    allegations of police misconduct. Section 112.533(1)(a) provides: “Every law
    enforcement agency . . . shall establish and put into operation a system for the . . .
    investigation . . . of complaints received by such agency from any person, which
    shall be the procedure for investigating a complaint against a law enforcement . . .
    officer . . . notwithstanding any other law or ordinance to the contrary.” (emphasis
    added).
    The City of Miami intervened, and was served separately with a declaratory
    action by the Fraternal Order of Police seeking to declare unconstitutional those
    ordinances empowering the CIP to investigate the City’s law enforcement officers.
    The CIP, in turn, joined that action. The two cases ultimately were consolidated
    and each party moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted the motions
    filed by the City and the CIP, relying upon Timoney v. City of Miami Civilian
    Investigative Panel, 
    990 So. 2d 614
     (Fla. 3d DCA 2008). Appellants contend
    Timoney is distinguishable and that Demings v. Orange County Citizens Review
    Board, 
    15 So. 3d 604
     (Fla. 5th DCA 2009), controls.
    SCOPE OF REVIEW
    The City of Miami is a municipality located in Miami-Dade County.
    Miami-Dade County is a constitutionally authorized home rule county, created
    pursuant to an amendment to the Florida Constitution, adopted at the general
    3
    election held on November 6, 1956. See Article VIII, §6(e), Fla. Const. (1968),
    incorporating Article VIII, §11, Fla. Const. (1885). Pursuant to this constitutional
    provision, Miami-Dade County is authorized to create, abolish or modify the
    boundaries of all municipal corporations, and provide the method by which each
    municipal corporation “shall have the power to make, amend or repeal its own
    charter,” Art. VIII, §11(c), (g), Fla. Const. (1885), provided, however, that
    “Nothing in this section shall limit or restrict the power of the Legislature to enact
    general laws which shall relate to Dade County . . . or to any municipality in Dade
    County.” Art. VIII, §11(5), Fla. Const. (1885). This section of Article VIII of the
    Florida Constitution of 1885 further provides, “[N]or shall the charter of any
    municipality in Dade County conflict with this Constitution or any such applicable
    general law.”    Id.   The next section of Article VIII, section 11 of the 1885
    Constitution repeats these admonitions. Art. VIII, §11(6), Fla. Const. (1885).
    Finally, although the chief purpose of Article VIII, section 11 of the 1885
    Constitution was to authorize Miami-Dade County to adopt a home rule charter of
    its own, the legislature and electors of the state recognized that these admonitions
    would apply to municipal ordinances as well. See Article VIII, § 11(9), Fla. Const.
    1885 (“[I]t is further declared to be the intent of the Legislature and of the electors
    of the State of Florida that the provisions of this Constitution and general laws
    which shall relate to Dade County … or to any municipality in Dade County …
    4
    enacted pursuant thereto by the Legislature shall be the supreme law in Dade
    County, Florida.”).   We accordingly restrict our review to a determination of
    whether the CIP investigation conflicts with general law.
    ANALYSIS
    In 2001, the City of Miami Charter was amended to include a mandate that
    the city commission create a civilian investigative panel to oversee the sworn
    police department.    City of Miami Charter, § 51.          The following year, the
    commission approved an ordinance creating the CIP in accordance with the
    Charter’s mandate.    Its express purpose is to “[a]ct as independent civilian
    oversight of the sworn police department.” Miami, Fla., Code art. II, § 11.5-27(1)
    (2002).   In furtherance of this purpose, the CIP is authorized to “[c]onduct
    investigations, inquiries and public hearings to make factual determinations, [and]
    facilitate resolution and propose recommendations to the city manager and police
    chief regarding allegations of misconduct by any sworn [police] officer.” Id.
    Particularly at issue is the CIP’s subpoena power, through which it can compel a
    sworn police officer or other witness to testify before it.       Id. at § 11.5-32.
    Lieutenant D’Agastino contends the Police Officers’ Bill of Rights (PBR), set forth
    under sections 112.532-533 of the Florida Statutes, provides the sole procedure for
    investigating police misconduct. To the extent the City charged the CIP with
    5
    investigatory power, he argues it directly conflicts with the statute and is therefore
    expressly prohibited.
    A side-by-side comparison of the two laws reveals the pertinent provisions
    to be as follows:
    § 112.533, Fla. Stat. (2007)                  Art. II, § 11.5-27
    Receipt and processing of               Purposes, powers and duties.
    complaints.—
    The purpose, powers and duties of the
    (1)(a) Every law enforcement agency CIP are to:
    and correctional agency shall establish
    and put into operation a system for the (1) Act as independent civilian oversight
    receipt, investigation, and determination of the sworn police department;
    of complaints received by such agency
    from any person, which shall be the . . . .
    procedure for investigating a complaint
    against a law enforcement and (5) Conduct investigations, inquiries
    correctional officer and for determining and public hearings to make factual
    whether to proceed with disciplinary determinations, facilitate resolution and
    action or to file disciplinary charges, propose recommendations to the city
    notwithstanding any other law or manager and police chief regarding
    ordinance to the contrary.                allegations of misconduct by any sworn
    officer of the city police department;
    ....
    ....
    (b)1. Any political subdivision that
    initiates or receives a complaint against (9) Make recommendations as to the
    a law enforcement officer or disposition of alleged incidents of
    correctional officer must within 5 police misconduct, to which the police
    business days forward the complaint to chief is required to respond within 30
    the employing agency of the officer days[.]
    who is the subject of the complaint for
    review or investigation.
    2. For purposes of this paragraph, the
    term “political subdivision” means a
    separate agency or unit of local
    6
    government created or established by
    law or ordinance and the officers
    thereof and includes, but is not limited
    to, an authority, board, branch, bureau,
    city,     commission,       consolidated
    government,      county,     department,
    district,   institution,    metropolitan
    government,      municipality,    office,
    officer, public corporation, town, or
    village.
    A brief perusal of these provisions makes clear the PBR does not purport to
    expressly preempt other investigative bodies or means of oversight. Lieutenant
    D’Agastino concedes as much. Thus, we proceed to our next task, a determination
    whether the CIP “conflicts” with the PBR.
    Conflict between legislative provisions is said to exist “if, in order to comply
    with one provision, a violation of the other is required.” Jordan Freewill Baptist
    Church v. Dade County, 
    334 So. 2d 661
    , 664 (Fla. 3d DCA 1976). Some federal
    courts have further refined the inquiry to ask whether the local action ‘frustrates
    the purpose’ of a state statute. See e.g., Bravman v. Baxter Healthcare Corp., 
    842 F. Supp. 747
    , 753 (S.D.N.Y. 1994); see also Hines v. Davidowitz, 
    312 U.S. 52
    , 67
    (1941). One of our colleagues has urged the explicit recognition and use of this
    test in our state district courts of appeal, suggesting that it has been impliedly used
    in his court already. See Judge James R. Wolf and Sarah Harley Bolinder, “The
    Effectiveness of Home Rule: A Preemption and Conflict Analysis,” 83 Fla. Bar
    Jnl, 92, 93 (June 2009) (citing City of Jacksonville v. American Environmental
    7
    Services, Inc., 
    699 So. 2d 255
     (Fla. 1st DCA 1997)). Other courts ask simply
    whether the provisions can “co-exist.” Phantom of Brevard Cnty., Inc. v. Brevard
    Cnty., 
    3 So. 3d 309
    , 315 (Fla. 2008) (“There is conflict between a local ordinance
    and a state statute when the local ordinance cannot coexist with the state statute.”).
    In reality, these so-called “tests” are just diagnostic tools available to assist our
    decision-making. Under all of them, our proper role is to harmonize and give full
    effect to both legislative prerogatives if we can.      See City of Hollywood v.
    Mulligan, 
    934 So. 2d 1238
    , 1244-45 (Fla. 2006) (“When possible, ‘we must give
    full effect to all statutory provisions and construe related statutory provisions in
    harmony with one another.’”) (quoting Clines v. State, 
    912 So. 2d 550
    , 557 (Fla.
    2005)). Mindful of this guidance and the limited scope of our review, we have
    little difficulty finding the provisions of the CIP and the PBR to be readily
    reconcilable.
    The City Charter and the CIP’s enabling ordinance clearly establish the CIP
    acts independently of the police department and other city officials. City of Miami
    Charter § 51(E)(1); Miami, Fla., Code, art. II, § 11.5-27.        Indeed, the CIP’s
    independence is central to its purpose, as expressed by its mandate: to provide
    “independent civilian oversight of the sworn police department.” City of Miami
    Charter § 51 (emphasis added).
    8
    The CIP is granted limited power to act in response to its investigations, and
    may only propose recommendations to the City Manager or Police Chief. City of
    Miami Charter § 51(E)(1)–(3); Miami, Fla., Code, art. II, § 11.5-27. The CIP has
    no management authority over City police officers. It cannot discipline, suspend,
    demote, discharge, or transfer city police officers. Management decisions as a
    result of police misconduct are reserved to city police administrators, in keeping
    with the structure of the PBR. Indeed, the CIP ordinance provides that “[p]olicies
    and procedures shall be established to ensure compliance with Chapters 112 and
    119 of the Florida Statutes and any other applicable laws.” Miami, Fla., Code, art.
    II, § 11.5-33(e) (2002).
    Additionally, the City Charter provides the CIP “shall not interfere with any
    pending or potential criminal investigation or prosecution.” City of Miami Charter
    § 51(D). The CIP ordinance further dictates the CIP shall “[e]xercise its powers so
    as to not interfere with any ongoing investigations and conduct its activities
    consistent with applicable law . . . and labor contracts.” Miami, Fla., Code, art. II,
    § 11.5-27(2). To that end, the CIP is restricted from investigating a complaint until
    “after determination by its independent counsel, who shall be required to consult
    with the appropriate prosecutorial agencies, [so] that an investigation will not
    interfere with any pending criminal investigation.” Miami, Fla., Code, art. II, §
    11.5-31(2)(a). Finally, the Ordinance provides that “[a] decision of the CIP to
    9
    proceed with an investigation may be challenged by any agency engaged in such
    investigation or prosecution by seeking judicial order in law or equity in a court of
    competent jurisdiction,” and that “[w]ritten notification of such challenge to the
    CIP shall stay the investigation for 48 hours permitting the agency to obtain such a
    judicial order.” Id.
    In contrast, the PBR creates a process for internal investigations by the
    police department to determine whether to proceed with disciplinary charges. To
    this end, section 112.532(1) of the Florida Statutes (2007), provides:
    (1) RIGHTS OF LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS AND
    CORRECTIONAL               OFFICERS         WHILE         UNDER
    INVESTIGATION.—Whenever a law enforcement officer or
    correctional officer is under investigation and subject to
    interrogation by members of his or her agency for any reason that
    could lead to disciplinary action, suspension, demotion, or
    dismissal, the interrogation must be conducted under the following
    conditions. . . .
    (emphasis added). The rights provided under this provision are limited to instances
    of investigation and interrogation by members of the officer’s employing law
    enforcement agency.      This provision makes no reference to external citizen
    investigations, and therefore does not apply in that context.
    Section 112.533(1)(a) provides:
    Every law enforcement agency and correctional agency shall establish
    and put into operation a system for the receipt, investigation, and
    determination of complaints received by such agency from any
    person, which shall be the procedure for investigating a complaint
    against a law enforcement and correctional officer and for
    10
    determining whether to proceed with disciplinary action or to file
    disciplinary charges, notwithstanding any other law or ordinance to
    the contrary.
    (emphasis added). The Appellants urge a reading of section 112.533(1)(a) that
    would vest law enforcement agencies with the exclusive authority to investigate
    any complaint against their sworn officers. The City, to the contrary, reads section
    112.533(1) to apply only to employee discipline. It urges that section 112.533(1)
    does not preclude the formation of an independent and external citizens review
    panel, such as the CIP, to investigate alleged police misconduct and make
    proposed recommendations. We believe the City has the better argument. The
    absence of any authority granted to the CIP to make the sort of police management
    decisions addressed in Chapter 112, or to affect the obligations that chapter
    imposes on the Miami Police Department and its investigators, makes manifest the
    absence of a conflict between the CIP ordinance and Chapter 112.
    Appellants, Lieutenant D’Agastino and the Fraternal Order of Police urge us
    to follow the rationale outlined in Demings, supra. There, the Orange County
    Sheriff and one of his deputies challenged the authority of Orange County’s CIP
    equivalent, the Citizen’s Review Board (“CRB”), to subpoena deputies or
    otherwise investigate civilian complaints of excessive use of force by the
    department’s sworn deputies.         Noting the Orange County Sheriff is a
    constitutionally elected officer possessed of a portion of the sovereign power of the
    11
    state, the Fifth District Court of Appeal, in the decisive holding in the case,
    determined the Sheriff could not be required to account for his activities to a
    locally-created board. The court explained:
    As an independent constitutional officer, the Sheriff does not derive
    his authority from the County’s charter or the board of county
    commissioners, and is neither generally accountable to the Board for
    his conduct in office nor subject to the board’s direction in the
    fulfillment of his duties. Art. VIII, § 1(d), Fla. Const. In the event of
    misconduct or misfeasance by the Sheriff, it is Florida’s governor who
    is authorized to suspend the Sheriff from office—and not the County’s
    governing board. Art. IV, § 7(a), Fla. Const. And, ultimately, the
    Sheriff is independently accountable to the electorate of Orange
    County. Art. VIII, § 1(d), Fla. Const.; State v. Sheats, 
    78 Fla. 583
    , 
    83 So. 508
     (1919) (explaining that the term “office” as used in the
    Florida Constitution “implies a delegation of a portion of the
    sovereign power to, and the possession of it by, the person filling the
    office” or “independent authority of a governmental nature”). Given
    this constitutional framework, we [] find that the County cannot
    interfere with the Sheriff’s independent exercise of his duty to
    investigate misconduct by his deputies either by forcing him to
    appoint members to the CRB or by mandating his participation in
    CRB proceedings, either in person or through his deputies or
    employees.
    Demings, 
    15 So. 3d at 610-11
    . Although the Fifth District Court of Appeal seemed
    to recognize this was the dispositive issue in the case, see 
    Id. at 609
     (“[T]he
    question presented is whether the County charter and ordinance creating and
    authorizing an independent board to review citizen complaints against Sheriff’s
    deputies, without first abolishing the constitutional office of sheriff, is
    ‘inconsistent’ with general law.”), 2 the court also addressed whether the conduct of
    2   Because Orange County is a charter county, it is authorized by Article VIII
    12
    the board was “inconsistent” with section 112.533. Id.3 We simply disagree with
    the judgment of the Fifth District Court of Appeal on this point. Rather, we prefer
    and remain quite comfortable with the observation made not so long ago by
    another panel of this court in Timoney, relating to the issue before us today,
    namely that Chapter 112 “concerns internal investigations conducted by a police
    department of its own officers” and the PBR “sets forth the procedures to be
    followed by the police department for interrogation of a law enforcement officer
    under investigation by the police department[,]” Timoney, 
    990 So. 2d at 618
    (first emphasis added), while the CIP’s authority “extends to independent,
    external investigations.”      
    Id. at 619
     (emphasis added).        Hence, following
    Timoney, we conclude the CIP provides a distinct function that is not prohibited by
    section 1(d) of the Florida Constitution to abolish the constitutionally elected office
    of sheriff by charter amendment or special law approved by a vote of the electors
    so long as all of the duties of the office are transferred to another office.
    3Orange County’s “conflict” provision emanates from Article VIII, section 1(g) of
    the Florida Constitution, which states: “Counties operating under county charters
    shall have all powers of local self-government not inconsistent with general law . .
    . . The governing body of a county operating under a charter may enact county
    ordinances not inconsistent with general law.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added). The terms
    are given the same construction in local government law in this state. See Jordan
    Chapel Freewill Baptist Church, 
    334 So. 2d at 664
     (affirming the lower court’s
    determination that “conflict” in Article VIII, section 11 of the 1885 Florida
    Constitution has been construed to mean “contradictory in the sense of legislative
    provisions which cannot co-exist.”); see also E.B. Elliott Adver. Co. v. Metro.
    Dade Cnty., 
    425 F.2d 1141
    , 1150 (5th Cir. 1970) (“The word ‘inconsistent’ means
    contradictory in the sense of legislative provisions which cannot co-exist and the
    same should be true of the word ‘conflict’ in [section] 11(5) [of Article VIII of the
    1885 Florida Constitution].”).
    13
    the rights and restrictions set forth under Chapter 112.       To the extent this
    observation was non-dispositive in Timoney, we adopt it here in support of the
    rationale already provided for affirmance.
    We affirm the decision of the trial court.
    WELLS, J., concurs.
    Freddy D’Agastino, et al. v. The City of Miami, et al.
    Case No. 3D10-2704
    ROTHENBERG, J. (dissenting).
    Because the City of Miami’s ordinance is preempted by and in conflict with
    state law, it is unconstitutional. I, therefore, dissent from the majority opinion
    upholding the ordinance.
    I agree that this case is governed by Article VIII, section 11 of the 1885
    Florida Constitution, as amended in 1968, which authorized the creation of a
    metropolitan government for Dade County (now Miami-Dade County) and granted
    the county electors the power to adopt a home rule charter. Article VIII, section
    11(1)(b) of the 1885 Florida Constitution authorized the charter to grant the Board
    of County Commissioners of Dade County the power to pass ordinances relating to
    14
    the affairs, property, and government of Dade County and to provide appropriate
    penalties for violation of its ordinances.
    This grant of power to the Board of County Commissioners, however, does
    not “limit or restrict the power of the Legislature to enact general laws which relate
    to Dade County . . . or any municipality in Dade County . . . relating to county or
    municipal affairs . . . .” Art. VIII, § 11(6). Article VIII, section 11(6) further
    provides that, the general laws enacted by the Florida Legislature “shall supersede
    any part or portion of the home rule charter . . . in conflict therewith and shall
    supersede any provision of any ordinance enacted pursuant to said charter and in
    conflict therewith . . . .” Id. Thus, section 11(6) preserves the Legislature’s right
    to enact laws applicable to Miami-Dade County and the municipalities within
    Miami-Dade County and limits the power of Miami-Dade County and its
    municipalities to enact charters or laws that are not in conflict with general
    (statutory) law. See also Article VIII, § 1(g), Fla. Const. (providing that under the
    Florida Constitution, county charters “shall have all powers of local self-
    government not inconsistent with general law”) (emphasis added); Article VIII,
    § 2(b), Fla. Const. (granting municipalities broad powers to conduct municipal
    government, perform municipal functions, and render municipal services “except
    as otherwise provided by law”) (emphasis added).
    In recognition of the powers granted and the limitations placed on local
    15
    governments by the Florida Constitution, the Florida Legislature adopted the
    Florida Municipal Home Rule Act in 1973. Sections 166.021(1), (3), and (4),
    Florida Statutes (1973), prohibit the exercise of municipal powers where expressly
    prohibited by the constitution, general or special law, or where expressly
    preempted to state and county government.
    (1) As provided in s. 2(b), Art. VIII of the State Constitution,
    municipalities shall have the governmental, corporate, and proprietary
    powers to enable them to conduct municipal government, perform
    municipal functions, and render municipal services, and may exercise
    any power for municipal purposes, except when expressly
    prohibited by law.
    ....
    (3) The Legislature recognizes that pursuant to the grant of
    power set forth in s. 2(b), Art. VIII of the State Constitution, the
    legislative body of each municipality has the power to enact
    legislation concerning any subject matter upon which the state
    Legislature may act, except:
    ....
    (c) Any subject expressly preempted to state or county
    government by the constitution or by general law. . . .
    (4) The provisions of this section shall be so construed as to
    secure for municipalities the broad exercise of home rule powers
    granted by the constitution. It is the further intent of the Legislature to
    extend to municipalities the exercise of powers for municipal
    governmental, corporate, or proprietary purposes not expressly
    prohibited by the constitution, general or special law, or county
    charter and to remove any limitations, judicially imposed or
    otherwise, on the exercise of home rule powers other than those so
    expressly prohibited. . . .
    § 166.021, Fla. Stat. (1973) (emphasis added).
    The language found in Article VIII, section 2(b) of the Florida Constitution,
    “except as otherwise provided by law,” has been interpreted as limiting municipal
    16
    power where: (1) state law expressly preempts the action, or (2) there exists a
    direct conflict between the local ordinance and a state statute. Tallahassee Mem’l
    Reg’l Med. Ctr., Inc. v. Tallahassee Med. Ctr., Inc., 
    681 So. 2d 826
    , 831 (Fla. 1st
    DCA 1996); see also Sarasota Alliance for Fair Elections, Inc. v. Browning, 
    28 So. 3d 880
    , 886 (Fla. 2010) (holding that “[a] local government enactment may be
    inconsistent with state law if (1) the Legislature has preempted a particular subject
    area or (2) the local enactment conflicts with a state statute”) (internal quotations
    omitted).   Because the City of Miami’s ordinance is expressly preempted by
    Florida law and is in direct conflict with Florida statutes, the ordinance is
    unconstitutional.
    ANALYSIS
    A.      The City of Miami’s Ordinance
    In 2002, the City of Miami passed an ordinance creating a civilian
    investigative panel (“the CIP”) to “[c]onduct investigations, inquiries and public
    hearings to make factual determinations, facilitate resolutions and propose
    recommendations to the city manager and police chief regarding allegations of
    misconduct by any sworn officer of the city police department[.]” Miami, Fla.,
    Code Art. II, § 11.5-27(5).
    Specifically, article II, section 11.5-27 of the City of Miami’s Code
    provides:
    17
    The purpose, powers and duties of the CIP are to:
    (1) Act as independent civilian oversight of the sworn police
    department;
    (2) Exercise its powers so as to not interfere with any ongoing
    investigations and conduct its activities consistent with applicable law
    ...;
    ....
    (5) Conduct investigations, inquiries and public hearings to
    make factual determinations, facilitate resolution and propose
    recommendations to the city manager and police chief regarding
    allegations of misconduct by any sworn officer of the city police
    department;
    (6) Request issuance of subpoenas . . . for the purpose of
    obtaining evidence from witnesses and production of books, papers,
    and other evidence . . . .
    ....
    (8) Issue reports to the mayor, city commission, city attorney,
    city manager, chief of police and the public;
    (9) Make recommendations as to the disposition of alleged
    incidents of police misconduct, to which the police chief is required to
    respond within 30 days[.]
    The City of Miami’s code further provides that “[p]olicies and procedures
    shall be established to ensure compliance with Chapters 112 and 119 of the Florida
    Statutes . . . .” Miami, Fla., Code Art. II, § 11.5-33(e). As will be discussed in
    detail below, the City of Miami’s ordinance is expressly preempted by, and is in
    direct conflict with, Chapter 112.
    B.    Chapter 112, Part VI, Law Enforcement Officers’ and Correctional
    Officers’ Bill of Rights
    Chapter 112, Part VI, governs the rights of law enforcement officers while
    under investigation. Section 112.531(1) defines a “law enforcement officer” as:
    18
    [A]ny person, other than a chief of police, who is employed full time
    by any municipality or the state or any political subdivision thereof
    and whose primary responsibility is the prevention and detection of
    crime or the enforcement of the penal, traffic, or highway laws of this
    state; and includes any person who is appointed by the sheriff as a
    deputy sheriff pursuant to s. 30.07.
    Lt. D’Agastino, the appellant, who was subpoenaed to appear before the CIP
    to answer questions and provide testimony to the CIP Committee regarding a
    civilian complaint alleging he committed misconduct during a traffic stop, is,
    without dispute, a law enforcement officer under section 112.531(1).              Lt.
    D’Agastino, therefore, is entitled to all of the safeguards and protections set forth
    in Chapter 112, Part VI, and specifically sections 112.532 and 112.533, commonly
    referred to as the Law Enforcement Officers’ Bill of Rights.
    Section 112.532 identifies the rights granted to law enforcement and
    correctional officers while under investigation, and begins with the following
    preamble. “All law enforcement officers and correctional officers employed by
    or appointed to a law enforcement agency or a correctional agency shall have
    the following rights and privileges[.]” (emphasis added).            Subsection (1)
    identifies the rights of law enforcement and correctional officers while under
    investigation; subsection (2) addresses who shall serve on complaint boards;
    subsection (3) provides a remedy for law enforcement and correctional officers
    who are knowingly falsely accused; subsection (4) specifies the notice
    requirements; subsection (5) protects law enforcement and correctional officers
    19
    from retaliation for exercising their rights; and subsection (6) provides a 180-day
    time limitation to complete an investigation.
    The rights specifically provided in section 112.532(1) are as follows:
    (1) RIGHTS OF LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS AND
    CORRECTIONAL OFFICERS WHILE UNDER INVESTIGATION.
    —Whenever a law enforcement officer or correctional officer is under
    investigation and subject to interrogation by members of his or her
    agency for any reason that could lead to disciplinary action,
    suspension, demotion, or dismissal, the interrogation must be
    conducted under the following conditions:
    (a) The interrogation shall be conducted at a reasonable hour,
    preferably at a time when the law enforcement officer or correctional
    officer is on duty, unless the seriousness of the investigation is of such
    a degree that immediate action is required.
    (b) The interrogation shall take place either at the office of the
    command of the investigating officer or at the office of the local
    precinct, police unit, or correctional unit in which the incident
    allegedly occurred, as designated by the investigating officer or
    agency.
    (c) The law enforcement officer or correctional officer under
    investigation shall be informed of the rank, name, and command of
    the officer in charge of the investigation, the interrogating officer, and
    all persons present during the interrogation. All questions directed to
    the officer under interrogation shall be asked by or through one
    interrogator during any one investigative interrogation, unless
    specifically waived by the officer under investigation.
    (d) The law enforcement officer or correctional officer under
    investigation must be informed of the nature of the investigation
    before any interrogation begins, and he or she must be informed of the
    names of all complainants. All identifiable witnesses shall be
    interviewed, whenever possible, prior to the beginning of the
    investigative interview of the accused officer. The complaint, all
    witness statements, including all other existing subject officer
    statements, and all other existing evidence, including, but not limited
    to, incident reports, GPS locator information, and audio or video
    recordings relating to the incident under investigation, must be
    provided to each officer who is the subject of the complaint before the
    20
    beginning of any investigative interview of that officer. An officer,
    after being informed of the right to review witness statements, may
    voluntarily waive the provisions of this paragraph and provide a
    voluntary statement at any time.
    (e) Interrogating sessions shall be for reasonable periods and
    shall be timed to allow for such personal necessities and rest periods
    as are reasonably necessary.
    (f) The law enforcement officer or correctional officer under
    interrogation may not be subjected to offensive language or be
    threatened with transfer, dismissal, or disciplinary action. A promise
    or reward may not be made as an inducement to answer any questions.
    (g) The formal interrogation of a law enforcement officer or
    correctional officer, including all recess periods, must be recorded on
    audio tape, or otherwise preserved in such a manner as to allow a
    transcript to be prepared, and there shall be no unrecorded questions
    or statements. Upon the request of the interrogated officer, a copy of
    any recording of the interrogation session must be made available to
    the interrogated officer no later than 72 hours, excluding holidays and
    weekends, following said interrogation.
    (h) If the law enforcement officer or correctional officer under
    interrogation is under arrest, or is likely to be placed under arrest as a
    result of the interrogation, he or she shall be completely informed of
    all his or her rights before commencing the interrogation.
    (i) At the request of any law enforcement officer or correctional
    officer under investigation, he or she has the right to be represented by
    counsel or any other representative of his or her choice, who shall be
    present at all times during the interrogation whenever the
    interrogation relates to the officer’s continued fitness for law
    enforcement or correctional service.
    (j) Notwithstanding the rights and privileges provided by this
    part, this part does not limit the right of an agency to discipline or to
    pursue criminal charges against an officer.
    Both sides agree that the rights granted to law enforcement officers and
    correctional officers under section 112.532 only apply when the officer’s
    employing agency is conducting an investigation. Thus, the Law Enforcement
    Officers’ and Correctional Officers’ Bill of Rights and the protections it provides
    21
    to law enforcement officers does not protect them when they are being investigated
    and questioned by the CIP.
    C. The City of Miami’s ordinance is expressly preempted by Florida Statute
    Section 112.533, enacted in 1974, was amended in 2003 to add the following
    bolded language:
    (1)(a) Every law enforcement agency and correctional agency shall
    establish and put into operation a system for the receipt, investigation,
    and determination of complaints received by such agency from any
    person, which shall be the procedure for investigating a complaint
    against a law enforcement and correctional officer and for
    determining whether to proceed with disciplinary action or to file
    disciplinary charges, notwithstanding any other law or ordinance
    to the contrary.
    § 112.533(1)(a), Fla. Stat. (2003) (emphasis added).
    The use of the word “the” before “procedure” is significant. As stated by the
    Attorney General:
    “The” is a definite article generally used before nouns with a
    specifying or particularizing effect and as opposed to the generalizing
    effect of the indefinite article “a” or “an” and, depending on the
    context, generally is used to mean but one.
    Op. Att’y Gen. Fla. 259 (1981), see also Work v. United States ex rel.
    McAlestered-Wards Coal Co., 
    262 U.S. 200
    , 208 (1923).
    It is also noteworthy that the 2003 amendment provided an express statutory
    exception authorizing investigation by the Criminal Justice Standards and Training
    Commission. § 112.533(1)(a), Fla. Stat. (2003). It did not, however, provide an
    22
    exception authorizing citizen review panels to conduct such investigations.
    In 2007, section 112.533 was further amended to require that:
    (1)(b)1. Any political subdivision that initiates or receives a
    complaint against a law enforcement officer or correctional officer
    must within 5 business days forward the complaint to the
    employing agency of the officer who is the subject of the
    complaint for review or investigation.
    2. For purposes of this paragraph, the term “political
    subdivision” means a separate agency or unit of local government
    created or established by law or ordinance and the officers thereof and
    includes, but is not limited to, an authority, board, branch, bureau,
    city, commission, consolidated government, county, department,
    district, institution, metropolitan government, municipality, office,
    officer, public corporation, town, or village.
    § 112.533(1)(b), Fla. Stat. (2007) (emphasis added).
    There is nothing ambiguous about these amendments. As the Fifth District
    Court of Appeal found in Demings v. Orange County Citizens Review Board, 
    15 So. 3d 604
    , 608-09 (Fla. 5th DCA 2009), the statute as amended
    conveys a clear and definite directive that when a complaint is
    registered against a law enforcement officer, the employing agency is
    the only local governmental entity authorized to investigate that
    complaint. This is clear from: (1) the title language of chapter 2003-
    149, designating the investigation required by chapter 112 as the
    “exclusive procedure” for investigation; (2) the language added to
    section 112.533 in 2003, mandating that the investigation authorized
    by chapter 112 “shall be the procedure” for investigating
    complaints against local law enforcement “notwithstanding any
    other law or ordinance to the contrary;” and (3) the language added
    to section 112.533 in 2007, directing any local governmental entity
    that receives or initiates a complaint against a law enforcement officer
    to forward it to the employing agency for investigation in accordance
    with chapter 112.
    23
    (emphasis added).
    Thus, the language in section 112.533, as amended, clearly and unambiguously
    mandates the procedure that must be followed when investigating a complaint
    against a law enforcement or correctional officer. Chapter 112 provides certain
    exceptions from this mandate. It provides an exception for the Criminal Justice
    Standards and Training Commission. It also authorizes criminal investigations by
    the State Attorney’s Office, state and federal grand juries, state and federal
    criminal courts, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, the Federal Bureau
    of Investigation, and the United States Department of Justice. See Demings, 
    15 So. 3d at
    608 n.3. Because review by citizen review panels is not excepted, the
    City of Miami’s ordinance is preempted by Florida law and is therefore
    unconstitutional.
    In 2013, the Florida Supreme Court upheld the Fifth District Court of
    Appeal’s decision in City of Palm Bay v. Wells Fargo Bank, 
    114 So. 3d 924
     (Fla.
    2013), which struck down a municipal ordinance that was inconsistent with, and in
    direct conflict with, the general statutory scheme for priority of rights with respect
    to interests in real property created by the Legislature. The issue was “conflict
    preemption” and the Florida Supreme Court’s analysis is highly instructive.
    The Florida Supreme Court began its analysis by acknowledging that “[i]n
    Florida, a municipality is given broad authority to enact ordinances under its
    24
    municipal home rule powers,” City of Palm Bay, 114 So. 3d at 928 (quoting City
    of Hollywood v. Mulligan, 
    934 So. 2d 1238
    , 1243 (Fla. 2006)), and that pursuant
    to section 166.021 “a municipality may legislate concurrently with the Legislature
    on any subject which has not been expressly preempted to the State.” 
    Id.
    In discussing preemption, the Florida Supreme Court stated the following:
    But we have never interpreted either the constitutional or statutory
    provisions relating to the legislative preemption of municipal home
    rule powers to require the Legislature specifically state that the
    exercise of municipal power on a particular subject is precluded.
    Instead, we have held that “[t]he preemption need not be explicit so
    long as it is clear that the legislature has clearly preempted local
    regulation of the subject.” Barragan v. City of Miami, 
    545 So. 2d 252
    , 254 (Fla. 1989). We have also recognized that where concurrent
    state and municipal regulation is permitted because the state has not
    preemptively occupied a regulatory field, “a municipality’s concurrent
    legislation must not conflict with state law.” Thomas v. State, 
    614 So. 2d 468
    , 470 (Fla. 1993).
    The critical phrase of article VIII, section 2(b) — “except as
    otherwise provided by law”— establishes the constitutional
    superiority of the Legislature’s power over municipal power.
    Accordingly, “[m]unicipal ordinances are inferior to laws of the
    State and must not conflict with any controlling provision of a
    statute.” Thomas, 
    614 So. 2d at 470
    . When a municipal “ordinance
    flies in the face of state law”— that is, cannot be reconciled with state
    law—the ordinance “cannot be sustained.” Barragan, 595 So. 2d at
    255. Such “conflict preemption” comes into play “where the local
    enactment irreconcilably conflicts with or stands as an obstacle to
    the execution of the full purposes of the statute.” 5 McQuillin
    Mun. Corp. § 15:16 (3d ed. 2012).
    . . . .
    [T]he Legislature has created a general scheme for priority of rights
    with respect to interest in real property. Giving effect to the
    ordinance superpriority provision would allow a municipality to
    25
    displace the policy judgment reflected in the Legislature’s
    enactment of the statutory provisions. And it would allow the
    municipality to destroy rights that the Legislature established by
    state law. A more direct conflict with a statute is hard to imagine.
    Nothing in the constitutional or statutory provisions relating to
    municipal home rule or in the Local Government Code Enforcement
    Boards Act provides any basis for such municipal abrogation of a
    state statute. The conflict between the Palm Bay ordinance and state
    law is a sufficient ground for concluding that the ordinance super
    priority provision is invalid.
    We categorically reject the City’s argument that the legislative
    enactment of exceptions to a statutory scheme provides justification
    for municipalities to enact exceptions to the statutory scheme. No
    authority supports this argument. The power to create exceptions to a
    legislative scheme is the power to alter that legislative scheme.
    “Fundamental to the doctrine of preemption is the understanding
    that local governments lack the authority to craft their own
    exceptions to general state laws.” 5 McQuillin Mun. Corp. §15:18
    (3d ed. 2012). Although municipalities generally have “the power to
    enact legislation concerning any subject matter upon which the state
    legislature may act,” §166.021(3), Fla. Stat. (2004), in exercising their
    power within that scope municipalities are precluded from taking any
    action that conflicts with a state statute. In this context, concurrent
    power does not mean equal power.
    Id. at 928-29. (emphasis added).
    The City of Miami’s ordinance does exactly what Florida’s constitution and
    the Florida Supreme Court in City of Palm Bay forbids. It creates an exception to
    the statutory scheme provided in Chapter 112, Part VI, which governs the rights of
    law enforcement officers while under investigation. As previously stated, section
    112.533(1)(a) establishes “the” procedure which “shall be the procedure for
    investigating a complaint against a law enforcement and correctional officer,” and
    section 112.533(1)(b) requires that any complaint filed against a law enforcement
    26
    or correctional officer must be forwarded to the employing agency of the officer
    for investigation. The statute “conveys a clear and definite directive that when a
    complaint is registered against a law enforcement officer, the employing agency is
    the only local governmental entity authorized to investigate that complaint.”
    Demings, 
    15 So. 3d at 608
    .
    The only exceptions to this statutory scheme have been explicitly provided
    by the Legislature. The Legislature has provided an exception for the Criminal
    Justice Standards and Training Commission, see § 112.533(1)(a), and it
    additionally authorizes investigations of law enforcement and correctional officers
    by the State Attorney’s Office, state and federal grand juries, state and federal
    courts, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, the Federal Bureau of
    Investigation, and the United States Department of Justice. See Demings, 
    15 So. 3d at
    608 n.3.   Conspicuously missing from this list are citizen review panels.
    And as the Florida Supreme Court stated in City of Palm Bay, “[f]undamental to
    the doctrine of preemption is the understanding that local governments lack the
    authority to craft their own exceptions to general state laws . . . concurrent power
    does not mean equal power.” City of Palm Bay, 114 So. 3d at 929.
    D.    The City of Miami’s ordinance is also in conflict with Florida law
    The City of Miami’s ordinance is not only preempted by state law, it is also
    in direct conflict with state law. Section 112.533, as amended in 2003 and 2007,
    27
    specifies that a law enforcement agency’s internal investigation shall be the
    procedure   for   investigating   law   enforcement    and   correctional   officers
    notwithstanding any other law or ordinance to the contrary. § 112.533(1)(a),
    Fla. Stat. (2007).   In 2007, the statute was also amended to direct all local
    governmental entities that receive or initiate a complaint against a law enforcement
    or correctional officer to forward the complaint to the employing agency for
    investigation in accordance with Chapter 112. § 112.533(1)(b).
    Section 112.533 also adds various other duties by the investigating agency
    and protections for the law enforcement or correctional officer being investigated.
    For example, section 112.533(1)(a) dictates that agency personnel assigned to the
    investigation must: prepare a report; verify that the contents are true and
    accurate based on personal knowledge, information, and belief; and include a
    sworn statement attesting that the rights of the officer under investigation
    contained in sections 112.532 and 112.533 have been honored.                Section
    112.533(2)(a) provides that the complaint and investigation must be kept
    confidential until the investigation is closed or the agency head provides written
    notice to the subject officer informing the officer that the investigation has
    concluded and whether disciplinary charges will be filed. Section 112.533(2)
    additionally grants the subject officer and/or his attorney broad discovery rights
    and access, and section 112.533(4) establishes penalties for premature willful
    28
    disclosure or failure to provide the subject officer with access to the identified
    discoverable items.
    These statutorily mandated obligations of the investigating agency and the
    rights granted to law enforcement and correctional officers are not similarly
    required or granted under the City of Miami’s ordinance, nor are the rights set forth
    in section 112.532.       Specifically, section 112.532(1) requires that: (1) the
    interrogation take place at the precinct or correctional unit where the incident
    allegedly occurred, at a reasonable time and preferably while the officer is on duty,
    § 112.532(1)(a-b); (2) all questions directed to the officer be asked by or through
    one interrogator during any one investigative interrogation, § 112.532(1)(c); (3) the
    officer under investigation must be informed of the nature of the investigation, the
    name of the complainant(s) and witnesses, all witness statements, and other
    evidence obtained, prior to the interrogation of the subject officer, § 112.532(1)(d);
    (4) the interrogation must be recorded and be made available upon request by the
    subject officer within 72 hours of the interrogation, § 112.532(1)(g); (5) if the
    subject officer is under arrest or is likely to be placed under arrest as a result of the
    interrogation, he or she must be informed of his or her rights prior to
    commencement of the interrogation, § 112.532(1)(h); and (6) the subject officer
    has the right to be represented by counsel and have counsel present during the
    interrogation, § 112.532(1)(g). The City of Miami Ordinance does not provide
    29
    these protections.
    The following protections are also provided by Chapter 112, Part VI, to law
    enforcement and correctional officers under investigation and are not required by
    the City of Miami’s ordinance. Section 112.532(3) grants law enforcement and
    correctional officers the right to bring a civil suit against any person, group,
    organization or corporation, or the head of such organization or corporation, for
    abridgment of the officer’s rights or for filing a complaint which the person or
    entity knew was false when it was filed. Section 112.532(6) additionally restricts
    the investigation to a 180-day period.
    Because the City of Miami’s ordinance does not include these substantial,
    material requirements and rights, it is in direct conflict with sections 112.532 and
    112.533. Therefore, the ordinance is unconstitutional. To hold otherwise would
    render these statutes meaningless and provide law enforcement and correctional
    agencies with a mechanism to obtain statements and other evidence from its
    officers by non-statutorily created boards that are not required to comply with the
    statutory mandates contained in Chapter 112. In other words, it would permit law
    enforcement to use evidence the CIP obtained without affording the subject officer
    the protection of the Law Enforcement Officers’ Bill of Rights.
    In reaching its contrary conclusion, the majority relies on this Court’s
    opinion in Timoney v. City of Miami Civilian Investigative Panel, 
    990 So. 2d 614
    30
    (Fla. 3d DCA 2008), while noting that the majority opinion conflicts with the Fifth
    District Court of Appeals opinion in Demings. Timoney, however, did not address
    the constitutionality of the City of Miami’s ordinance or analyze whether the
    ordinance conflicts with or is preempted by state statute. This Court in Timoney
    merely determined that because Chapter 112 only governs the rights of law
    enforcement officers under investigation, and the definition of “law enforcement
    officer” in section 112.531(1) specifically exempts the chief of police from its
    definition, Chapter 112 did not apply to Chief Timoney and he was therefore
    subject to the CIP’s investigative subpoena. Timoney is therefore not controlling.
    Indeed, the majority, does not contend that it is. Conversely, the Fifth District
    Court of Appeal in Demings did address the constitutionality of a similar county
    ordinance in Orange County and found that it was in direct conflict with Chapter
    112. I wholeheartedly agree with the Fifth District’s opinion in Demings.
    In Demings, Orange County’s Sheriff, Jerry Demings, and his deputy,
    Steven Jenny, appealed the trial court’s order upholding the sections of Orange
    County’s charter and ordinances establishing the Orange County Citizen’s Review
    Board (“the CRB”), which is similar to the board created by the City of Miami, the
    CIP, and was created to investigate citizen complaints of excessive force and abuse
    of power.   Demings, 
    15 So. 3d at 605
    .       After analyzing section 112.533, as
    amended in 2003 and 2007, the Fifth District Court of Appeal concluded it was
    31
    unambiguous and “[i]t conveys a clear and definite directive that when a complaint
    is registered against a law enforcement officer, the employing agency is the only
    local governmental agency authorized to investigate the complaint.” 
    Id. at 608
    .
    The Fifth District thus concluded that “[b]ecause section 112.533 limits the
    investigation of complaints against law enforcement officers by local
    government to the employing agency’s investigation, the charter provisions
    and ordinance that establish an additional procedure for investigating these
    complaints necessarily and directly conflict with the statute.”         
    Id. at 609
    (emphasis added).
    CONCLUSION
    Because the City of Miami’s ordinance is preempted by state law and it is in
    direct conflict with sections 112.532 and 112.533, it is unconstitutional.        I,
    therefore, respectfully disagree with the majority opinion upholding the ordinance.
    Additionally, the majority recognizes, and clearly states, that it “disagrees” with
    the Fifth District Court of Appeals’ opinion in Demings, but then it refuses to
    certify conflict without addressing its reason(s) for doing so. Because the majority
    opinion is in direct conflict with Demings, I also respectfully dissent from the
    majority’s refusal to certify direct conflict with Demings.
    32
    33