Skip to content


Facebook Comments Spark Outrage

The fallout over the Facebook comments by Miami-Dade Captain Brian Beckmann on the Trayvon Martin shooting case continue to keep folks in Florida and beyond on edge.

Captain Beckmann’s commentary on ”urban youth” and “ignorant, pathetic” parents reignited the simmering controversy that has captured the attention of the nation since February. Miami Dade fire is now investigating whether Captain Beckmann will face discipline.

Here is some of the news coverage.

Posted in Constitutional Rights, Disciplinary Action, Discrimination, First Amendment, Politics, Social Media, Web/Tech, You Can't Make This Stuff Up

Tagged , , , , ,

5 Comments

  1. Legeros says

    One interesting aspect of this involves requests for service. I’ll wager that just about any social media scandal will NOT affect someone’s dialing 911, when they have a fire, or a heart attack, or…

    Could there be a collective affect? If an agency received bad press after bad press, might their customers loose confidence in their ability to help? Maybe. But in high-panic mode, I think we’re probably hard-wired to dial 911.

    Thus, reputation management is for affecting a different set of outcomes. One’s personal employment, for example. There’s also public support, which is invariably tied to funding and approval for things asked for.

    on April 21, 2012 @ 6:01 pm. Reply
  2. Laura says

    Freedom of speech does not give him the right to represent his employer, coworkers or his community in a negative way. I have been a public servant for 15 years and clearly he is in violation of company policy & his employment should be terminated. If he clearly feels that way then he should express his opinion as a unemployed private citizen.

    on April 22, 2012 @ 10:56 am. Reply
  3. Anthony Buono says

    Cases like this show why every department needs a social media policy.

    on April 24, 2012 @ 3:43 pm. Reply

Some HTML is OK

or, reply to this post via trackback.

Continuing the Discussion

  1. Another Facebook Question in Florida | Fire Law linked to this post

    [...] a month after a Miami-Dade firefighter created a racially charged controversy with statements posted to his personal Facebook page, a [...]

    on May 14, 2012 @ 11:10 am.
  2. Decision in Miami-Dade Facebook Case | Fire Law linked to this post

    [...] just broke the story about Miami-Dade fire captain Brian Beckmann’s demotion to firefighter, and the requirement that he undergo a psychological examination and take [...]

    on May 14, 2012 @ 4:38 pm.