10-06-66 v MINUTES OF THE SPECIAL MEETING OF THE ATLANTIC BEACH CITY
COMMISSION HELD AT THE CITY HALL ON THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6TH,
1966 AT 8 P.M.
Present:
Wm S. Howell, Mayor-Commissioner
Donald L. Goodling
Louis Holloway, Jr.
Walter J. Parks, Jr. , Commissioners
and
Frank Thompson, City Attorney
Murray H. Bennett, City Manager
Adele S. Grage, City Clerk
Absent: John W. Weldon, Commissioner (out of City)
This Special Meeting was called pursuant to notice by
the Mayor in line with requirements of the City Charter.
The meeting was called to order by the Mayor-Commissioner,
Mr. Howell.
The Invocation was given by Commissioner Parks.
The following is a transcript of and is hereby made the
minutes of this Special Meeting:
MINUTES OF THE SPECIAL MEETING OF THE
ATLANTIC BEACH CITY COMMISSION ON
OCTOBER 6, 1966, PURSUANT TO NOTICE BY
THE MAYOR, HELD AT CITY HALL. (j `YL
PRESENT:
WILLIAM S. HOWELL, Mayor-Commissioner
DONALD L. GOODLING
LOUIS C. HOLLOWAY, JR.
WALTER J. PARKS , JR. , Commissioners
and
FRANK THOMPSON, City Attorney
MURRAY H. BENNETT, City Manager
ADE LE S. GRACE, City Clerk
w.
MAYOR HOWELL: The meeting will now come to order
and we' ll have the invocation by Mr. Parks.
MR. PARKS: Our Heavenly Father, as we assemble this
evening in Special Meeting of this City Commission, guide
and direct our efforts to the end that this municipality
shall have better government and help us as Commissioners
to be good representatives of the people and to make
decisions with wisdom. Forgive us of our sins . This we
ask in Jesus ' name, amen.
MAYOR HOWELL: In order to make a clarifying
statement before this meeting gets underway, there has
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
appeared in the newspapers in the last coupLe of day
certain releases which, apparently, are growing into
great proportions. As a matter of fact, if this thing
was allowed to continue, in my judgment, it was going to
turn into the greatest catastrophy since the .ii.wb:Li.i
Nagasaki and Hiroshima. So it seemed wise to me that:
these things be cleared up because many times there are
misunderstandings .
Now, a Special Meeting is called to consider special
things only. The City Commission meets in regular
session on the second and fourth Mondays of every month;
at which time any citizen may bring up any business that
he wishes , but a Special Meeting is called for a specific
purpose, and this is a Special Meeting. And we 're to
consider only those things that have come up in the last
couple of days in the papers. For instance, the so-called
news censorship and resignations from clubs. That is all
that will be considered tonight; no other business will
be heard.
Now, do you have any remark you wish to make, Mr .
r"yy
MR. I have this article here. The
article published in the October 5, 1966, Jacksonville
Journal , when my name was mentioned , I want it recorded
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA
3
in the records I have nothing further to say. So we' ll
turn it over to the City Commissioners .
MR. GOODLING: Are you going to record it?
MAYOR HOWELL: Does anyone have a copy of it? If
so, I shall so read it.
MR. BENNETT: I have a copy.
MAYOR HOWELL: Do you want this whole thing read?
MR. BENNETT: As it was written.
MAYOR HOWELL: If you will bear with me, I' LL read
to you from the October 5, 1966 edition of the
Jacksonville Journal.
"ATLANTIC BENNETT UNDER FIRE.
"By Bill Scrimpshiri.
"Atlantic Beach City Manager Murray Bennett has
ordered all city empLoyees holding free memberships in
' local clubs or organizations ' to give them up
immediately, the Journal has Learned .
"In a letter posted on all departmental bulletin
boards , Bennett said: 'ALL employees of the City of
Atlantic Beach are hereby requested not to accept
gratuities ; such as free memberships in LocaL clubs or
organizations ; or any substantial gifts from suppliers
or individuals .
" 'Those with free gratis memberships are hereby
r i
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STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA
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requested to resign immediately, giving me a copy of
the resignation for the records. '
"This means that at least 10 city employees --
including Police Chief Robert Vogel and Public works
Director Richard Hilliard -- must resign from the Atlant.:_,.
Beach Hotel' s Club-By-The-Sea.
"Vogel, Hilliard, Mayor William S. Howell and other
city officials and employees were given free memberships
in the club by Hotel Manager Martin H. Bagedonow.
"Bennett, who was named city manager by a three-two
City Commission vote, earlier ordered Chief Vogel to clea._l
aLL Local news and including routing traffic accidents
and fire calls through him.
"In a Letter to the Journal, the hotel manager said:
" 'Dear Sir:
" ' It has been brought to my attention that Mr.
Murray H. Bennett has issued a directive to city
employees of Atlantic Beach to resign from clubs that
they have received a complimentary membership in .
" ' Since we have extended memberships to the police
and fire department , I wish to make a statement. We made
no special request for any special service from either
department. We feel that since public servants are not
overly well paid that this extra service we as a taxpayer
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
could provide would help keep this fine group of men
here in Atlantic Beach. At no time has any of these men
abused any privilege.
`• ' On the other hand, Mr. Bennett has constantly
asked special privileges as a tenant in our apartments .
I so informed him and the city council in a Letter dated
September 8 .
" ' I would Like to know why Mr. Bennett can penalize
the entire police and fire departments and families, men
who have experience and are devoted to their duty, when
he as a newcomer totally without background, experience
or know-how can make personnel demands .
'How long is this bull-and-china going to be
tolerated? When are the commissioners going to act to
restrain this know-nothing, do-nothing City Manager?'"
•
Signed 'O Martin H. Bagedonow.'1
{ That seems to be the article in its entirety.
2 I MR. GOODLING: Mr. Chairman, to my knowledge, I have
not met Mr. Bagedonow. I had a telephone conversation,
,
the caller identifying himself, as such. I would Like
to ask if you would determine if Mr. Bagedonow is
present in the room?
MAYOR HOWELL: Is Mr. Bagedonow in the audience?
MR. BAGEDONOW: Yes .
•
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
MR. GOUDLING: He seem ; most concerned, but since
this was a telephone conversation and not a matter of
record, I think it would be proper for the City
Commissioner to provide Mr. Bagedonow an opportunity at
this time, if he so chose, to make any statement relating
to the alleged letter written by him.
MAYOR HOWELL: Well, in a few moments , after the
Commissioners have anything they want to say, I' LL be
happy to hear from anybody in the audience. You can have
it now or Later.
MR. GOODLING: I think we should offer him the
opportunity, first, since his name has been brought up on
the table.
MAYOR HOWELL: Do you have any statement to make,
Mr. Bagedonow?
MR. BAGEDONOW: Yes , I do.
Mr . Mayor , first of all, I'd Like to make this
li statement if I would: That I'm speaking as an individual ,
(( plus the fact that I'm here tonighthas caused me to be
fired.
Mr. GoodLing called Mr. Winston who was my employer
this morning and asked that I neither appear nor speak
at the meeting tonight. My employers told me that should
I appear at this meeting tonight, and should I voice my
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
opinion, that it would be considered a resignation of my
job.
But I think it' s important enough that neither I nor
anyone else be gagged. That was my objection, originally.
Now , I 'd like to read a prepared statement which
will be available for anyone that wants a copy of it when
I'm through speaking.
MAYOR HOWELL: Is this statement , now , in connection
with, Mr. Bagedonow, the calling of this meeting and for
the purposes which I previously stated and are they --
MR. BAGEDONOW: Yes, Mr. Mayor, it is. I have a
series of correspondence with Mr. Bennett concerning the
special privilege charge. I have the club membership
resignations and I have a first-hand knowledge of the
fact that the police and firemen are no Longer allowed to
issue any statements , and the reason that this was given,
and I'd like to make this perfectly plain. I think, Mr.
Mayor, that since I'm resigning a job in order to crake
this statement that I should have the benefit of a full
and uninterrupted hearing.
MR. PARKS : Mr. Mayor , I 'd Like to interrupt the
gentleman to ask if this concerns his relationship with
Mr. Bennett in his capacity as City Manager of Atlantic
Beach, or in his capacity as an individual, a tenant at
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
the property?
MR. BAGEDONOW: First, Mr. Parks , because Mr.
Bennett has chosen to intertwine the two things . This
is the unfortunate thing and this is my contention where
Mr. Bennett has abused his public office and that, as a
tenant, he was entitled to certain things. We have a
copy of the lease which I am perfectly willing to offer
here to the Commission , but Mr . Bennett, above and beyond
the agreement that he made, came to me, as manager of
the hotel, made demands and then, in his capacity as
City Manager, attempted to impose restrictions and to
persecute me in my job because I would not allow him
special privilege in the hotel. And in his apartment.
I have a Letter that Mr . Bennett wrote on City
stationery which I would Like to submit with my answer ,
of which the entire City Council has a copy. You, Mr.
Parks , received a copy along with Mr. Goodling, Mr.
i Weldon, the Mayor --
MR. PARKS: Mr. Mayor, if this pertains to personal
business between Mr. Bagedonow and Mr. Bennett, it' s
out of order.
MAYOR HOWELL: Yes, it is. I don ' t know that the
point -- it becomes difficult to decide when it becomes
personal and when it is not personal.
- E
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA
9
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Mayor, may I reiterate and I
think it' s quite clear that when I've come to this
community and I'm willing to forfeit my job which is a
substantial job and contract to come here and to clarify
a public issue, I think I should be allowed to first
present something. Mr. Parks is ® king an effort to rule
out what I want to present before I've even presented it.
We have heard from Mr . Goodling and Mr. Parks. In Mr.
Weldon ' s absence, we have a Martin, Barton and Fish
thing that Mr. Roosevelt referred to in 1932 that we' re
facing in Goodling, Weldon and Parks, the same three men
that placed Mr. Bennett in office.
MAYOR HOWELL: Let ' s keep it down to the issues
that -- for what tills meeting is called for.
Now, we' re going to have to do that. It wa. called
as I stated before, to clarify these two things.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Mayor, will you accept the
letter written on stationery of the City of Atlantic
Beach by Mr. Bennett for reading? May I read the letter?
MAYOR HOWELL: Is this a letter dated September 8th?
MR. BAGEDONOW: No, sir; it' s a letter dated
August 30th, where Mr. Bennett makes a statement in his
capacity as City Manager , and this is one of the cases
where I claim that he' s abused the privilege of the
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA
LU
City Manager.
MAYOR HOWELL: Well, Mr. Bagedonow, we' re not here
to Level charges against the City Manager .
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Mayor , the charges have been
leveled. Mr. Bennett read into the record that I made
an accusation. Mr. GoodLing asked that I substantiate
this accusation. I'm prepared to use a Letter that Mr .
Bennett has written on the stationery of the City of
Atlantic Beach to substantiate these charges.
Now, will I be allowed to use this Letter, Mr .
Mayor?
MR. THOMPSON: It' s within your province to Look at
the Letter and see if it ' s relevant to the issue , and
then if it is not, to rule it out or rule it in.
MAYOR HOWELL: Can I see the letter?
MR. BAGEDONOW: Surely. Here' s the Letter and
here' s the answer .
(Hands to Mayor Howell)
MAYOR HOWELL: Do you deem that is relevant to the
purpose of the meeting (handing documents to Mr.
Thompson) ?
MR. THOMPSON: There' s no reference to the published
thing, of course, as you can readily see.
MAYOR HOWELL: Mr . Bagedonow, the City Attorney --
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA
11
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Mayor , I' ll read it Monday
night, if I'm not permitted to read it tonight. Because
it' s my understanding that Monday night I can read
anything. So we' ll read it Monday night, if I'm not
permitted to read it now, but it' s my contention it is
relevant because it' s my contention that letter asks for
special privilege on Mr. Bennett' s behalf and that' s what
my Letter to the press indicated and my letter to the
Mayor indicated that Mr. Bennett had requested special
privilege and I contend that substantiates the fact that
Mr. Bennett had asked for special privilege.
Now, further , with reference to this article, we
can take the article -- we' re going to take it in the
Literal context, as you' ve interpreted it.
Now, the first thing is a question of censorship.
Approximately two weeks ago, Sheriff Carson was in touch
with Mr. Culverhouse , one of the gentlemen who owned the
1 Atlantic Beach Hotel and at that time it was discussed
ti
that wvuLd it be possibLe for me to assist in a function
for the Boys' Ranch that would be held some place in the
beach area. Mr. Culverhouse had no objection, and on
that basis , in fact, he concurred it would be a fine
thing to help the Boys ' Ranch, and on that basis , a !�
'I I
dinner was held at the Atlantic Beach Hotel where Sheriff
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
.JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
12
and Mrs. Carson, the Chief of Police, the Chief of the
Fire Department of Atlantic Beach and a member of the Fire
041,1„,,e_
Department, Mr. Bain, were in attendance.
It was decided at this meeting that not I, that the
others present, were to explore the potential of having
this function held in the Jacksonville Beach Auditorium
and I volunteered because of prior experience to offer
my services to coordinate the background, not the public
relations, nor the sale, nor the formal presentation to
the public , but to coordinate what I call the "back of
the house" towards attempting to make a successful
effort for this function.
It has been brought to my attention subsequent that
because an article appeared in the press which mentioned
my name in conjunction with the Police and Fire
Department that Mr. Bennett has imposed censorship on
the Police and Fire Department and demanded that in the
future all statements be cleared through the office of
the City Manager.
Further, along with the context of the article,
over a number of years prior to Mr. Winston or Mr.
Culverhouse' s ownership of the Atlantic Beach Hotel and
the swimming club attached to it, it had been Mr. Adams'
custom over a period of many, many years as proprietor
of the hotel, and as a member of the community, to extend
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
111 JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
13
the privilege of the use of the pooL to the Police and
Fire Department and also to life guards .
We, on acquisition of the hotel -- or my owners on
acquisition of the hotel -- felt that this was a
desirable public service. We not only extended the
privilege to the Fire and Police Departments , but we
also extended it to the life guards so that they could
hold their weekly practice in the pool at the hotel.
We extended the privilege of the use of the pier for
life guard purposes through the City of Atlantic Beach
at the request of Mr. Hilliard. We, during my tenure,
have at no time made any special request of the Fire or
Police Department and I defy anyone to show me where we I
have or to bring it forward at this meeting. We never
required any special service. We never asked for any
special privilege. We feel that we were performing a
public duty as a citizen and as a taxpayer in this
community.
We are also aware of the fact that Selva Marina ,
another club in the community, has extended the same
privilege, not to all, but to several members of the
municipality. We feel that this is a direct sLap in the
face to ourselves and to Selva Marina.
We ask and we wonder -- I ask and I wonder -- by
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA
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what authority Mr. Bennett could deny these men the
privilege of the use of the pool; could deny it to thei-_
families , as I stated in my article.
I wonder if any records of this Council show that
Mr. Bennett approached the Mayor or any of the Councilmen
to support him in this matter?
I wonder if the Council has ever taken a position in
the past with knowledge , over a period of 20 years , that
the hotel has existed and the Adams family extended these
privileges?
I wonder if at any time the Council has discussed
this matter and decided not to allow these men to join
this club?
I wonder why Mr . Craig, fully knowledgeable and in
receipt of a membership, then City Manager , why he --
i
if he felt it was not justifiable for the men to have
these memberships , did not bring it before the Council?
I wonder why the Mayor did not return the membership,
if he felt that it wasn't proper for a City Official to
receive the membership?
I wonder why the Mayor, with full knowledge at the
time that these memberships were given out, did not then,
request that the men not use the memberships and return
- !I them, if that was not proper for them to receive?
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA
! I
Obviously, the Mayor had no objection. Obviously,
the then City Manager had no objection. Obviously, the
Mayor of Jacksonville Beach and the Mayor of Neptune
Beach had no objection because they, too, received these
memberships and have been receiving them over a period of
years.
I wonder why the Mayor didn't refuse a membership
at SeLva Merina? vJhy this suddenly has become an issue
under Mr. Bennett?
Is Mr. Bennett attacking the hotel or is Mr. Bennett
seeking good government in our community?
Is Mr. Bennett seeking to embarrass the Chief of
Police? Is Mr. Bennett seeking to embarrass the police
and the Mayor in his capacity and in his job .
Why did Mr. GoodLing, relative to this evening' s
discussion, call my employers and force me in a position
to resign a job that pays in excess of $20,000 a year ,
far more than Mr. Bennett' s city employee job , so that
I could come here tonight and sit like a mouse in the
corner instead of bringing the facts to the oregound''
No job, no amount of money means that much to me
that I'm going to be cornered, nor allow the City, any
city government in this country that I Live in, to be put
in that position. And I hope to come back, Mr. Mayor ,
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA
16
on Monday night without restriction and read these Letters
which I think are pertinent and relevant and in the
interim I plan to give them to the press of this City.
MAYOR HOWELL: Thank you, sir .
Mr. GoodLing, you still have the floor .
MR. GOODLING: Mr. Chairman, there have been a number
of statements there. One of which is relevant to your
call for the meeting without question. It might help
clarify the situation if I would say that I endorsed the
City Manager' s request to the employees of this city that
they refrain from accepting gratuities. I think that
public employees ' actions and activities should at all
times be above reproach. I believe we have a good group
of city employees and I believe that their desires are
to so conduct themselves and it seems to me when an issue
like this does develop, that in the case of gratuities,
it does cloud it with a bit of suspicion. The best
solution is to --
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Mayor --
MR. GOODLING: -- follow the City Manager' s request.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr . Mayor, Mr. GoodLing hasn't
answered whether he called my boss this morning and asked
for my removal and my being bottled up tonight. Mr.
Goodling speaks in a vague platitude about gratuities and
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
17
1
makes vague accusations. Let us substantiate where we --
MAYOR HOWELL: Mr. Goodling can answer this , if he
wants to. This is totally irrelevant to the reason the
meeting was called. If Mr. Goodling wants to answer it,
I' ll certainly, by all means, give him the opportunity to
do so.
MR. GOODLING: I will in a moment. I would Like
to have your permission to speak to Mr. Thompson in
private before I do.
MAYOR HOWELL: ALL right, do you have any more you
want to say at this moment?
MR. GOODLING: No .
MAYOR HOWELL: Mr. Parks , anything you want to say?
4 MR. PARKS: Mr. Howell, I'm sure that the principals
involved in the ownership of the Atlantic Beach Hotel,
both being respectable gentlemen, regret having their
names involved in this dispute. I'm interested as a
result of Mr. Bagedonow' s statement that he made from the
floor a while ago, as to why the decision was made that
the Atlantic Beach Hotel be utilized by the Atlantic
Beach Police Department and Fire Department, without
consultation with any City officials for the purpose of
sponsoring and promoting a benefit for the Sheriff' s
Boy' s Ranch?
S i
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
II
! 18
Now, let me comment here and I want this clearly
understood. The jheriffs Boys' Ranch is a fine institutio .
It's a worthy charity for any individual in this room.
But that is beside the point in this instance. The
Atlantic Beach Police Department and the Atlantic Beach
Fire Department, if I understand city government, are under
the direction of the Director of Public Safety who, in
this instance, is the City Manager, and whose office is
in the City HaLL.
Now, it troubles me why a decision was made to
utilize those departments without any contact, any
clearance or anything else with the City Manager or with
the Mayor, or, apparently, any other city officials. I
would appreciate an answer to that.
MR. HOLLOWAY: Mr. Parks, maybe I can help you on
that subject. I have contacted the Chief of Police this
afternoon, before this meeting, and asked to get his views
on this subject, and he stated to me this : I asked him,
specifically, I said, "Chief, would you mind filling me
in on some information?" And he said the day that Mr.
Bennett took office, he went to Mr. Bennett' s office and
asked Mr. Bennett if there was anything he would like for
him to do, and Mr. Bennett explained to him, "You carry
on your duties just as you have before," with no specific
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
19
instructions, one way or the other, how to operate the
police force and so Chief Vogel took this upon himself as
a clireative i:o operate in this manner : That he had
authority to do the extracurricular activities without
going through the City Manager' s office.
MR. PARKS: Commissioner Holloway, I'd like to --
I'm not differing with your statement. I appreciate it,
but I would appreciate at this point, with the Mayor's
permission, having the City Attorney render us an opinion
on the propriety of the Atlantic Beach Police Department
and/or Fire Department, as a part of the municipal
organization, attempting such a benefit under that
identity rather than the Police Benevolent Association
or other identity other than as specific employees of
the City of Atlantic Beach?
MAYOR HOWELL: Will you comment, Mr. Thompson?
MR. THOMPSON: Of course, if it is to be done as a
city-endorsed and sponsored thing, it should have the
approval of this Commission, Mr. Parks . If that answers
your question. I don't know that under the circumstances
of that, if the City could be held responsible for the
operation of that or for any obligations that might be
incurred. Legally, I don' t think so. I do see room for
people to contend that it is a City function and might
i I
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
20
lead to a misunderstanding of some sort .
Does that answer your question?
MR. PARKS: I judge from what you say, counselor,
then, that there would conceivably be an implied
responsibility on the part of the City, if not a technical
one?
MR. THOMPSON: I think it could well be understood
that way and people could be misled to that end. I do
think, as a legal proposition, it would require the
endorsement of the Commission and where the power to
obligate the City is vested, not in the Chief of Police
or the Fire Department.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Mayor, at the meeting at no time
was it ever discussed and Mr. Carson and the Chief of
Police can verify this, at no time was it discussed that
this was to be an Atlantic Beach function. At no time
was there any association of these men in their official
capacity. The entire project was to be sponsored by the
Sheriff' s Office and we, the Chief, the Chief of the Fire
{ Department, the other persons involved, were contributing
their time and effort to a worthwhile charity, as private
citizens and not in an official capacity. They had been
invited, not to my knowledge, because I was not aware of
who was going to be at that dinner. In fact, I was
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
21
surprised there was more than the sheriff and his wife.
I didn't expect other people to attend. But at no time
was it contemplated that anything official either by this
municipality or by any other municipality would take part
in this particular function. This was a gathering of
people of good will who were interested in furthering a
charitable organization and contributing what talent they
could to it.
Further, the interest, as I understood it and it was
represented to me, and the reason for these men attending
was, because of their profession and because of the
Boys ' Ranch having need for a fire station that they were
particularly interested in contributing their services
towards this effort.
Isn' t that correct, Mr. Vogel?
MR. VOGEL: Can I speak?
MAYOR HOWELL: Yes, sir.
MR. VOGEL: That is correct. That is correct and
if you' ll allow me to expound on this -- do you want me
around in front of you, Mr. Parks?
MR. PARKS: That' s all right.
MR. VOGEL: Let me say -- I want to predicate what
Isay here that everything I say will be the truth.
When I was made Chief of Police, here , I made up my
{
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER �ttt
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
22
mind this was probably the last worthwhile job I'd ever
have. And I was going to give it every effort to make it
a good one. I served under two previous City Managers
and on my return from vacation this summer I met with
Mr. Bennett in this office and shook hands with him and
congratulated him and sat down and told him if there was
anything I could do to personally help him in any way, that
he could count on me, and he said at that time, "Chief,
the only thing I want at this time is to be sure of
honesty," and I said, "Mr. Bennett, you have that
assurance. "
And I said, "If at any time you want anything done,
you tell me. "
And he said he would.
Now, the first time that I learned that he objected
to me conveying anything to the newspapers was on Monday
morning. This past Monday morning. And I might mention
in passing that there has been a lot of reference to me
as Chief of Police in the papers relative to the
PBA meeting in Jacksonville Beach that the Fraternal
Order of Police are putting on a ball; these things I
have not called to Mr. Bennett' s attention, personally.
5 I had no intention of going over his head or over the
head of this Commission on any endeavor or obligating
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
' I 1
23
this City in any capacity on my say-so.
What Mr. Bagedonow just said as to this meeting at
the Atlantic Beach Hotel, there was nothing finalized
there . There was just sketchy, up-in-the-air plans of --
we didn' t even know whether it would be possible to secure
the auditorium at this time. We were just starting this
thing. It wasn't to be an Atlantic Beach Police and Fire
Department endeavor. We wouldn' t attempt anything of
this magnitude for such a small force . We were going
to endeavor to engage the facilities of the entire
county, City of Jacksonville, and any other fire department
that would be interested. The Fraternal Order of Firemen,
which is a state-wide organization, has been interested
in establishing this fire station, and we had plans to
engage their support. I wrote a letter to the Governor
and I wish you would read it, Mr. Mayor.
(Mr. Vogel hands letter to Mayor Howell. )
MR. VOGEL: This is his answer.
MAYOR HOWELL: The letter is addressed to
"Mr. R. C. Vogel.
Chief of Police.
Atlantic Beach Police Department.
Atlantic Beach, Florida.
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"Dear Bob:
"Much to my regret, because of other commitments
already scheduled for November 18, I am unable to accept
your invitation to participate in the First Annual
Florida Sheriffs Boys ' Ranch Fair to be held in Atlantic
Beach.
"To you and all those associated with you in this
most meritorious project, I extend my heartiest
congratulations and best wishes for a most successful
fund-raising activity.
"Certainly, it is a project which merits the support
of all Duval County' s citizens.
"With my kindest personal regards , I am
"Sincerely yours,
"Haydon.
Governor."
MR. GOODLING: Mr. Chairman, who is the Letter
addressed to?
MAYOR HOWELL: Mr. R. C. Vogel, Chief of Police,
Atlantic Beach Police Department, 857 Seminole Road,
Atlantic Beach, Florida .
MR. GOODLING: Thank you.
MR. VOGEL: As the last sentence in the Letter
1 indicated, it was to be a county-wide project. I' LL
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answer any questions anybody wants to ask me.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Chief, may I ask a question of the
Chief, Mr. Mayor?
MAYOR HOWELL: In this regard?
MR. BAGEDONOW: Yes , sir.
MAYOR HOWELL: Yes, I guess so.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Vogel, at any time during this
session, did I ask for any contribution from either you
or the other gentlemen at the table?
MR. VOGEL: No, sir.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Did I place any qualifications on
any help that I would give? In other words , did I offer
my help in return for any favors ?
MR. VOGEL: No, sir.
MR. BAGEDONOW: That' s all.
MAYOR HOWELL: Mr. Parks, you still have the floor.
MR. PARKS: Mr. Mayor, I am not only fascinated but
intrigued by the fact that some of the testimony and
comment that has been offered by several individuals
within the lat few minutes is quite contrary to what
has been published in the local press concerning
sponsorship and activity and endeavor. Is it possible
that we have such poor reporting among the members of the
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Fourth Estate? They're well-represented here tonight.
! MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Parks , would you quote that? Do
you have the article where you would Like to quote where
the differences are in the press?
MR. PARKS: I've just been listening.
MR. BAGEDONOW: No, but you just made a statement
that what has been said here is in conflict with what ' s
been in the press . Could you point out where it has
been?
MR. PARKS: The press reports that we have read --
MR. BAGEDONOW: May we hear the press report?
There' s no allowance for supposition, no allowances for
platitudes. Could we hear the article that you have
reference to or is it going to be a weldon,Goodling and
ii Park again, supporting incompetency which is what I've
been contending all along.
Mr. Mayor, May I have --
MAYOR HOWELL: Let' s keep it down to --
MR.
PARKS: That might well be --
MAYOR HOWELL: Let ' s keep it down to the facts.
MR. PARKS: I didn' t bring a stack of newspapers
with me thiAs evening, Mr. Mayor , but I'm sure I'm not
the only one that reads the local press . And there may
have been articles that I didn' t read. But the several
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that I read referred to this effort being sponsored by
the Atlantic Beach Police and Fire Departments .
MAYOR HOWELL: Any other comments, Mr. Parks?
MR. PARKS: No more at the moment.
MAYOR HOWELL: Mr. Holloway?
Is there anyone else in the audience who wishes to
.peak specifically on these matters?
MR. OLSON: May I? George Olson. I think that the
whole situation derived out of a premature press release.
We've had these situations in the organization I work
for and we have handled them and got together with the
people involved, straightened it out, and notified the
press that any releases would come through our office.
I think the same situation prevails here. I don't
think there' s anybody in this room who is not interested
in the welfare of Atlantic Beach. And I think that the
whole thing is just mushroomed, one thing on top of the
other, and I think it' s a matter that can be worked out
without any problems or anyone losing jobs or anything
else.
And if something happened in the press , these
fellows working for the press , are under orders to build
up this Beach section and get a hold of something that
is newsworthy and it comes out. And I think that it is
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a situation that can be resolved within the Commission
and that it' s something that has appeared in print and
people take a different reaction to something that
appears in print. Some people can brush right over it
andcthers will say this is an endorsement by this
group and I think the whole thing can be worked out, and i
appeared in print and people are concerned about it, but
I still think it' s a matter of a premature press release
and that the people can sit down and dicsuss this thing
and work it out without any problems in the future.
I mean, I don' t know of any one employee or anybody
else who was here in the City of Atlantic Beach who is
not interested in the welfare, and it' s just a matter
that these fellows are under instructions to build up
this beach section in the newspaper and the situation
developed which was news in the opinion of the writer and
iI the opinion of many people who read it, but I think it' s
something that can be worked out within the Commission and
j� with the press , and there should be no problem within all
these departments . I don' t think anyone is trying to
overshadow anyone else and I think you're all working for
Atlantic Beach.
MR. WEISTER: Mr. Mayor, ogt. Weiser, United States
Air Force Recruiter for the Beaches . I'm here today as
1
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a taxpayer of Atlantic Beach. I'm here today to find out
two things . First of all, the Sheriffs and the Chief of
Police have occasion of a Boys ' Ranch in Duval County.
I don' t realize what you people realize because I'm a
recruiter that will get your sons . But did you realize
that on the beaches 237. of the men are ineligible to
join the United States Air Force because of juvenile
delinquency?
39% of them are ineligible to join the United States
Air Force because they do not have the education.
Now, I'm not here to preach Air Force, but if the
Chief, over here, with his advocates, with Dale Carson,
downtown, can get a Boys' Ranch started, I'm for it a
hundred per cent.
I'm 49 years old and I want to see the kids get a
break. I also say this; I am a taxpayer and any man that
comes out against the Chief of Police, without advocation,
I have one question to ask him: Is he a taxpayer?
And I mean that, Mr . Bennett. When you pay taxes
on this beach at $8500 a year, then you come down and
talk to me. I'm for the Chief of Police of this beach
because Atlantic Beach has the lowest juvenile delinquency
rate of the three beaches , believe me. And Jacksonville
Beach has the highest. I don' t wish to say that, but I
SAM ROSENFELD
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want to go on the record that I want to see this project
go forward so that your kids in this place can step forth
and join a service without going through an FBI
investigation to see if they can make it .
MAYOR HOWELL: Sergeant, we appreciate your
comments . Let me get one or two things straight, right
quick before --
MR. WEISER: I'm not recruiting.
MAYOR HOWELL: No. I, no one is attacking the Chief
of Police.
MR. WEISER: I don't want it to be in the record as
that.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Mayor, how can you say that
when the Chief of Police is under censorship? You can
sit there and this man is restricted because he ' s an
employee of you people sitting behind the table and he' s
directly subservient to Mr. Bennett . How can you sit
there and say nobody is attacking him?
MAYOR HOWELL: I don' t think there has been an
attack on Chief Vogel' s abilities as to the job he' s
doing as Chief of Police.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Isn' t it an attack on his judgment,
Mr. Mayor? Wouldn' t you say that? How would you
classify it? Besides sweeping it under the table, how
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would you classify it? What kind of attack would you call
it?
MAYOR HOWELL: The only thing is that there has been
no attack on the Boys ' Ranch.
MR. WEISER: It' s the manner he' s going at, sir.
MAYOR HOWELL: And I think everybody is certainly
100% in favor of the Boy' s Ranch and similar
organizations.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Everyone is for God and country, but
Let' s sweep it away and do it our way; that' s Mr.
Bennett' s attitude.
MAYOR HOWELL: Give your name.
MR. SENF : Chet Senf, S-e-n-f. I think the question
is whether the City Manager has the right to require
City employees, acting in their individual capacity, to
submit all news releases through him. If they are acting
in their individual capacity, the mere fact that they are
City employees, as a group, does not automatically submit
them to his censorship and control.
MAYOR HOWELL: We' re going back, again, to this news
release.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Mayor, Mr. Bennett is City
Manager, he' s supposed to know the charter. Why don't we
see if he knows anything about the charter and see where
II
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it is in the charter . He' s never read it.
MAYOR HOWELL: I'm speaking at the moment. The
actual order, apparently, has been that Mr. Bennett
instructed the Police and Fire Departments not to give out
news releases other than day-to-day happenings, that is,
whose house burned down and who ran into who and who hit
who over the head.
MR. SENF: If they are acting in their individual
capacity as citizens , the mere fact that as a group they
all appear to be City employees donating their services
to the Boys' Ranch does not automatically make them
subject to his control.
MAYOR HOWELL: If this is true, I think the question
is their capacity of policemen or firemen.
MR. THOMPSON: I (laughter)
Would you restate the question to the City Attorney?
MR. SENF: If the members of the Fire Department
and the Police Department are acting in their capacity
as citizens in donating their services to the Boys' Ranch,
not in their official capacity as City employees , are
they still subject to the control of the City Manager in
news releases?
MR. THOMPSON: Wherever their acts affect the City,
they would be.
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MR, SENF: All right, in this case did their actions
affect the City?
MR. THOMPSON: I don't know.
(Laughter)
MR. MORSE: Roland Mise. I may be oversimplifying
it, but there is a question I want to ask. Is there such
a thing as an organization chart, a job description, that
clearly Lays out the responsibilities and authorities
of the employees of the City of Atlantic Beach?
MAYOR HOWELL: Basically, yes.
2
MR. Imo: Authority and responsibility?
MAYOR HOWELL: Basically, yes , we have a personnel
ordinance and then we have a charter and there are
coverages in each one . Now, the charter does not break
down into -- as many classifications as the personnel
ordinance.
MR. M8&3E: They should be capable of avoiding
conflicts that possibly verge on personalities , then,
job responsibility, and job authority ought to clarify
most of the problems that have been heard here today,
Shouldn't it?
MAYOR HOWELL: I don' t know.
(Laughter)
MR, BAGEDONOW: Mr. Mayor --
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MAYOR HOWELL: Just a moment. We have someone over
here. Mr. Ward.
MR. WARD: George ward, Atlantic Beach. There' s just
a couple of words I'd like to say. I think what Mr.
Bennett has on his mind all along is simply a chain of
7 command and tried to coordinate the activities here in
the community. Now, this gentleman, Mr. Bagedonow --
my apology if I mispronounce your name -- but you
referred earlier to the fact that these Qfitieers in the
department were not representing the City when they
appeared at the dinner you're speaking of. The fact
remains they wouldn't have been at the dinner if they
hadn't been officers of the City or members of the Fire
Department. They wouldn't have been there at all, so
they had to have some connection with the City or,
apparently, they wouldn't be there . And I don' t think
you can make a distinction in their capacities on that
particular evening, and I think that' s what Mr. Bennett
has in mind, too .
Now, as to the membership in the swimming pool, I
don' t take that too seriously and I don' t think there
can possibly be anything suggested improper about it, but
what we' re trying to do in this State, now, and in this
community, now, is to get away from anything that would
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reflect on any individual serving the public community.
And that, I think, is what Mr. Bennett has in mind,
that he wants to get away from any gratuities or gifts
or prizes or what you want to call it, that could
possibly tie a man' s hands in any way whatsoever or
reflect on him or on the community.
And I believe that' s the reason that he had in mind
trying to discontinue that practice at the hotel or
wherever else it might have existed in the community.
Those are the two things Mr. Bennett has in mind, here,
and in quoting these restrictions we' re talking about.
MR. WEISER: Mr. Mayor --
MAYOR HOWELL: Yes , sir.
MR. WEISER: Does Mr. Ward mean that Mr. Bennett is
going to move out of the Club-By-The-Sea into the
taxpaying land Like we own?
MAYOR HOWELL: Anyone else that has any comments to
make?
iI Mr. GoodLing, did you want to talk to Mr. Thompson?
MR. GOODLING: Might I be excused?
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Mayor.
MAYOR HOWELL: Yes , sir.
MR. BAGEDONOW: We 've heard what Mr. Bennett thinks
through somebody else and Mr. Bennett doesn' t Look like
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36
Charlie McCarthy to me . He's sitting up there . Why can' t
we get an interpretation from Mr. Bennett as to what he
meant in both of these instances? Why can't we -- Mr.
Bennett, as City Manager, it' s correct to assume that the
gentleman who appointed Mr. Bennett, and Mr. Bennett, in
accepting his position, felt that he was qualified. Now,
a qualified man should have a knowledge of his job . If
Mr. Bennett is qualified and if these gentlemen have the
confidence in Mr. Bennett to appoint him, I'm sure that
they' ll have no objection to Mr. Bennett quoting from
sections of the Personnel Code or quoting from sections
of the City Charter, justifying his stand. And I'm sure
Mr. Bennett, if he knows his job , and if he issued these
with full knowledge of their import , has no objection
to telling us where the foundation of the authority lay
and how he is justified in asking this. I have a further
question which I think is relative for Mr. Bennett and
it is that -- it' s my understanding of city management
and it' s consistent all the way through the municipalities
in the area, in the county, as well as the City of
Jacksonville, that the City Manager require a report from
the Police Department each day enumerating every police
call, enumerating all instances and procedures that have
occurred in the Police and Fire Department. It' s my
SAM ROSENFELD
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understanding that Mr. Bennett doesn't require this kind
of a report --
MAYOR HOWELL: You' re getting off the subject.
MR. BAGEDONOW: No, it's relevant, Mr. Mayor --
MAYOR HOWELL: It' s not the purpose of this meeting.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Mayor, if this report had been
in existence and if there was something relevant, it
would have been on the report. How else is somebody to
inform the City Manager if there is no system of reports?
MAYOR HOWELL: No, not necessarily, because it seems
there may be some misunderstanding as to the chief of
police' s sphere of authority and, therefore --
MR. BAGEDONOW : Could Mr. Bennett give us his
interpretation, here, in front of all of us because he' s
supposed to be knowledgeable?
Mr. Parks, are we going to hide this man' s ignorance,
again, by not allowing him to answer a question?
MR. PARKS: Mr. Mayor, the legality of Mr . Bennett' s
action in regard to the gratuities has not been challenged,
No. 1.
No. 2, I, as a taxpaying citizen, think he is
entirely within his rights and I endorse his action. I
{ want that distinctly understood.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Mayor, could the City Manager
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answer those questions? Could he define the Personnel.
Code and the City Ordinances for us with regard to this?
MAYOR HOWELL: I can' t speak for him. I don't
think anybody should.
MR. CONNELLY: You should; you're the mayor.
MAYOR HOWELL: I can' t define it. I know the job of
the Chief of Police; I know the job of the City Clerk,
and the job of virtually everybody in here, but I can't
tell you exactly.
MR. CONNELLY: Joe Connelly. You are going to Lead
our beach into consolidation with Jacksonville Beach with
a man like this and we run one off.
MAYOR HOWELL: We're off of the subject.
MR. CONNELLY: We always are, Billy.
MAYOR HOWELL: Wait a minute.
MR. CONNELLY: We 've got a good police department.
MAYOR HOWELL: Now, Look, wait a minute. This thing
was called tonight for one thing, to alleviate certain
articles that came out in the newspaper.
MR. CONNELLY: Yes , sir.
MAYOR HOWELL: Which apparently were either
misunderstood by the press or by some of the people
concerned or by some of the people who received the
• orders and this thing was mushrooming. This meeting is
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for no other purpose.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Let Mr. Bennett clarify; that ' s
what we' re asking for, Mr. Mayor. Let Mr. Bennett answer
where his authority Lays . Let Mr. Bennett tell us about
8 it .
MR. CONNELLY: I've seen the Chief of Police arrest
teenagers here, and it' s got to be a joke because the
teenagers got back to the beach before our Chief of Police
got back here. The same ones that live right here in
Atlantic Beach. Then we get a new City Manager in here.
We had one that was underpaid. We begged him to stay
here for two or three years and he got along just fine
with our Chief of Police we had. We begged him -- you
forced him to stay here, Billy, for two or three years,
and we hire a new one and he wants to run him off.
MAYOR HOWELL: I don't think that is it at all. Mr.
1 Bennett is the Director of Public Safety.
MR. CONNELLY: Yes , sir .
MAYOR HOWELL: Now, the Director of Public Safety,
according to the charter, is supervisory head of the Fire
and Police Departments .
MR. CONNELLY: Right.
MAYOR HOWELL: In this capacity, he sets up certain
criteria, certain policy matters that the Police
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Department is to follow. Now, if in the -- and I 'm not
going to use the word "Mr. Bennett ," I 'm going to use the
words" In the judgment of the Director of Public Safety, "
whoever he may be, if he deems it necessary to request or
demand , order or direct , whatever you want to call it ,
that news releases , all or portions of them, be funneled
through him, he 's within his authority to do so, as I see
it .
MR. CONNELLY: I think so.
MAYOR HOWELL: But likewise, if Mr. Bennett -- beg
your pardon, if the Director of Public Safety, whoever he
may be , feels that if a man belongs to a club, whether on
an honorary or gratuitous basis , whatever you want to call
it, if this is not in the best interest of the City, in
his opinion, he certainly has a right to say so.
MR. CONNELLY: I think the man should do it in a
diplomatic way. I don ' t think he ought to bring out City
right now at the crisis of time when we are fighting this
business of joining up with Jacksonville Beach, for him
to bring something out by our Chief of Police. I think
we 've got a nice, little town. I 'm proud of it .
MAYOR HOWELL: I don 't --
MR. CONNELLY: And Billy, I 'm going to tell you, right
now, if you don 't mind me speaking, what we 're talking
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about , right now, is we 've tried to help the kids in
this Beach. This man, the Chief of Police, has fought
for the kids of this Beach ever since he 's been in office .
He 's fighting right now for a ranch. I can remember,
Billy, about seven, eight years ago, when I approached
you for a donation to Little League. You told me that
you couldn' t help us because of the same thing -- as
buying golf clubs for your kid and charging it to the
City .
MAYOR HOWELL: That ' s correct .
MR. CONNELLY: Isn 't that right?
MAYOR HOWELL: That 's correct .
MR. CONNELLY: But right now you've got a Little
League Park down there and it ' s all on account of that
man right there.
MR. PARKS: No.
MAYOR HOWELL: No, I don' t know about that .
MR. CONNELLY: But you have never helped us and then
we get a man in here that starts killing a man that ' s
trying to help this Beach. Am I right , Billy? Didn 't you
tell me that?
(Laughter)
MR. CONNELLY: You told me that .
{ MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Mayor, I asked three questions
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and I still haven' t gotten an answer. I 'd like to know,
again, for the public record, for the Press , that Mr.
Goodling did not call my employers ' office to try to
influence my not being here tonight; that ' s No. 1 .
No. 2 , I ask for Mr . Bennett, not for Mr. Parks or
Mr. Goodling, to answer, himself, and to tell us what
the Personnel Code contains . What the City Charter
contains . What knowledge he has and what background he
has 'in management of cities that qualifies him to have
issued these two edicts and I would like to know, Mr.
Mayor, on what grounds initially, and how Mr. Bennett
was appointed and whether or not you voted for him at
that time?
MAYOR HOWELL: That has nothing to do with the
meeting tonight .
Mr. Bennett can certainly say anything he wants to
say. So far as sitting up and attempting to quote the
charter, I helped write the charter. I couldn 't begin
to quote it . As far as the Personnel Ordinance is
concerned, I helped write it . I couldn 't begin to quote
it .
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Mayor, if you had made a state-
ment and written a letter two days ago, wouldn't you have
referred to that section and if you referred to it two
SAM ROSENFELD
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days ago, is there anybody here so feeble-minded that
they can' t remember what they referred to two days ago
when they wrote a letter and they must have had some basis ,
in fact , when they wrote that letter, some basis and
authority .
Now, is the basis of authority Goodling, Weldon and
Parks or is there something in the charter that allows
Mr . Bennett to make the statements and write the letters
and issue the statements to the Press?
MAYOR HOWELL: Well , we' re talking about these two
releases and I thought I got it fairly well clear a
minute ago that the Director of Public Safety, in my
opinion, this is within the realm of his responsibility.
MR. BAGEDONOW: It 's in the realm of his
responsibility through your interpretation, Mr. Mayor,
that he can impose censorship. Would you answer for the
Press , Mr. Mayor, whether or not it is your interpretation
of our City Charter that the City Manager, who is appoint-
ed and is a City employee, cnn impose censorship? Is
that the interpretation you want to give us?
MAYOR HOWELL: No; no, I don 't say that.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Well , then, what do you say?
MR. CONNELLY: Why don't you let him speak, Billy,
you can' t tell him not to.
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(Laughter)
MR. CONNELLY: Hell , you are just the Mayor.
A VOICE: Is this drive going to continue for the
Boys ' Ranch?
MAYOR HOWELL: I beg your pardon?
A VOICE: Is the Boys Ranch organization still going
to go through?
MR. CONNELLY: No.
MAYOR HOWELL: I haven' t heard anybody say it
couldn ' t .
MR. CONNELLY: The City Manager said he can ' t talk.
MR. WEISER: He ' s handicapped .
MR. CONNELLY: You hired him, how come he can' t
speak?
(Laughter)
MAYOR HOWELL: Mr. Bennett made a statement at the
beginning of the meeting.
MR. WEISER: He referred to the newspaper.
MR. BAGEDONOW: Yeah, he had somebody read a
newspaper article that I wrote. How about him opening
his mouth?
9 y (Laughter)
MR. BAGEDONOW: He ' s been able to open his mouth
when he wanted special privileges for himself when he
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wants some privilege. Why can' t he open his mouth, now?
MAYOR HOWELL: Mr. Longo.
MR. LONGO: Mr . Mayor, incidentally, I 'd like to
state that I also am a heavily overburdened taxpayer of
over $8,500 in Atlantic Beach for the record. But I
think this thing has developed into a personality clash
between two people, No. 1 , an ex-employed hotel manager,
as of today, I 'm sure, and our City Manager, Mr. Bennett.
Mr. Bennett wasn't hired. He was elected by the Board of
this City, by the City Commissioners and they are, in
turn, elected by the citizens of this Beach who come
to this City Hall and vote them in office and, I think,
it ' s their responsibility, if they choose to have Mr.
Bennett serve as a City Manager, whether it 's good, bad
or indifferent, it is their responsibility and it ' s our
responsibility of electing these gentlemen to do this
job .
Now, I think the program of the Boys Ranch has
become irrelevant . I don't think that this at the time,
now, in answer to the lady 's question is the paramount
point , nor do I think the reputation of Chief Vogel is
at stake . I think Chief Vogel has done a marvelous
job as well as the other members of his staff; that is
not the question. The question is , is Mr. Bennett allowed
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
46
to do his job and I say, again, as a taxpayer and
citizen of the City, that he is because he is head of
those departments .
Now, I don' t think Mr. Bennett is vindictive to
the Chief of Police nor do I think there is a great deal
of friction in prohibiting this man to do his job . I
think the possibility of Chief Vogel carrying on extra-
curricular activities , above and beyond his normal realm
of job, is very possible and that, again, is probably
on Chief Vogel 's own personal time but once this City
addresses a letter to any other City or to any other
municipality, you direct it to a Chief Vogel or Chief
Smith or Chief Jones of somebody, and that is the City
of Atlantic Beach. And at any time that the Chief of
Police goes to a function, he goes as a Chief of Police
of Atlantic Beach, not as Mr. Robert Vogel . And that is
not the way that letter was addressed from Haydon Burns ,
the Governor. And these things have to be distinguished
between what is the legal responsibility of this City
Council, of the Mayor, of the Chief of Police, against
something that is obviously a personal battle between
two people. I , for one, have sat here and heard people
ask Mr. Bennett to quote the charter. Well, I think this
is stupid because nobody can quote any charter. I doubt
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
IIJACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA
47
seriously if there is a person in this room that can
quote the Constitution and we 're all citizens . So how
can this enter into the matter of the so-called premature
press release of October the 5th? I can ' t see where
there is any bearing; I think Mr. Bennett did his job.
(Applause)
MAYOR HOWELL: Yes, Mr. Connelly?
MR. CONNELLY: I ' ll be honest with you. I didn ' t
vote for a damn one of them.
(Laughter)
• I ' ll tell you something. I 've been here for 19
years and this is the first time we have ever had a
Chief of Police and a Fire Department which was decent ,
and when you start picking on our Chief of Police and our
Fire Department -- I don' t know how long you've been here.
MR. LONGO: I 've been here five years and I love
every bit of it .
MR. CONNELLY: You've got a lot to go; 19 years .
MR. LONGO: That might be 14 years longer than me .
MAYOR HOWELL: This is all irrelevant. Do you want
to stick to the subject or don' t you?
MR. CONNELLY: I didn' t vote for you, Billy.
(Laughter)
I still think we 've got the best Fire Department and
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
48
Chief of Police in the land .
MAYOR HOWELL: That 's a fine opinion.
MR. CONNELLY: We can' t have a stranger come in
here and run us out .
MAYOR HOWELL: That is your opinion .
MR. CONNELLY: I 've been here long enough.
MAYOR HOWELL: I was born in Duval County.
MR. CONNELLY: I mean at the Beach.
MAYOR HOWELL: Mr. Sony.
MR. : I live here in Atlantic Beach. I 'm also
a heavy taxpayer and probably exceed these fellows in
taxes . I 'd like to ask a question. Are the City
officers and Fire and Police Department still maintaining
their privileges at the Atlantic Beach Hotel? Do they
still get that free?
MAYOR HOWELL: In the Atlantic Beach Hotel?
MR. : In the pool, wherever they are allowed to
go over there free.
MR. BAGEDONOW: No, sir; they have been forced to
fI resign.
MAYOR HOWELL: I can' t speak for the Chief of Police .
If you're asking me, I still have a card that says I can
go to theool if I
P � want to go to the pool . I had a
charge when Charlie Adams owned it and at the Chateau and
it
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
49
at the Sea Turtle.
MR. CONNELLY: You ought to give it up.
MAYOR HOWELL: When my bill comes out , I pay it .
Sometimes on time and sometimes late.
MR. SONY: I take it the former manager, if I may
so state, says that he ' s been here going on 18 or 20
years when we were given free membership; that 's when we
were a township not a city. We have grown . We have a
city and I think that what anybody -- whether it be the
Police Chief, Fire Chief or anybody else -- if they get
any complimentary membership cards , it creates in the
mind of the public some type of obligation that they
�1 would owe back when they 're getting something free,
favors at certain times . And I think it ought to be
I discontinued for the sake of clearing the people ' s mind
because I 've been around three-score years and I 've
never gotten nothing for nothing. I 've had to work for
LO everything I 've had.
MAYOR HOWELL: Does anyone else have anything to
say?
MR. CONNELLY: I think they ought to raise their
pay so they can join it .
MAYOR HOWELL: Mr. Goodling?
MR. GOODLING: Yes, sir, could I ask you -- it may
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA
50
take a minute but I believe Mr. Bagedonow ---
MR. BAGEDONOW: Speak louder.
MR. GOODLING: I believe Mr.Bagedonow made a charge
on three different occasions relating to an alleged phone
call between myself and Mr . Winston. Would you find
those three, if I 'm correct, and read them back to me
so I can hear -- there ' s been a bit of discussion since
then .
(Discussion off record)
MAYOR HOWELL: Come to order, please . Mr. Goodling,
you have a request to make?
MR. GOODLING: Would you read that statement?
(Reporter read what Goodling requested)
MR. GOODLING: Mr. Chairman, I categorically deny
that .
MR. BAGEDONOW: Mr. Goodling, you deny you called
Mr. Winston this morning?
MR. GOODLING: Tr -.9� (4'1
t- -,c,62 cx- "
MAYOR HOWELL: That ' s all .
MR. GOODLING: I 'm through.
MAYOR HOWELL: That ' s all .
Mr. Parks , do }ou have anything additional to say?
MR. PARKS: I have nothing more .
MAYOR HOWELL: Mr. Holloway?
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
51
MR. HOLLOWAY: Nothing.
MAYOR HOWELL: This meeting, I again tell you, was
called for one purpose, to clarify the news release
wherein a censorship, and I 'm quoting "A censorship" was
put on the news .
Now, this appears to have been cleared up in the
article of October the 5th, 1966 in the Jacksonville
Journal , wherein it states that this was pertaining only
to those things that might affect the City as a whole,
and that the City should be advised of them before they
are so released . The other thing, which was about the
Club memberships , which I think has been fully explained ,
this is the opinion of the Director of Public Safety, it
is certainly within his prerogative to have such an
opinion and issue such an order.
Now, I assume that winds those two things up and
that ' s that . And that 's what the meeting was called for .
There is no censorship on news .
That ' s all we have. Do you have a motion to adjourn?
MR. PARKS: Move to adjourn.
MAYOR HOWELL: Second the motion?
MR. HOLLOWAY: Second the motion.
MAYOR HOWELL: Meeting adjourned.
(Whereupon, at 9: 25 P.M. , the meeting adjourned)
SAM ROSENFELD
STENOTYPE COURT REPORTER
JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA
There being no further business Mayor Howell declared this
special meeting of October 6th, 1966 adjourned.
i , I
1A4 f .�L
Wm. S. Ho - 11, Mayor-
Commissioner
Attest:
10-0 S /6' /<(
Adele S. Grage, City Cle• 1