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  • Report:  #273978

Complaint Review: Gerald M Bailey Commisioner F.d.l.e

Gerald M Bailey Commisioner F.d.l.e sworn police officers ignored grand theft, sworn to protect and do nothing, derelict of duty, refuse to do their sworn job Tallahassee Florida

  • Reported By:
    columbus Ohio
  • Submitted:
    Sun, March 11, 2007
  • Updated:
    Fri, July 18, 2008
  • Gerald M Bailey Commisioner F.d.l.e
    2331 Phillips Road
    Tallahassee, Florida
    U.S.A.
  • Phone:
    850-410-7000
  • Category:

Geral m Bailey the commisioner with the F.D.L.E has a complaint in front of him filed by me where the police officers working under him have disgustingly ignored a grand theft they had an obligation to take care of. As an officer of the law its great to have words written on the f.d.l.e web site saying how your job is to protect the citizens and visitors of the state of florida. I believe mr bailey needs to explain to his officers not only what that means but explain what the sworn oath they took means.

You see i had a grand theft committed to me when my yacht was stolen from me. Although the local authorities in monroe county refused to do anything about it i begged for the f.d.l.e to help. I was told immediately they would but that soon changed when they realised a fellow group of officers did something wrong and they would be the ones to expose it. But they didnt they cowardly backed out.

Before anyone goes saying i sound like i dont like police first understand my family here are well respected police officers in their field. Its officers like the ones i dealt with in the f.d.l.e that puts a bitter taste in peoples mouths about police. You see when something this simple is handed to law enforcement,and they totally choose to ignore it, thats what puts a bad taste im my mouth. Mr bailey has a chance to correct his problems and i would love a call from him directly taking responsibility for his sworn officers dropping the ball,then correcting the problem. I will keep everyone posted on anything that happens. Below is a front page article run just a couple weeks ago on the thieves who stole my yacht. Hopefully this will let everyone see how bad the f.d.l.e has discrased not only the badge they wear but the badges police officers wear nationwide who diligently work hard for the respect of their community. Myself and the florida residents who live there full time have been severly let down.

Subject: NEWS STORY ABOUT ALLEGED BOAT THEFT


by Dennis Reeves Cooper

Last October, Kevin McCarthy, of Amelia Island, Florida, drove down to Key West to look at a 45-foot boat being offered for sale by the Ocean Key House Resort. He looked at the boat, talked to a broker and was ready to offer the asking price of $110,000.

Then he learned that the hotel was planning to auction off the boat. So he checked with hotel General Manager Steve Boswell and the hotel's attorney, Alan Eckstein.

?I wanted to make sure that the hotel really owned the boat,? McCarthy told Key West the Newspaper this week. ?They told me that they had taken possession of the boat after the owner had defaulted on his dockage payments.?

So McCarthy authorized his broker to bid on the boat? and he got it for $71,000. And he got a purchase sales agreement from Attorney Eckstein.

McCarthy motored the boat up to Islamorada and left it there for 10 days for cleaning and servicing. Then he and his wife returned to the Keys to take the boat up to Amelia Island.

?We were nearing Miami when both engines quit on us,? he said. ?And while we were waiting on a tow, I got a call on my cell phone from Robert Krutko, who identified himself as the former owner of the boat. He told me, ?You are on my stolen vessel.'

?He said that the Ocean Key House had stolen the boat from him and had illegally resold it,? McCarthy said.

?I didn't know what to think, so while we were being towed to Miami, I called Attorney Eckstein. He reassured me that everything was okay. Then I checked with a Miami maritime lawyer recommended by the towboat driver. After listening to my story, he told me that I had probably bought a stolen boat.?

McCarthy said he had already made arrangements for extensive servicing in Ft. Lauderdale, so he had the boat towed there and, back home, consulted with another maritime lawyer in Jacksonville.

?He agreed with the Miami lawyer and, after some more research, he wrote Eckstein a letter demanding that they return my $71,000,? McCarthy said. ?It took them a couple of weeks, but they finally sent me the money.?

Last December, the Ocean Key House sued Krutko in federal court, alleging that he owes the hotel more than $60,000 in dockage fees. Krutko has counter sued, alleging grand theft.

Krutko said that, in June of 2005, he and his wife bought an existing sunset cruise and snorkeling business based at the Ocean Key House Resort marina. The deal included the boat.

?We were paying $3000 per month for dockage on a month-to-month basis,? he said. ?But we soon learned that we were losing thousands of dollars because the concierges at the hotel were referring business to our competitors. I complained to General Manager Boswell and he promised to put a stop to it. But nothing changed.?

Then, the hurricanes of September and October 2005 blew through, and many of the docks and walkways at the hotel were destroyed.

?The hotel had ordered all boats out of the marina before the storms but, after Wilma, we were allowed to return because our slip was intact,? Krutko said. ?But we were not required to pay rent for a couple of months because the marina was not operational.?

But by December, when the walkways in the marina had been repaired, he and his wife had decided to move the boat, put it up for sale and move on.

?But Boswell begged us to stay, even offering six months free rent because of the storms and the problems the concierges had caused us,? Krutko said. ?But the problem never got any better.?

So, a few days before the six-month free rent deal expired, Krutko said that he had an employee move the boat out of the hotel marina, up to his home on a canal on Cudjoe Key, 23 miles away.

?But it was decided that there wasn't enough room to put the boat at my dock, so he anchored it out in the bay,? Krutko said.

But, the next day, the boat was missing and Krutko filed a theft report with the Sheriff's Office. Deputies reported that a call had come in from a neighbor who said the boat was adrift and that he had called the Florida Wildlife Commission (FWC).

An FWC officer found the boat and a Sea Tow boat showed up at the same time. Then a call came in from the Ocean Key House. Hotel officials reportedly told the officer that the boat had broken loose in the marina and that it should be returned to the hotel.

?Incredibly, the FWC officer released the boat to the hotel, rather than having it towed to a secure location until the owner could be found,? Krutko said. ?It didn't seem to occur to the officer to question how the boat could have ?drifted' from the Ocean Key House to a location 23 miles up the Keys!?

A Sheriff's deputy reportedly later found the boat chained to the dock at the hotel marina. Upon questioning, hotel employees reportedly told the deputy that the hotel had a lien on the boat, but they could not produce any paperwork to support that claim.

?The Sheriff not only bought that bogus claim, a deputy called me and told me it was now a civil matter,? Krutko said.

Not long after that, the hotel sold the boat to Kevin McCarthy.

McCarthy said that, even though the hotel returned his purchase price to him, he is still out thousands of dollars for other expenses associated with buying and moving the boat. ?I am watching Robert's lawsuit against the hotel,? he said. ?When he wins his suit, I'm next in line.?

Krutko calls the hotel's lawsuit ?outrageous?.

?They are even suing for dockage fees during the time, after the storms, when the hotel didn't have any docks.? he said.

He said he is also disappointed in State Attorney Mark Kohl, who refused to accept his grand theft complaint against the hotel. ?Why can't he see grand theft when it's staring him right in the face??

While the lawyers wrangle, the boat remains in the custody of federal marshals in a Ft. Lauderdale marina, continuing to run up dockage bills.


Other news storys are being written soon along with other parts to this story from key west. This story is only part 1 more will follow. I will keep everyone posted

Robert
columbus, Ohio
U.S.A.

Click here to read other Rip Off Reports on various Police Departments

7 Updates & Rebuttals


John

Califon,
New Jersey,
U.S.A.

So why haven't you sued them

#8Consumer Comment

Fri, July 18, 2008

Why?

Why haven't you sued them and the alleged government officials/people/companies that you continue to slander if you are right?


Maritime Armed Security

Covington,
Louisiana,
U.S.A.

lien

#8Consumer Comment

Fri, July 18, 2008

You stated they didn't have the paper work, of course they didn't. Tallahassee has the lien against the title... End of story!


Kristina

Akron,
Ohio,
U.S.A.

These Stories are Terrible

#8Consumer Comment

Tue, March 20, 2007

I just counted 8 reports that he wrote on this one subject. Every one tells a different story.

He started this one by claiming FWC and SeaTow were resposible for taking the boat. In fact he blamed FWC for allowing it. Then, in his update, he's claiming someone from the hotel hotwired the boat and sailed it away. Which is it? Also, he first stated it was taken from an anchorage in the bay, then later stated it was taken from his home. On another report, he accused two people who rebutted him as being the cops. I won't even get into the numerous other conflicting statements he made.

There is nothing believable about this whole complaint.




Cory

San Antonio,
Texas,
U.S.A.

Who's Next?

#8Consumer Comment

Mon, March 19, 2007

The Attorney General of The United States and then the President of the United States? This guy just keeps going up the ladder.


Ashley

Cudjoe Key,
Florida,
U.S.A.

One Story Not Enough?

#8Consumer Comment

Sun, March 18, 2007

As the editor and others can see, Robert feels he needs to start multiple complaints on the same topic.

Pardon the cliche. But if it smells like a duck, walks like a duck, looks like a duck, it's a duck. The local Sheriff's Office, State's Attorney's, and FDLE all agreed this was a civil matter. Quite simply, that means it's civil.

There has been no rip-off here. The whole report is erroneous.


Robert

columbus,
Ohio,
U.S.A.

Hot OFF THE PRESS NORTH FLORIDA NEWSPAPER

#8Author of original report

Fri, March 16, 2007

Shannon Malcom
News-Leader
904-261-3696 ext. 232
904-261-3698 fax
smalcom@fbnewsleader.com


Smooth sailing, except
boat was stolen property


Shannon Malcom
News-Leader

As owner and operator of Amelia River Cruises and Charters, Amelia Island
resident Kevin McCarthy has had a dream job for the last six years, but he
inadvertently cruised into a nightmare last October when he learned he'd
spent thousands on a boat that couldn't legally be sold.
McCarthy estimates he lost about $20,000 when he became embroiled in a legal
battle between a Key West hotel and the owner of the 45-foot Corinthian
Catamaran he tried to buy.
For McCarthy, the situation began about two years ago when he decided his
business had grown enough to justify buying another vessel, and he started
doing research on passenger boats for sale throughout the state. He located
the boat he wanted, docked at the Ocean Key Resort Hotel, in October and
purchased it for $71,000.
McCarthy said the hotel's attorney told him the boat, previously owned by
Robert Krutko of Columbus, Ohio, had been abandoned and was being sold to
cover dockage fees.
"I did call the hotel that morning to make sure everything was on the up and
up," McCarthy recalled. "They said yes, and said they'd had no recent
contact with the former owner, so I bought the boat."
After spending about $20,000 for general maintenance to the boat, McCarthy
and his wife prepared to bring it home to Fernandina Beach.
"I filled it up with fuel, and got ready to bring it back," he said.
They're sailing trip didn't make it past the very southern tip of Florida
before both engines on the boat failed. While he was being towed to land,
McCarthy received a phone call from Krutko on his cell phone.
"He told me I was on a stolen vessel," McCarthy recalled. "An hour before,
everything was fine ... then the engines fail, and I find out the boat isn't
mine."
After checking with two maritime attorneys, one in Miami and one in
Jacksonville, McCarthy learned the sale had not been legal. According to
McCarthy and Krutko, an employee of the hotel had hotwired the boat and
sailed it away from Krutko's home in the Keys.
Krutko is currently suing the hotel for what he believes was the theft of
his boat; the hotel is suing Krutko for $61,000 in dockage fees he says he
doesn't owe.
Regardless of the ultimate outcome of those lawsuits, authorities and
attorneys agreed that McCarthy's purchase of the boat wasn't legal. He
returned the boat immediately; he said it's now being held in Ft.
Lauderdale.
"After about three weeks of legal wrangling, they paid me back the $71,000,"
he said. "But overall, I'm still out about $20,000."
Now he is awaiting the outcome of Krutko's case against the hotel to decide
if he will also file suit against the hotel.
But throughout the ordeal, McCarthy and Krutko became friends, and Krutko
said what happened to McCarthy - who's been familiar with the boating
business all of his life - could happen to anyone.
"It's very important to do the right checking ... the best suggestion would
be to pay a maritime attorney before the purchase to do a search and look
over any deals on that boat," he said. "... Just protect yourself as best
you can."
Although McCarthy lost, at least for the time being, thousands of dollars
and two months of time he would have been spending on his business, he did
purchase another boat nearly identical to the first and is moving forward.
And each men made a new friend.
"I look forward to meeting him and his wife in person and taking them out to
dinner," Krutko said. "Out of all this rain and stormy weather I've been
through, I got a new friend out of the deal."
smalcom@fbnewsleader.com


Robert

columbus,
Ohio,
U.S.A.

Just spoke to Mr. Bailey -hes a high paid official that doesnt give a d**n about the badge he is sworn to uphold

#8Author of original report

Mon, March 12, 2007

Mr Bailey is obviously a high paid commisioner with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement who doesnt give a d**n that his officers have ignored what is clearly a grand theft. The other sad point is he doesnt give a d**n about the sworn oath him and his officers have taken to protect and serve, but i bet he doesnt ever miss picking up his pay check either. This is a sad situation for all Florida Residents who depend on these officers to do their job. They have totally discrased the police badge they wear.

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