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National Sheriffs Group Names Gualtieri Sheriff of the Year

Bob Gualtieri | Pinellas Sheriff | Politics

The award, given annually by the National Sheriffs Association, recognizes a sheriff who has made outstanding contributions to law enforcement and the criminal justice profession.

PINELLAS COUNTY – PInellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri has been named the recipient of the 2019 Ferris E. Lucas Sheriff of the Year award from the National Sheriffs’ Association.

Gualtieri will receive the award for his contribution to the law enforcement committee this summer in Louisville, KY, at the association’s annual conference.

The award, given annually by the NSA, recognizes a sheriff who has made outstanding contributions to law enforcement and the criminal justice profession, demonstrates exceptional service to his or her community, and has contributed to the betterment of the NSA. The national award is awarded to any active sheriff who has performed the duties of his or her office in the highest professional manner as well as
enhance the office of sheriff. The award is given in memory and honor of Ferris E. Lucas, who served as NSA president from 1944 to 1946 and as executive director of the group from 1964 to 1982.

“Sheriff Gualtieri embodies what this award was created to recognize,” NSA Executive Director Jonathan Thompson said. “Not only are there no limits or obstacles for him in keeping his community safe but he has continually answered the call as a national leader on the biggest issues facing law enforcement across the country.”

Gualtieri began his law enforcement and public service career as a detention deputy working in the Pinellas County jail in 1982. After attending the police academy, he joined the Dunedin Police Department as a patrol officer and later rejoined the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office as a law enforcement deputy. Over the next 15 years, Gualtieri served in many different components of the agency, including several years’ conducting domestic and international drug trafficking investigations as part of a DEA task force.

Gualtieri earned his bachelor’s degree from Eckerd College in St. Petersburg and his law degree from Stetson University College of Law. After graduating from Stetson and being admitted to the Florida Bar, Gualtieri entered private practice in Tampa, specializing in labor and employment defense. Gualtieri is admitted to practice law in all Florida courts, before the U.S. Supreme Court, as well as the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit and the U.S. District Courts in the Northern, Middle, and Southern districts of Florida.

Gualtieri returned to the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office in 2006 as its general counsel and was appointed chief deputy (second in command) in 2008. Gualtieri served in the dual role of general counsel and chief deputy until he was appointed sheriff in 2011. He was elected and re-elected sheriff in 2012 and 2016, respectively.

Gualtieri serves on the board of directors for the Florida Sheriffs Association and the Major County Sheriffs of America. He is the chair of the FSA Legislative Committee and the MCSA Legal Affairs Committee.
He is also an executive fellow for the Police Foundation, member of the National Sheriff’s Association, International Association of Chiefs of Police, and the Police Executive Research Forum.

On a national level, Gualtieri represented NSA and MCSA while working with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to develop a basic ordering agreement with various Florida sheriffs that aimed to prevent the release of criminal aliens back into the community. The BOA clarifies that aliens held by these jurisdictions are held under the color of federal authority, thereby affording local law enforcement liability protection from potential litigation as a result of faithfully executing their public safety duties.

After the school shooting at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in February 2018, then-Gov. Rick Scott appointed Gualtieri to serve as the chair of the MSDHS Public Safety Commission. The commission is tasked with analyzing information from the shooting and other mass violence incidents around the state to provide recommendations and system improvements.

During Gualtieri’s years as sheriff, he has established multiple new initiatives in Pinellas County, many of which are being replicated by other jurisdictions: Pinellas Safe Harbor, an emergency homeless shelter and jail-diversion program, Adult Pre-Arrest Diversion program, Intelligent Led Policing Division, Mental Health Unit, Risk Protection Unit, Operation H.O.M.E. (Habitual Offender Monitoring Enforcement) a countywide  effort to reduce teen crime, and a School Guardian Unit.

Gualtieri is active in many community organizations and serves on the Pinellas County Homeless Leadership Board, and the boards of directors for the Boys and Girls Clubs of the Suncoast and the Pinellas Sheriff’s Police Athletic League. Gualtieri has also received many awards and recognitions for his effort to improve public safety, including being named 2014 Sheriff of the Year by Crisis Intervention Team International for his work on mental health issues.

The National Sheriffs’ Association is one of the largest associations of law enforcement professionals in the U.S., representing more than 3,000 elected sheriffs across the nation, and with a total membership of more than 20,000. NSA is a non-profit organization dedicated to raising the level of professionalism among sheriffs, their deputies, and others in the field of law enforcement, public safety, and criminal justice. Throughout its 78-year history, the NSA has also served as an information resource for all law enforcement, as well as state governments and the federal government.

National Sheriffs Association | Pinellas Sheriff | Bob Gualtieri | Tampabay News

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