Post Office Meltdown in Deerfield Beach: Two 911 Calls, Body Cam Censorship, and a Denied Records Request

Despite this video being filmed entirely in public, one or more of the postal employees decided to infringe on my first amendment right and got YouTube to remove this video at 15,000 views. As a response to infringing on my rights, I am now releasing the original uncensored video for free in full 4K resolution. Let’s show them that filing unwarranted privacy complaints is a guarantee the video gets more distribution! Happy sharing!!!

 

The First Visit

When I pulled up to the Village Post Office at 100 S. Military Trail in Deerfield Beach, I expected a quiet First Amendment audit. Instead, I got two 911 calls, police backup, censored footage, and a federal employee who claimed he didn’t know what a public records request was.

It didn’t take long to spark chaos. As soon as I started filming from the publicly accessible lobby, two postal employees—Kevin and Antoinette—told me I couldn’t record. Kevin, along with the customer he was helping, immediately picked up the phone and called the police. That’s two separate calls to law enforcement over a constitutionally protected activity.

Before the officers arrived, a supervisor, Julio De Paula emerged from the back. He didn’t identify himself by name, but he made his position crystal clear: I was to leave. I refused. He demanded I stop filming. I didn’t.

Officer Smith from the Broward Sheriff’s Office was first to arrive. I immediately informed him that I was a journalist engaged in constitutionally protected activity and warned that any violation of my rights would result in accountability. He didn’t affirm my rights, so I asked for a supervisor. Officer Ruiz arrived shortly after, but no actual supervisor followed. Both officers disappeared behind a locked employees-only door to have a private meeting with postal office staff.

When they returned, they left the scene without taking any enforcement action against me. But the real story unfolded afterward.

Following the encounter, I attempted to submit a public records request to Kevin. He refused to accept it and claimed he didn’t know what a public records request was. I let him know I’d be back—with a warrant—and that court would be in session.

I submitted a public records request to the Broward Sheriff’s Office asking for the body cam footage of Officers Smith and Ruiz. They tried to charge me $60, citing an “extensive use” labor clause under Florida Statute 119.07(4). To avoid the fee, I narrowed my request to just the final 15 minutes of footage. What they released was muted during key moments and embedded with copyrighted music that never existed in the original environment—likely added to prevent me from uploading it to YouTube.

The footage also blacked out the officers’ discussion with post office staff behind the locked door. The audio? Silenced. The context? Erased. Transparency? Gone.

This raises major concerns—not just about how government employees react to public filming, but how public records are being manipulated or withheld altogether. When the content most relevant to accountability is precisely what gets muted, redacted, or buried under copyright traps, the public’s right to know is not just obstructed—it’s outright sabotaged.

And the excuses don’t stop at cost. Public agencies frequently misuse Florida’s “special service charge” rule to overinflate the price of access, hoping citizens will just give up. But here’s the thing: I won’t. And neither should you.

For the record, public records belong to the public. You shouldn’t have to pay $60 just to find out what your government employees said behind a closed door about you—especially when they called law enforcement over a camera and tried to remove you from a public building.

The bigger picture here is that accountability only works if we stay persistent. Government bodies—from local post offices to county sheriff’s departments—count on people being too intimidated or too exhausted to push back. They count on red tape to wear you down. They count on your silence.

But they’re not counting on me.

This experience is just one chapter in a larger fight for transparency and First Amendment rights. Every time a government agency hides footage, overcharges for access, or flat-out refuses to take a public records request, it’s an attack on the very principle of open government. That’s why I document, that’s why I publish, and that’s why I go back—warrant in hand, camera rolling.

The Village Post Office is federally operated, but it exists within a community that deserves transparency. If public servants don’t even know what a public records request is—or pretend not to—that’s a failure of training and a violation of trust. It’s not just inconvenient. It’s unacceptable.

My next visit to this location won’t just be another audit—it’ll be a legal follow-up. I’ll be serving a formal “warrant for public records,” an accountability tool I use to reinforce that these requests are backed by law, not opinion. The people have a right to inspect their government—especially when that government is the one calling the police on peaceful journalists.

I’ll also be following up with BSO, and I’ll challenge any unlawful redactions or editing meant to obstruct public access. If they want to play games with transparency, I’ll expose that too.

Until then, I encourage everyone reading this to get involved. Learn how to file public records requests. Record your interactions. Ask questions. Challenge overcharges. And when you get stonewalled—don’t retreat.

Stand your ground. Hold court. Make it public.

If you want to see what happens when I return, sign up for my newsletter and get notified the moment the next chapter drops. The fight for accountability continues, one audit at a time.

Location Details

Date of Audit: April 25, 2025

Physical Address: 100 S Military Trail #13 Derfield Beach, FL 33442

Phone: ?

Website: https://usps.com

Postal Employee Details

Name: Antionette

Email Address: ?

Work Phone: ?

Title: ?

Salary: ?

Date of Hire: ?

Name: Kevin

Email Address: ?

Work Phone: ?

Title: ?

Salary: ?

Date of Hire: ?

Name: Julio De Paula

Email Address: ?

Work Phone: ?

Title: ?

Salary: ?

Date of Hire: ?

USPS Social Media Accounts

BSO Employee Details

Name: Rashad Smith #20788

Email Address:

rashad_smith@sheriff.org

Name: Pedro Ruiz #19594

Email Address: pedro_ruiz@sherrif.org

USPS Social Media Accounts

Disclaimer

The people appearing in my videos are in public spaces where there are no reasonable expectations of privacy. Recording in public is protected by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution. This video is for entertainment and educational purposes only. The legal topics covered on GCNN are designed to be educational and informative. They should never serve as legal advice under any circumstances. The content of this video is in no way intended to provoke, incite, or shock the viewer. This video was created to educate citizens about constitutionally protected activities, law, civilian rights, and emphasize the importance of exorcising your rights in a peaceful manner.

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