Post Office Clerk Found GUILTY – Charge: Failure to Comply with Public Records Request [FOLLOW-UP]

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Visit 1: The Meltdown Begins

When I arrived at the Deerfield Beach Main Post Office, I expected a routine First Amendment audit. Instead, I got three separate 911 calls, a federal employee blocking the camera, and multiple people—including a customer—attempting to weaponize law enforcement against a constitutionally protected activity.

As soon as I began filming in the publicly accessible lobby, postal employees Kevin and Antoinette declared I couldn’t record. Kevin—along with the customer he was serving—called the police. A few minutes later, an elderly couple, Kevin incited, made the third call to 911.

I submitted a public records request to the Broward Sheriff’s Office for the body-worn camera footage and 911 audio. BSO hit me with a $60 cost estimate, so I narrowed the scope to just the 911 audio and the final 15 minutes of the responding deputy’s body cam. What I received was completely redacted, and the footage was laced with copyrighted music—rendering it entirely unusable.

This was censorship by design, not coincidence.


Visit 2: Charges Filed—Sort Of

I returned—this time carrying a warrant for public records and staging a satirical courtroom bit, where I charged Kevin with Failure to Comply with a Lawful Public Record Request.

To his credit, Kevin accepted the warrant and told me he would pass it to his supervisor. More importantly, he admitted he’d received training and thanked me for the education. He even shook my hand, confirming that he now understood the public’s right to record.

At that moment, it felt like the mission was accomplished: transparency achieved, awareness raised, and a public employee brought into alignment with the First Amendment.

But that feeling didn’t last long.


Visit 3: The Censorship Plot Twist

Just as I was finishing the edit for Visit 2, YouTube hit me with a notification:

A privacy complaint had been filed.

Someone—likely Kevin or someone within the post office—was trying to erase the original footage from Visit 1.

So I returned again. This time, Kevin avoided interaction but blasted loud music throughout the lobby, preventing me from capturing any usable footage inside. Outside, I interviewed a customer who said a postal worker had once threatened to call the police simply because he spoke too loudly.

I also ran into Tom, the customer who had called 911 during Visit 1. We had a cordial conversation. Tom told me he had served as a police officer for 30 years. He said he understood what I was doing, but still couldn’t quite grasp the point. That says everything about the culture of government and law enforcement’s relationship with accountability.


They Tried to Silence the Footage—So I Doubled Down

Rather than cave to censorship, I released the uncensored, footage directly on my website—free to download, copy, and share.

When they try to shut down one camera, we respond with ten more.

When one video gets struck, we repost it everywhere.


Final Thoughts

The Deerfield Beach Post Office tried to silence accountability. They filed a complaint, blocked access to records, and flooded footage with copyrighted music.

But what they don’t understand is this:

Censorship always backfires.

The more they resist transparency, the more exposure they get. That’s the First Amendment in action—and this is why we audit.


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Location Details

USPS Social Media Accounts

Employee Details

Name: Kevin (AKA Frodo Baggins)

Email Address: ?

Work Phone: (954) 427-4255

Title: ?

Salary: ?

Date of Hire: ?

Supervisor: Julio De Paula

Supervisor Phone: ?

Supervisor Email: ?

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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