Follow Up Whine 1 1 Accountability Time for Lying Postal Worker and CSPD

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Postal Worker Lied to 911 — What Happened After the Cameras Stopped Rolling

Most people think a First Amendment audit ends when the police leave and the camera shuts off. That’s the part you see. What you don’t usually see is everything that comes afterward. The paperwork. The unanswered calls. The slow, unglamorous process of accountability.

This follow-up exists to show that part of the story.

If you haven’t seen the original audit that led to this follow-up, you should start there. It provides essential context for everything discussed below, including the 911 call and the police response inside the Coral Springs Post Office:

911 Lie Turns Audit Into Walk of Shame for Coral Springs Police

911 Lie Turns Audit Into Walk of Shame for Coral Springs Police


When Feelings Replaced the Law

In the original incident, a postal employee named Tiffany called 911 and falsely claimed I was irate and causing a disturbance. I wasn’t. I was standing off to the side, quietly recording, waiting to speak with a supervisor about a missing Poster 7.

When Coral Springs police arrived, instead of enforcing postal regulations or federal law, they enforced feelings. That distinction matters. Law enforcement is not empowered to resolve emotional discomfort by threatening arrest, especially on federal property.

Many viewers assumed that was the end of it.

It wasn’t.


Why I Didn’t “Stand My Ground”

One of the most common reactions in the comments was that I should have stood my ground. Some people framed leaving as weakness. Others treated the encounter like a victory for authority, as if rights are something that can be scored against.

That thinking misses the bigger picture.

When you’re outnumbered, surrounded by armed officers, and being threatened with arrest on federal property, pride isn’t strength. It’s a liability. Real power isn’t always loud or immediate. Sometimes it’s patience. Sometimes it’s stepping back, collecting facts, and choosing a battlefield where truth actually matters.

Walking away wasn’t surrender. It was strategy.

This follow-up shows what that strategy looks like.


Step One: Who Is the Postmaster?

The first issue was surprisingly basic. If recording inside a post office supposedly requires permission from a postmaster, who is that person? How is the public expected to comply with a rule when the decision-maker isn’t clearly identified or reachable?

I began calling USPS numbers associated with Coral Springs branches and the main customer care line. Anyone who has dealt with USPS bureaucracy will recognize the result. Automated systems. Dead ends. No direct answers.

That failure isn’t just frustrating. It’s relevant. “You should have asked for permission” doesn’t mean much when there is no realistic way to do so.


The Jurisdiction Question No One Answered

This is where the follow-up moves beyond inconvenience and into something more serious.

When Coral Springs police entered the post office that day, they were inside a federal building. Local police do not automatically have jurisdiction on federal property. Their authority depends on specific agreements, often memorialized through memorandums of understanding or interagency contracts.

So the question became simple but critical: who authorized Coral Springs Police Department to enforce anything inside that post office?

To answer that, I filed a Freedom of Information Act request with USPS seeking any agreements between the United States Postal Service and Coral Springs Police Department. I also requested confirmation of the postmaster’s identity and information related to the employee who made the 911 call.

This isn’t about technicalities. Jurisdiction determines whether a threat of arrest is lawful or not. The public has a right to know where that authority comes from.


Making Accountability Official

Verbal complaints disappear. Written ones don’t.

After submitting the FOIA request, I drafted a formal letter to USPS management outlining what actually happened inside the Coral Springs Post Office. I wasn’t asking for favors. I was asking for explanations. Why was Poster 7 missing? Why was a false 911 call made? And why were police allowed to intervene without clear jurisdiction?

That letter was mailed via certified mail with tracking enabled, creating a permanent record that it was sent and received.

To mail it, I returned to the Greenacres Post Office.


Why Greenacres Matters

Greenacres was the first post office that ever trespassed me during an audit, over a year ago. During that original visit, a postal worker named Richard initiated the confrontation, and a manager escalated the situation by attempting to touch my camera. The formal trespass was issued by another employee, Daquilla Collins.

In this follow-up video, I briefly included clips from that first visit for background context. Not to relitigate it, but to explain why returning to that same post office to mail a complaint letter felt fitting.

What mattered this time was the contrast.

On my return visit, a different postal clerk assisted me. She was calm, professional, and raised no objections to recording. She did her job exactly the way public service is supposed to work.

That matters, because this isn’t about demonizing postal workers. It’s about holding individuals accountable for specific actions.


Complaints and Public Records

Accountability doesn’t stop with USPS.

During the Coral Springs incident, officers H. Rainey and D. Anderson threatened me with arrest inside a federal building without first establishing whether they even had jurisdiction to do so. That isn’t a minor oversight.

Formal complaints were filed and sent directly to their supervisor, Sergeant Eric Walsh, as well as Sergeant Derek Fernandez, who heads the Coral Springs Police Department’s Office of Professional Standards. The officers themselves were also copied.

In addition, I submitted a public records request to Coral Springs Police Department seeking all body-worn camera footage related to the incident. The request was received and confirmed.

If and when that footage is released, it will be published. Transparency applies to everyone.


Why Follow-Ups Matter

This is the part of accountability most people never see.

Accountability doesn’t begin with confrontation. It begins with documentation. With records requests. With written complaints. With jurisdictional scrutiny. With patience.

Had I stayed inside that post office lobby and argued in the moment, I likely wouldn’t be writing this today. Instead, I chose a setting where facts matter and time works in my favor.

That’s not weakness. That’s how accountability is built.


What Comes Next

Now it’s a waiting game.

I’m waiting on responses from USPS. I’m waiting on body camera footage from Coral Springs Police Department. And when those records come in, updates will be published.

If this follow-up shows anything, it’s that the story doesn’t end when the camera shuts off. Sometimes, that’s when it actually begins.

For full context, including the original audit that sparked this follow-up, be sure to read the original post here:

https://goodcitizennewsnetwork.com/2025/10/02/911-lie-turns-audit-into-walk-of-shame-for-coral-springs-police/

Until next time, stay free, stay engaged, and keep those cameras rolling.

The 911 Calls: Fear vs. Fiction

Through a records request, I pulled both 911 calls. And they say everything.

Tiffany’s Call

She told dispatch there was a “disturbance,” called me “irate” (which the video proves was a lie), and demanded I be barred from the property. Then she admitted the only thing in my hand was a camera. Calm voice, measured tone — this wasn’t fear. It was an employee lying to 911.

The Customer’s Call

This one was almost sad. The customer’s voice was frantic. She said she was “afraid” and kept repeating that what I was doing was “so strange.” She even admitted she filmed me with her own phone. Her fear was real — but fear doesn’t make filming illegal.

Location Details

Date of Audit: 10/02/2025

Physical Address: USPS Atlantic Blvd Branch 8801 W Atlantic Blvd, Coral Springs, FL 33071

Phone: (954) 345-2864

Website: https://usps.com/

USPS Social Media Accounts

USPS Employee Details

Name: Chuck

Title: Cashier

Salary: Enough

Name: Tiffany

Title: Cop Calling Cashier

Salary: Too Much

CSPD Social Media Accounts

Coral Springs Police Department Officer Details

Name: Officer H. Rainey #4124

Email Address: hrainey@coralsprings.gov

Supervisor: Sgt E. Walsh

Supervisor Phone: (954) 346-1273

Supervisor Email: ewalsh@coralsprings.gov

Name: Officer D. Anderson #4147

Email Address: danderson@coralsprings.gov

Supervisor: Sgt E. Walsh

Supervisor Phone: (954) 346-1273

Supervisor Email: ewalsh@coralsprings.gov

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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