ORLANDO, Fla. — Florida's child welfare agency sent a letter to a Florida newspaper telling it to ''cease and desist'' its reporting on foster families for a story about a nonprofit associated with Gov. Ron DeSantis' wife that is the subject of an investigation.
The Orlando Sentinel received the letter on Friday from the state Department of Children and Families, whose top official is appointed by the governor. The letter claimed that the newspaper's Tallahassee reporter had used threats to coerce foster families into making negative statements about the Hope Florida Foundation when he contacted them about the welfare nonprofit behind the signature initiative of Casey DeSantis, Florida's first lady.
''Cease and desist the above-described intimidation of these families,'' the DCF letter said.
Orlando Sentinel Executive Editor Roger Simmons said the agency's characterization of the reporter's conduct was ''completely false.'' The yet-to-be-published story was looking into grants distributed by Hope Florida to organizations, families and individuals, according to the Sentinel.
''We stand by our stories and reject the state's attempt to chill free speech and encroach on our First Amendment right to report on an important issue," Simmons said in an email.
DCF on Monday repeated the claim that the reporter had harassed multiple foster families who complained to the agency.
''The Orlando Sentinel can report on whatever they want, but they do not have a right to harass foster families,'' Miguel Nevarez, DCF's press secretary, said in an email.
The letter is attempting to intimidate the Sentinel from publishing what may be unflattering news about Hope Florida in what is known as prior restraint, and prior restraint efforts typically are unconstitutional, said Clay Calvert, a law professor emeritus at the University of Florida and nonresident senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.