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Everglades scientist ordered to surrender to serve jail term

Everglades scientist Tom Van Lent
SA国际传谋
An appeals court upheld a conviction of criminal contempt for Everglades scientist Tom Van Lent on Wednesday.

An Everglades scientist found guilty of contempt of court will surrender in July to serve a 10-day jail sentence, according to a judge鈥檚 order issued Thursday.

Tom Van Lent was sentenced to time behind bars after the Everglades Foundation accused him of stealing trade secrets three years ago. Van Lent denied stealing protected documents, but a judge found him guilty of criminal contempt after he disobeyed an order to stop deleting information from his computers. Van Lent said he was erasing personal documents.

READ MORE: In fight over research, influential Everglades Foundation sues its former chief scientist

鈥淚 will be surrendering to the court on July 17,鈥 Van Lent said Thursday. 鈥淭he Everglades Foundation鈥檚 relentless campaign against me reflects their fear that their organization will be exposed for putting politics and money above science in the Everglades.鈥

The Everglades Foundation did not respond to requests for comment.

The case shocked the tight-knit Everglades community after Van Lent quit in 2022. On his last day, he tweeted that he was going to work for a different nonprofit 鈥 Friends of the Everglades, founded by Marjory Stoneman Douglas, who he said 鈥減ut facts over politics.鈥

The rift came after Van Lent raised concerns over a $3 billion reservoir being constructed south of Lake Okeechobee and considered a key piece in ongoing restoration efforts to deliver more clean water to southern marshes and Florida Bay. Van Lent and other scientists worry the project fails to include enough stormwater treatment marshes needed to meet strict pollution limits. Foundation leaders initially agreed with the concerns, but later pivoted to backing the project.

During a two-day hearing in 2023, an IT expert hired by the Foundation testified that Van Lent downloaded thousands of documents and folders from his work computer, although he and other staff who testified were not able to say what they contained.

In a statement, Friends of the Everglades board president Philip Kushlan and vice president Peter Upton praised Van Lent and said the 10-day jail sentence detracted from restoration work.

鈥淲e are more resolved than ever to be a force for positive change and sound science,鈥 they said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not too late for the Everglades Foundation to ask the court to waive this vindictive jail sentence and we encourage it to do so.鈥

Van Lent agreed to surrender after the Foundation鈥檚 attorney, who prosecuted the contempt case for the judge, filed a motion in April asking to have Van Lent arrested.

After this story posted, the Everglades Foundation said in an email the following day that it had nothing to do with the motion to have Van Lent arrested and took no position on his sentence.

Sign up for SA国际传谋鈥檚 environment newsletter Field Notes to receive our insider鈥檚 guide for living in South Florida鈥檚 changing landscape. Get original reporting and recaps, with context, delivered to your inbox every Friday. Subscribe here.

Jenny Staletovich is SA国际传谋's Environment Editor. She has been a journalist working in Florida for nearly 20 years. Contact Jenny at jstaletovich@wlrnnews.org
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