WINTER HAVEN, Fla. – Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the Jason Raynor Act into law Tuesday in Winter Haven, sending a direct message to anyone who attacks a police officer in Florida: the consequences are now permanent.
The law, named for Daytona Beach Police Officer Jason Raynor — who was shot and killed in the line of duty in 2021 — requires a life sentence without the possibility of parole for anyone convicted of manslaughter resulting in the death of a protected law enforcement officer.
“The message we send with this bill is simple,” DeSantis said at the signing ceremony. “If you attack a member of law enforcement in Florida, prepare to be held accountable.”
What the law does
The Jason Raynor Act makes four significant changes to Florida law:
- Life sentence, no parole: Anyone convicted of manslaughter in the death of a protected law enforcement officer faces life in prison without the possibility of parole.
- Broader protections: The definition of a “protected officer” is expanded to include correctional officers, probation officers, and auxiliary officers — not just sworn police.
- Tougher assault penalties: The law raises the offense severity and criminal penalties for committing assault, battery, aggravated assault, or aggravated battery against any law enforcement personnel.
- No resisting a good-faith arrest: Citizens are prohibited from using physical force to resist an arrest or detention if the officer is acting in “good faith” — defined as making a sincere effort to comply with the law — even if a court later rules the arrest itself was unlawful.
A case that exposed the gap
The law traces directly to the 2021 killing of Officer Raynor, 26, who approached Othal Wallace to question him about a car similar to one that had been reported stolen. The encounter turned physical, and Wallace shot Raynor in the head before fleeing. Raynor died from his injuries.
Wallace stood trial on first-degree murder charges. The jury convicted him of the lesser charge of manslaughter. Under Florida law at the time, manslaughter with a firearm carried a maximum sentence of 30 years — and that is exactly what Wallace received.
Law enforcement leaders called the outcome a failure. Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood said the verdict was “a slap in the face to not only the Daytona Beach Police Department, it’s a slap in the face to anyone who puts their uniform on and goes to work.”
State Attorney RJ Larizza said Tuesday the case left a wound that this law begins to heal.
“Officer Raynor’s murder was a dark time for his family and our law enforcement communities,” Larizza said. “This law brings some much needed protections to law enforcement and honors the life and sacrifice of Officer Raynor.”