Florida sheriff deputies have arrested a roofer from Texas who was attempting to repair houses in an area that was hit hard by Hurricane Ian.

According to the Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office (CCSO), the owner of Duque Roofing, Terence Duque, was arrested last Friday for contracting without a Florida license, which is a felony crime.

CCSO said that the Charlotte County Economic Crimes Unit received a call from an investigator at the Department of Business and Professional Regulation at 1:30 p.m. last Friday.

“The investigator informed the CCSO detective that a roofing company, Duque Roofing, was found to be in Charlotte County, conducting business without a Florida license to do so, and that a homeowner had already agreed to a contract with them,” CCSO’s post about the arrest said.

The post also noted that Duque thought he was in the right by showing up to repair hurricane damaged roofs.

CCSO said that Duque had read the Governor’s State of Emergency order regarding contractors, and that he understood it to mean that contractors from out of state were permitted to work in Florida. But the order only eased rules for contractors within the state, not from out of state.

The sheriff said Duque told officers that an employee of his made contact with the Florida Department of Business Regulation (DPBR) and that a representative had given him permission to conduct business in Florida, though he could not provide the name of the representative.

Duque Roofing has been in business in Texas and Louisiana for 13 years and is rated A+ by the Better Business Bureau. The company has done work in the aftermath of several hurricanes, and on its website says that employees provide tarps, food and water for those impacted. The company also has a focus on providing jobs for veterans.

Florida contractor requirements are notoriously strict and costly, more so than in Texas, according to the website Construction Dive. But the requirements are mainly meant to make sure businesses in Florida are up to standard. Meanwhile, Duque Roofing is already known for doing solid work in multiple states.

“The extensive financial and application requirements of licensing systems, like there are in Florida and California, help weed out those financially unprepared to run a construction business,” Construction Dive wrote.

The requirements in Florida may also be to make sure predatory contractors don’t take the money and run, the website says. But with Duque’s extensive record of doing post-disaster repairs, and the several large construction trailers and RV that they brought to Charlotte County as documented by CCSO, there’s no evidence that the company had plans to scam people out of money.

Still, CCSO Sheriff Bill Prummell accused Duque of “victimizing” residents.

“Ignorance is not an excuse,” Prummell wrote. “If you are in Charlotte County, doing business with the people of this community, you had better be on the up-and-up and have the appropriate licensing and insurance. These people have been through enough, and I will not allow unlicensed contractors to further victimize them.”

CCSO’s press release said that Duque was transported to Charlotte County Jail without incident. But in a search of CCSO’s arrest portal, Duque’s name did not appear in the results. DPBR, CCSO and Duque roofing have not yet responded to requests for comment from Creative Loafing Tampa Bay.

Yesterday, DPBR celebrated the arrest of Duque on Twitter, and received a lot of pushback from the public.

“During a State of Emergency, working without proper licensure is a felony. Thanks to #DBPR‘s Division of Regulation’s hard work in impacted areas, @CCSOFLSheriff arrested an unlicensed roofing worker putting Floridians at risk,” DBPR wrote, with a picture of what looks like Duque being arrested by CCSO beneath the text.

Then, the comments started coming in.

“You guys are a disgrace,” one commenter wrote.

“Are you aware that you’re the bad guys?” another wrote.

Nearly 900 comments have poured in as of now, along with almost 400 quote Tweets, just about all of them berating CCSO and DPBR for the arrest.

Here are a few of the tweets…

the pitchers who didn't wear the pride logo posted a 13.5 ERA (and earned the loss in relief). that kinda feels like a sign to me. https://t.co/Qa53aNnJVQ— Neverending Corey (@CoreyNever) June 6, 2022
I'm new to American Christianity. Can someone give me a shortcut to whom Jesus says I should hate and why?— JDills (@jeff_dilworth) June 6, 2022

Non-Florida authors

These are some of the best and most talked about new books I read in 2024.
When the Moon Hatched By Sarah A. Parker’ A sweeping, romantic high fantasy with a deeply immersive, dragon-filled world and intricate magic system. With so much heartbreak and hope, there’s no wonder When the Moon Hatched is a darling of the romantasy genre this year.
’House of Flame and Shadow by Sarah J. Maas’ Every new Sarah J. Maas book is the must-read of the season, and the hype for HOFAS reached a fever pitch with midnight release parties around the country. The book turned out to be an intense and dizzying conclusion to the Crescent City trilogy.
’The Rise and Fall of the Galactic Empire by Dr. Chris Kempshall’ Ever wanted to read a Star Wars history textbook? Well, this one charts the events of the Skywalker Saga, delving into the politics and government actions that led to the rise of the fascistic Galactic Empire. Fiction, but eerily parallels some of our own political and cultural issues.
’A Monsoon Rising by Thea Guanzon’ Not Star Wars, but Star Wars inspired with dragons and a unique magic system set in a fantastical, Philippines-inspired world. A Monsoon Rising is the second book in The Hurricane Wars trilogy of high fantasy with simmering romance.
Special mention: ‘Mistborn and the Stormlight Archive’ Love for Brandon Sanderson’s Cosmere books hit an all-time high this year thanks to his newest book, the fifth in the Stormlight Archive series. He’s my most-read author for 2024, and his books have literally altered my brain chemistry. Journey before destination.

Jacob Whitworth

Profession: Senior cybersecurity engineer at Modern Technology Solution
Other boards/organizations:
Lived in Hillsborough since: 2022
Notable references: Manager, coworker
Registered party: No party affiliation
Whitworth cites eight years of professional IT experience in nonprofit, government, and private organizations.

Krystyna Berger

Profession: Director of Ambulatory Healthcare Technologies and Informatics at TGH
Other boards: MHA Advisory Board Member for the USF College of Public Health
Lived in Hillsborough since: 2002
Notable references: Supervisor at TGH, a friend and co-worker.
Registered party: No party affiliation
Berger’s applications said, “In my current role as TGH IT Director, I have to maintain knowledge of federal, state and local healthcare regulations, budgeting and negotiation.”

Robert Emerson

Profession: Self-employed private investor/financial consultant
Other boards/organizations: Hillsborough County Republican Executive Committee member 2012-2025
Lived in Hillsborough since: 2012
Notable references: Rep. Mike Owen (R-Apollo Beach), 2024 Hillsborough County Board of Commissioners District 4 Republican candidate and real estate broker Cody Powell, real estate broker Mike Greer
Registered party: Republican
In the application, Emerson wrote that they have deep experience in financial analysis, budgeting, planning economics, investments and insurance risk management at several Fortune 100 companies over many years.
Being gay is not a "lifestyle." Being gay is not a "lifestyle." Being gay is not a "lifestyle." Being gay is not a "lifestyle." Being gay is not a "lifestyle." Being gay is not a "lifestyle." Being gay is not a "lifestyle." Being gay is not a "lifestyle."cc: @RaysBaseball pic.twitter.com/f7klUJ0Y8U— Peter Schorsch 🇺🇦 (@PeterSchorschFL) June 6, 2022
Like Carlin said: fascism disguised as “tolerance.” https://t.co/se0HrMNJGu— Josh Denny (@JoshDenny) June 6, 2022
Wearing a patch doesn’t mean you have to go out and sleep with another dude. It’s literally just saying that you’re not cool with discrimination against people who might want to sleep with another dude. Everything doesn’t have to be zero sum.— Corey Richardson (@vexedinthecity) June 6, 2022
Wearing a patch doesn’t mean you have to go out and sleep with another dude. It’s literally just saying that you’re not cool with discrimination against people who might want to sleep with another dude. Everything doesn’t have to be zero sum.— Corey Richardson (@vexedinthecity) June 6, 2022
the pitchers who didn't wear the pride logo posted a 13.5 ERA (and earned the loss in relief). that kinda feels like a sign to me. https://t.co/Qa53aNnJVQ— Neverending Corey (@CoreyNever) June 6, 2022

Non-Florida authors

These are some of the best and most talked about new books I read in 2024.
When the Moon Hatched By Sarah A. Parker’ A sweeping, romantic high fantasy with a deeply immersive, dragon-filled world and intricate magic system. With so much heartbreak and hope, there’s no wonder When the Moon Hatched is a darling of the romantasy genre this year.
’House of Flame and Shadow by Sarah J. Maas’ Every new Sarah J. Maas book is the must-read of the season, and the hype for HOFAS reached a fever pitch with midnight release parties around the country. The book turned out to be an intense and dizzying conclusion to the Crescent City trilogy.
’The Rise and Fall of the Galactic Empire by Dr. Chris Kempshall’ Ever wanted to read a Star Wars history textbook? Well, this one charts the events of the Skywalker Saga, delving into the politics and government actions that led to the rise of the fascistic Galactic Empire. Fiction, but eerily parallels some of our own political and cultural issues.
’A Monsoon Rising by Thea Guanzon’ Not Star Wars, but Star Wars inspired with dragons and a unique magic system set in a fantastical, Philippines-inspired world. A Monsoon Rising is the second book in The Hurricane Wars trilogy of high fantasy with simmering romance.
Special mention: ‘Mistborn and the Stormlight Archive’ Love for Brandon Sanderson’s Cosmere books hit an all-time high this year thanks to his newest book, the fifth in the Stormlight Archive series. He’s my most-read author for 2024, and his books have literally altered my brain chemistry. Journey before destination.
I love that Rays player invoking the gay "lifestyle." He should met this gay couple we're friends with. Just had a kid. Living on no sleep. Constantly covered with barf and poop. Consider eating a pizza and watching 3/4 of a TV show a "victory."What a threatening "lifestyle."— Craig Calcaterra (@craigcalcaterra) June 6, 2022
The same people who say you should have to play the national anthem and stand for it are offended about putting "politics" in the game.If universal compulsory nationalism is part of baseball, it's already political.— crouching tiger, shining wizard (@bizmarkiedesade) June 6, 2022
Credit: Photo via Florida DBPR/Twitter

Justin Garcia has written for The Nation, Investigative Reporters & Editors Journal, the USA Today Network and various other news outlets. When he's not writing, Justin likes to make music, read, play...