Davenport Man Sues Osceola Deputies Over Wrongful Handcuffing

An upstate New York man says his Central Florida getaway turned into a nightmare when Osceola County deputies handcuffed and pinned him at a Davenport vacation rental during an “attempt to locate” in March 2025. He claims the encounter left him with a torn rotator cuff that required surgery and sidelined his life for more than a year. His new federal lawsuit seeks monetary damages and demands a jury trial.

According to WESH, the complaint names four Osceola County deputies and also lists two others who were later exonerated by the sheriff’s office. An internal affairs investigation sustained violations against two deputies, and the agency imposed 32-hour suspensions and mandatory retraining for some personnel, the report said.

The suit says the deputies were responding to an “attempt to locate” request from the Polk County Sheriff’s Office, but alleges the address listed in that request did not match the Davenport rental where deputies went in and detained the man.

Department Facing Recurring Litigation

The Tantalo filing arrives as the Osceola County Sheriff’s Office is already under legal and public scrutiny from other recent civil cases. A separate federal lawsuit, stemming from a 2022 gas-station taser incident that left a man badly burned, survived a motion to dismiss in March 2026, as reported by ClickOrlando. That case has kept questions about deputy use of force and judgment squarely in the spotlight.

Plaintiff And Attorney Push For Accountability

Tantalo’s attorney, James Slater, argues that deputies continued force and detention after witnessing unlawful entry and seizure, according to WESH. The complaint describes Tantalo being handcuffed and pinned to the ground inside the Davenport rental while his wife, Karen, dialed 911 after hearing his screams…

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