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Sanford police chief steps down temporarily amid criticism for handling of Trayvon Martin case

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Sanford Police Chief Bill Lee Jr., resigns in response to the handling of the Trayvon Martin shooting, during a news conference in Sanford, Florida, Thursday, March 22, 2012. (Photos by Gary W. Green/Orlando Sentinel/MCT)

SANFORD, Fla. (MCT) — The police chief who for weeks has faced a firestorm of criticism over the shooting death of Trayvon Martin said Thursday that he is stepping down temporarily.

Bill Lee Jr., who became Sanford’s police chief in April after 27 years as a Seminole County deputy, said he is a “distraction” in the death of 17-year-old Trayvon.

“I do this in the hopes of restoring some semblance of calm to a city which has been in turmoil for several weeks,” said Lee, 52, in a brief news conference.

His announcement did little to appease protesters furious that he did not arrest the shooter, crime-watch volunteer George Zimmerman, who claimed self-defense in the Feb. 26 shooting.

A short time after the chief’s announcement, Trayvon’s father, Tracy Martin, told a cheering crowd in Sanford that Lee’s move “is nothing. We want an arrest. We want a conviction, and we want him (Zimmerman) sentenced for the murder of our son.”

When Lee became chief less than a year ago, beating out 175 other applicants, he took over an agency with major problems: a town with hard-core urban crime and a hostile black community. Still, Lee said it was his dream job: being chief of police in his hometown.

Lee grew up in a house on Sanford’s Hester Street, the son of a city firefighter. He started school in the mid-1960s, when local public schools were still segregated, and graduated from Seminole High School in 1977.

He went through the police academy at what is now Seminole State College and graduated from the University of Central Florida in 1981 with a degree in criminal justice. He would later get a master’s degree in public administration, again at UCF, according to his resume. He graduated from the FBI academy in 2001.

In 1998, Seminole County Sheriff Don Eslinger gave Lee his agency’s highest award, its medal of valor for stepping into the open and braving several rounds of gunfire to check on Deputy Eugene Gregory, who lay dead, the victim of a gunman who was hiding behind heavy machinery and holding off a SWAT team by firing thousands of rounds of ammunition.

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