A group of Tallahassee community organizations held a virtual news conference calling for the removal of Police Chief Lawrence Revell from his position for his paid attendance and comments during a controversial religious retreat last month.

The news conference was previously planned to be held outside City Hall but was moved online due to rain. It was hosted by over 10 organizations and featured 6 speakers who collectively called for Mayor John Dailey and the City Commissioners to instruct City Manager Reese Goad to fire Revell.

Revell attended the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association's Chief Law Enforcement Officer Appreciation Event retreat from Sept. 28-30. The BGEA openly opposes same-sex marriage and employment protections from discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation.

During the retreat, Revell gave a speech where he appeared to advocate for promoting Christianity in law enforcement agencies.

"What is it that you want for the men and women that serve your community every day? Hopefully at the very top of that list is for them to know Jesus Christ as their lord and savior," he said in the speech.

Lauren Brenzel, statewide director of organizing for Planned Parenthood of North, South and East Florida and speaker during the news conference, said it was wrong for Revell to attend an event for an anti-LGBTQ+ organization under his capacity as police chief.

"We cannot have a police chief who works with organizations that dehumanize, criminalize and promote the suffering of LGBTQ+ individuals and pretend like that is OK," they said. "When we talk about communities feeling afraid of police, this is why."

Barbara DeVane, a lobbyist for the Florida National Organization for Women, said Revell's speech during the conference violated the separation of church and state.

"He does not have the right to represent a government agency using his title, and talking about spreading Christianity to police officials, officers, the police force," she said. "That is the business of preachers and missionaries, not a chief of police."

During a City Commission meeting Wednesday, Revell said he attended the retreat on his own time and defended the BGEA.

"They do great and mighty things all around this world," he said.

He said he does not discriminate against anyone and denied that he proselytizes his beliefs at work.

"How I treat the citizens of this community and how I treat members of my police department will never, ever include any type of discrimination. If you want to know whether that is true or not, go ask the men and women of my department," he said.

Lakey Love, co-founder of the Florida Coalition for Transgender Liberation, said Revell's comments were inappropriate because he was speaking at an event for chief law enforcement officers where he was recognized as the Tallahassee Police Chief.

"We're not denying that he's entitled to his beliefs," they said. "When you speak publicly and openly, it's a problem."

Delilah Pierre, field director for the Tallahassee Community Action Committee, attended Wednesday's city commission meeting. She pushed back against his comments that he does not discriminate, arguing his comments during his retreat speech alluded to actions he carried out on the job.

"I listened to that whole speech he gave, where he talks about holding the line. Where he talks about specifically and purposely using his position to push Christian values on people who might not accept that," she said.

Pierre also discussed Revell's controversial shooting of 19-year-old George Williams in September 1996. A grand jury found Revell's actions were justified months after the shooting, but a witness claiming the shooting did not happen as police say was not called to testify. Friends and family members of Williams protested Revell's appointment to police chief in 2019.

"We have to understand that Revell has a significant power and influence over how people in neighborhoods and communities are treated," she said. "And I don't think he cares about people."

An email campaign to city officials sponsored by Florida Coalition for Transgender Liberation and promoted during the news conference has resulted in 2,499 emails calling for Revell's removal at the time of this story's publication.