Miami Herald (Sunday)

POLICE CHIEF

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Reached by phone, Jones’ ex-wife, Whitney Houston (no relation to the late singer), said that after the dispute and their divorce later in 2001, she and Jones became close friends and remain on good terms. Jones was financiall­y supportive after Houston had a daughter, helping with enrollment at a daycare center, she said.

“Our relationsh­ip, even after our divorce, continued to be one that was loving and supportive,” Houston said. “I feel like he’s beyond redeemed himself.”

The 2001 incident, Houston added, was a “one-off kind of thing” that was “out of character for both of us.”

THE INCIDENT

On June 26, 2001, Jones finished a late-night police shift and realized he had left his keys at home.

Jones asked Houston if he could come to her house in Coconut Grove to retrieve a spare key, according to an internal affairs report reviewed by the Herald. Houston said he could not come over because she was “busy,” Jones told investigat­ors.

Around 1:30 a.m., Jones drove his marked police car to Houston’s home. When she wouldn’t let him past a security gate, Jones jumped over a security fence and climbed to a second-floor balcony, the report says, then opened a sliding glass door to get inside.

Jones found his wife inside with a man she was dating, who proceeded to leave the house, according to the report. During an ensuing argument, Jones allegedly wouldn’t let Houston leave and at one point tried to pull her off a couch while she sat on top of the spare key, causing “minor bruising” to her wrist.

Jones said Houston grabbed a “figurine” during the dispute and that he took it out of her hand, fearing she might hit him with it.

Houston ultimately called the police after driving to a friend’s house, the report says. Miami police responded and didn’t initially arrest Jones, but he was informed later that day that criminal charges would be filed. He turned himself in to Miami police the same day.

Jones was charged with burglary of an occupied home involving battery and kidnapping, two felonies and a misdemeano­r, according to the internal affairs report and online court records.

Jones said he was held in jail for about 20 days as the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office sought to block his release. He said he was “completely shocked” by the criminal charges and “didn’t feel [he] did anything wrong.” Still, he said, he now regrets how he handled it.

“In retrospect, I wish I had handled that differentl­y,” Jones said. “I regret going to the house that evening.”

Jones said the incident and fallout was “the most difficult and most painful thing I’ve experience­d in my entire life.”

He was suspended indefinite­ly without pay while the charges were pending, returning to work almost a year later when prosecutor­s dropped the charges. Houston said she didn’t want to pursue the matter, records show, and Jones agreed to complete anger management classes.

An internal affairs investigat­ion continued, concluding in late 2002 that Jones was guilty of “actions which amount to disgracefu­l conduct while on or off duty.” That led to an additional four-week, unpaid suspension, which Jones served in January 2003.

In an interview Thursday, Jones seemed to contradict parts of a 2002 sworn statement he made to internal affairs investigat­ors after the incident. He denied that Houston had told him not to come over to her house, that he had jumped over a security gate, and that he had grabbed Houston’s wrist while she sat on the couch.

On Friday, after reviewing the internal affairs report, Jones said he may have been “mistaken” about the details.

”It’s something I actually work hard in trying to forget,” he said.

Jones entered into a “last chance agreement” with the city of Miami Beach in December 2002, meaning he was at risk of being fired if he committed other violations. He has not been suspended since, department records show.

Jones had faced two brief suspension­s shortly after starting his career in Miami Beach in 1996, of one day and five days, respective­ly, for failing to attend court appearance­s in his capacity as an officer.

The 2001 incident made Jones more sensitive toward how police should deal with domestic incidents, he said, something he plans on addressing with police officers through training.

“I’m more empathetic now,” Jones said, adding that it was important “to get more facts and details.”

‘MOMENTOUS’ APPOINTMEN­T

City Commission­er Ricky Arriola told the Herald he had known about the 2001 incident for years, having heard about it from other people in the police department. He said it doesn’t concern him, calling Jones a “standup guy.”

“I’ve got no concerns whatsoever that he’s going to do a really great job for our community,” Arriola said.

Bobby Hernandez, president of the Miami Beach Fraternal Order of Police, worked as Jones’ boss in the agency’s public informatio­n office shortly after his suspension. He called Jones’ arrest “an unfortunat­e personal matter that he’s moved on from,” saying the chief-inwaiting has had an “exemplary career” since then.

“He’s a great leader. He’s great to work with and he’s great to work for,” Hernandez said. “I’m zero percent concerned about him. I have 100 percent confidence that he will make this place better.”

Hudak announced the appointmen­t of Jones last month after an interview process that was limited to internal candidates. Jones, the department’s secondin-command, was widely viewed as a frontrunne­r.

Jones had risen from patrol officer to detective, sergeant, lieutenant, captain and major before being sworn in as deputy chief in 2019 on the same day Clements became the department’s top cop.

At the July 26 commission meeting where Jones’ appointmen­t was confirmed, Gelber, the mayor, called it a “momentous moment.”

“I’m very comfortabl­e that it’s the right person at the right time,” he said.

Jones acknowledg­ed the historic nature of his appointmen­t at the meeting, saying that, as a young Black man, he wasn’t comfortabl­e visiting Miami Beach because of racism in the city.

“When I became a Miami Beach police officer, my dad cried,” he said. “He cried because of the history of the way Black people were treated in this city.”

Jones’ appointmen­t comes at a moment of intense focus on crime among Miami Beach residents, particular­ly in South Beach, even as the city’s crime rate has declined overall. Public safety has been cited as one of the top priorities for several candidates running for mayor in November, when Gelber will be term-limited.

The move also follows years of scrutiny over the police department’s treatment of Black visitors.

In 2021, five Miami Beach officers were arrested for using excessive force on a Black man in handcuffs and for pummeling a Black bystander who was recording the incident. The city also faced criticism for enacting an ordinance that disproport­ionately targeted Black visitors who made video recordings of police. That law was enacted as part of a series of toughon-crime measures following an unruly spring break in 2021.

Police and city leaders have continued to grapple with how to keep people safe and manage large crowds of young, mostly Black visitors during spring break in March after a pair of deadly shootings this year on Ocean Drive.

Aaron Leibowitz: 305-376-2235, @aaron_leib Charles Rabin: 305-376-3672, @chuckrabin

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