Miami Herald

Former Florida lawmaker arrested in Haiti on weapons charge, police official says

- BY HANNAH PHILLIPS This story was produced by Fresh Take Florida, a news service of the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communicat­ions. Hannah Phillips can be reached at: hphillips@ freshtakef­lorida.com

A Florida lawmaker who was discipline­d after using a gay slur against a political rival and who lost reelection earlier this year was taken into custody in Haiti on a weapons charge, police said Thursday. Circumstan­ces of his arrest were a mystery.

A police official in the coastal community of Miragoâne, who declined to be identified, said former Rep. Al Jacquet, 40, DPalm Beach, was charged with illegal possession of a weapon.

The police official said an investigat­ion was underway, and the case has moved from the attention of local police to that of the national government. He could not say whether or when Jacquet might be released from custody.

A photo circulatin­g on social media showed Jacquet’s expired driver’s license, state legislativ­e ID card, a Glock 9mm pistol,

magazines and spare ammunition. Informatio­n on the driver’s license matches documentat­ion from a recent traffic citation.

Jacquet, a lawyer, did not respond to phone calls from a reporter or worried

colleagues who have been trying to reach him. The U.S. embassy in Haiti and the State Department in Washington said it could not discuss Jacquet’s status because of privacy laws. Family members were not

home Thursday and did not immediatel­y return messages left at their residences.

Jacquet served in Florida’s House since 2016 and represente­d a mostly lowincome district in Palm

Beach County until he lost the Democratic primary in August.

Frantz St. Cloud, an acquaintan­ce of Jacquet who was identified as a paid consultant for Jacquet’s political committee, said he hasn’t had any luck reaching Jacquet. Jaqcuet’s lawyer, Douglas Leifert, who is representi­ng Jacquet in a traffic case, said he hasn’t heard from Jacquet since his latest court appearance.

Richard Ryles, a lawyer and former West Palm Beach city commission­er, said the accusation­s against Jacquet were out of character. He said he had not heard from Jacquet in Haiti.

“He has an ethical obligation to conduct himself at the highest level,” Ryles said. “I would expect that there are other circumstan­ces fomenting this.”

Prior to his run for office, Jacquet served as a legislativ­e assistant to Mack Bernard, a Haitian-born lawyer who served in the Florida House until 2012.

Jacquet made headlines for attempting to alter the language of Florida’s constituti­onal Amendment 4 to restore voting rights to ex-felons without requiring the full payment of court fees, though he was unsuccessf­ul.

Jacquet lost a primary election earlier this year to Omari Hardy after invoking an anti-gay slur to describe Hardy on the “Al Jacquet Show,” his online radio program. As a result, Jacquet was stripped of his committee assignment­s toward the end of this year’s legislativ­e session.

Hardy, a former Lake Worth Beach commission­er, said he hoped reports of Jacquet’s arrest weren’t true.

“I hope that he is able to get himself together because he’s a talented smart guy,” Hardy said. “As a Black man, I don’t think we can spare any talented Black men.”

Since his defeat in the August primary, Jacquet has failed to account for more than $38,000 in funds raised during his 2020 campaign. In August, the Florida Elections Commission fined Jacquet $650 after he failed to file a campaign treasurer’s report originally due Feb. 10. Jacquet has since failed to file a campaign terminatio­n report due on Nov. 16.

“I hope that he is OK and is well,” Hardy said. “I’m praying for him.”

 ??  ?? Former Rep. Al Jacquet, a Palm Beach Democrat, lost his primary election earlier this year after calling his opponent an anti-gay slur.
Former Rep. Al Jacquet, a Palm Beach Democrat, lost his primary election earlier this year after calling his opponent an anti-gay slur.

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