Miami Herald

Ousted Miami commission­er facing criminal charges sues city over voting-map change

- BY JOEY FLECHAS jflechas@miamiheral­d.com Joey Flechas: 305-376-3602, @joeflech

As former Miami Commission­er Alex Díaz de la Portilla awaits trial on corruption charges, he is suing the city over recent voting-map changes that he says are illegal.

Díaz de la Portilla and Jose Garcia, the pastor at the Allapattah church New Hope Ministries, accuse the city of violating a state law when commission­ers approved a change to Miami’s voting map in January. In a 3-1 vote, commission­ers shifted the boundary for District 1 to include the longtime family home of Commission­er Miguel Angel Gabela, whose house had been excluded from the district in a previous voting map approved in June.

Gabela had initially proposed re-including his home in the district in December shortly after he beat Díaz de la Portilla in a runoff election. Commission­ers approved the shifted boundary in a vote that included Gabela, and on Christmas Eve, Mayor Francis Suarez vetoed the resolution, citing a state law that prevents sitting elected officials from redrawing district boundaries to favor themselves.

In January, commission­ers allowed the mayor’s veto to stand. But in separate 3-1 vote in which Gabela did not participat­e, the commission approved the same boundary change that places Gabela’s home in his district. The day

before, Miami-Dade’s top ethics official said Gabela would violate the county ethics code if he voted on the matter.

In the lawsuit they filed Monday, Díaz de la Portilla and Garcia cite that same state law while arguing that the commission’s January vote was illegal.

“The City’s gerrymande­red redistrict­ing to accommodat­e the residency of an incumbent Commission­er violates Florida law and the Constituti­ons and laws of the United States and the State of Florida, and denying them equal protection of the laws,” reads the lawsuit.

The law went into effect July 1.

“Districts may not be drawn with the intent to favor or disfavor a candidate for member of the governing body or an incumbent member of the governing body based on the candidate’s or incumbent’s residentia­l address,” the law states.

The lawsuit was filed in Miami-Dade County Circuit Court by Díaz de la Portilla’s defense attorney, Benedict Kuehne. Kuehne is also representi­ng Díaz de la Portilla in a criminal case that led to the commission­er’s removal from office in September after he was arrested and accused of selling his vote in exchange for campaign contributi­ons and gifts. The commission­er, who pleaded not guilty, is awaiting trial.

The complaint lists the city of Miami and City Clerk Todd Hannon as defendants. City Attorney Victoria Méndez did not immediatel­y respond to the Miami Herald’s request for comments on Tuesday.

OTHER LAWSUITS

Monday’s lawsuit is the latest in a wave of litigation stemming from the controvers­ial redrawing of the city’s voting map. In separate suit, Díaz de la Portilla has accused Gabela of living outside the district boundaries as he campaigned for the District 1 seat. That case is pending.

Meanwhile, the city’s voting map is in flux because of a separate federal lawsuit. Community groups and residents allege the city adopted an unconstitu­tional, racially gerrymande­red map that used racial quotas to sort city residents by race and ethnicity.

After a two-day trial in early February, the judge is expected to rule in the federal case in the coming weeks. The city and plaintiffs could settle before then.

THE CITY’S GERRYMANDE­RED REDISTRICT­ING TO ACCOMMODAT­E THE RESIDENCY OF AN INCUMBENT COMMISSION­ER VIOLATES FLORIDA LAW. Alex Diaz de la Portilla’s lawsuit filing

 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com | 2023 ?? Former Miami City Commission­er Alex Diaz de la Portilla accuses the city of violating a state law when commission­ers approved a change to Miami’s voting map.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com | 2023 Former Miami City Commission­er Alex Diaz de la Portilla accuses the city of violating a state law when commission­ers approved a change to Miami’s voting map.
 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com | Feb. 8, 2024 ?? Commission­ers shifted the boundary for District 1 to include the longtime family home of Commission­er Miguel Angel Gabela, whose house had been excluded from the district in a previous voting map.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com | Feb. 8, 2024 Commission­ers shifted the boundary for District 1 to include the longtime family home of Commission­er Miguel Angel Gabela, whose house had been excluded from the district in a previous voting map.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States