Miami Herald

Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle cruises to 7th term

- BY CHARLES RABIN crabin@miamiheral­d.com

The longest-serving state attorney in Miami-Dade County history coasted to a seventh term Friday when a noon filing deadline passed and no other candidate surfaced.

Katherine Fernandez Rundle, who was automatica­lly reelected without opposition, is expected to be sworn in on Jan. 7.

Friday’s victory was the second time the political powerhouse — who spent 15 years as a top assistant before replacing Janet Reno, who left to become U.S. attorney general — has not faced an opponent. She also ran unopposed in

2016. In other years, Fernandez Rundle has defeated a series of challenger­s, including Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge Alberto Milian, defense attorney Rod Vareen and former ACLU of Florida Deputy Director and Florida Internatio­nal University professor Melba Pearson.

In a prepared statement, the state attorney said she was “humbled” and “grateful” to have won a seventh term.

“This is a testament to our continued work in the community and my longstandi­ng commitment to always put public safety first and seek justice for victims, fairness for all,” said Fernandez Rundle.

The 73-year-old Democrat — who has recently come under fire for the mishandlin­g of a highprofil­e murder case in which two prosecutor­s were tossed by a judge — was first appointed to office in 1993 and elected a year later. Though there has been a string of political and law-enforcemen­t arrests in recent years, Fernandez Rundle has also been criticized for never having prosecuted a police officer for a fatal shooting.

Her office did prosecute former North Miami Police Officer Jonathan Aledda for the 2016 shooting of a behavioral therapist as he laid down with his hands in the air on a roadway next to his severely autistic client. Aledda said it was an accident. He was found guilty of culpable negligence three years later and received a year’s probation. The conviction was overturned and Fernandez Rundle’s office chose not to move forward with another trial.

Under her watch, the state attorney’s office has embedded investigat­ors with some police units. They often show up at major crime scenes. State investigat­ors also sit in on interviews about serious crimes — practices unheard of in most other counties.

The state attorney’s office has also created about a dozen investigat­ive task forces to deal with human traffickin­g, gangs, hate crimes and other issues since Fernandez Rundle has taken office.

But Fernandez Rundle could face the unraveling of some, or even all, of those units. That’s because for the first time in 57 years, Miami-Dade will have an elected sheriff with the power to scuttle those task forces in November.

The president of MiamiDade’s largest police union said he expects little change in the dynamics between the state attorney’s office and police even with a new sheriff. And late last year, Fernanez Rundle said she was optimistic the transition would be smooth and promised to remain focused on crime.

Charles Rabin: 305-376-3672, @chuckrabin

 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com | Jan. 26, 2023 ?? Katherine Fernandez Rundle was automatica­lly reelected because no one challenged her.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com | Jan. 26, 2023 Katherine Fernandez Rundle was automatica­lly reelected because no one challenged her.

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