Miami Herald

Mayor Suarez was questioned in SEC case against developer who paid him

- BY JAY WEAVER, TESS RISKI, SARAH BLASKEY AND JOEY FLECHAS jweaver@miamiheral­d.com triski@miamiheral­d.com sblaskey@miamiheral­d.com jflechas@miamiheral­d.com

When the Securities and Exchange Commission sued developer Rishi Kapoor in December, accusing him of defrauding investors in his real estate projects, the SEC’s lawsuit made no mention of his company’s consulting agreement with Miami Mayor Francis Suarez.

But that didn’t leave Suarez, who was not named as a defendant, entirely unscathed.

In April, Suarez was compelled under subpoena to give a sworn statement related to the Kapoor case, according to three people familiar with the matter. Although his statement under oath is not a public record, those familiar with Suarez’s testimony say he was questioned by SEC lawyers about his consulting contract with Kapoor to find investors for the developer’s real estate projects.

The mayor has refused to make public a copy of the contract since questions about his work for the developer became public last year, and instead said there was no conflict of interest. The Miami Herald has previously reported that the mayor received a $10,000 monthly retainer but has now learned that he was also promised commission­s if he helped woo investors, find real estate and secure financing for Kapoor’s projects in Miami and elsewhere.

Also notable: The agreement promised Suarez an equity stake in Kapoor’s company if he worked as a consultant for a certain period of time, though ultimately he did not receive it, according to people familiar with the contract and the developer’s business.

The date on the contract, which was executed in July 2021, when Suarez received his first $10,000 payment, appears to undermine the mayor’s longstandi­ng claim that he has never mixed

his public work with his private employment. A Suarez-Kapoor meeting that was organized through official city channels and listed on Suarez’s mayoral calendar took place in late August 2021 on Kapoor’s yacht. By that point, the mayor had already received $20,000 from URBIN LLC, one of Kapoor’s former developmen­t companies, sources said.

Although the exact nature of Suarez’s statement to the SEC is unknown, the agency’s probe generally focuses on the mayor’s contract with the developer, the nature of his work and his compensati­on beyond the retainer. But the details of Suarez’s contract, and in particular its start date, are more broadly relevant as MiamiDade County ethics officials, state prosecutor­s and federal authoritie­s, including the FBI, investigat­e whether the mayor misused his public office for private gain.

Kapoor hired Suarez in July 2021 after more than a year of working the mayor’s channels at City Hall to push through legislatio­n beneficial to one of the developer’s planned projects in Coconut Grove.

The next month, the two met at the Cocoplum Yacht Club and went out on Kapoor’s yacht, according to public records and sources familiar with the meeting.

Kapoor said through his attorney that he did not discuss business with Suarez at the August rendezvous. But the timing of the meeting, in which Suarez spent two hours with Kapoor in what appears to be his mayoral capacity at a time when he was also on the developer’s payroll, underscore­s a possible breach of the firewall that Suarez is supposed to maintain between his public office and private employer, according to county ethics laws.

Suarez and his defense attorney, Armando Rosquete, did not respond to requests for comments on his statement to the SEC, the contract or the mayor’s yacht meeting with Kapoor.

URBIN ended up paying Suarez more than $200,000 over two years — a greater amount than the Herald originally reported — according to corporate records and sources familiar with the payments. The payments continued through at least March 2023, a couple of months before Suarez’s involvemen­t in the company was revealed in a lawsuit.

Suarez’s contract included financial incentives promising commission­s based on a small percentage of any investment that he secured for the company’s “work-live” developmen­t projects, sources said. In effect, the mayor could be compensate­d beyond his monthly retainer fee if he found an investor and made introducti­ons with Kapoor.

As it turned out, according to numerous people familiar with his consulting work for URBIN, Suarez never delivered any new investors between 2021 and 2023 and didn’t receive any compensati­on beyond the monthly fee.

Similar incentives were also written into Suarez’s contract with URBIN if he helped facilitate a land or loan deal for the company. That never happened, either, according to sources familiar with the contract.

SEC lawyers are pursuing allegation­s that Kapoor misled investors in his condo and retail projects developed by URBIN and its parent company, Location Ventures.

The SEC’s civil suit accuses Kapoor of “fraudulent” activities while raising about $93 million from more than 50 investors in his companies’ projects in Miami, Miami Beach,

Coral Gables and Fort Lauderdale between January 2018 and March

2023.

Kapoor’s defense attorney, Fred Schwartz, said his client “defrauded no one and that the SEC has been misled by disgruntle­d former employees and a few greedy investors.”

SEC lawyers are also delving into whether Kapoor and Suarez acted as unregister­ed investment brokers under SEC laws by offering securities in the form of equity in real estate deals.

South Florida lawyer David Chase, a former

SEC enforcemen­t attorney who has defended individual­s in SEC investigat­ions for over 25 years, is not involved in the Kapoor case and has no views on the allegation­s against him.

Chase said the SEC would have likely questioned Suarez about whether he acted as an unregister­ed broker in violation of federal securities laws if his contract’s terms with Kapoor’s company provided him incentives for introducin­g investors.

“To act as an unregister­ed broker, you have to, among other activities, receive transactio­n-based compensati­on (typically a commission), actively market the project to investors, and provide advice as to the merits of the investment,” Chase said in email to the Herald.

If Suarez simply made investor introducti­ons and was compensate­d accordingl­y, without engaging in typical “broker” activity, Chase said he believes the SEC would not have a viable case.

“This is particular­ly so if the mayor never made an investor introducti­on,” Chase said.

NO CLEAR LINE

Suarez, a part-time mayor with more than a dozen outside jobs in the private sector, has always maintained that he never mixes his government work with his private employment.

He remained steadfast when a lawsuit revealed last year that he had been hired as a $10,000-amonth consultant for “unknown services” by Kapoor, whose condominiu­m project in Coconut Grove needed the city’s approval.

After the news broke, the mayor’s then-spokespers­on, Soledad Cedro, told reporters “no issues connected to Location Ventures or [URBIN] have come before the Mayor in his official capacity.”

When internal documents from the developer’s company indicated that Kapoor had used connection­s in the mayor’s office to help overcome zoning hurdles, Suarez denied any involvemen­t.

Suarez told reporters who approached him last May outside his office at City Hall that he had never had any meetings with Kapoor — although presumably he meant that he had never met with his private employer in his official capacity as mayor.

Public records later revealed that he and Kapoor met regularly in 2020 and 2021 as they worked with city staff and commission­ers to draft an amendment to the city code dealing with the kind of microunits and co-living developmen­ts that Kapoor was hoping to develop in Miami.

Suarez never responded to the Herald’s questions about those meetings, which appeared to contradict his previous statements. But the developer’s first attorney, Brian Goodkind, told the Herald last year that the legislativ­e push was over long before Suarez was on the company payroll.

Now, the previously unknown contract details give new significan­ce to the twilight meeting at the Cocoplum Yacht Club, demonstrat­ing how Suarez’s dual roles as public servant and paid consultant became intertwine­d.

One month after Kapoor put Suarez on his payroll, the mayor met with the developer on Kapoor’s yacht on Aug. 23, 2021, a meeting organized through Suarez’s mayoral office and listed on his official city calendar.

Time spent on private meetings and personal matters is generally listed on the mayor’s calendar as “FXS block,” without any elaboratio­n. But the details on the calendar indicate that Suarez was meeting with Kapoor that night in his capacity as mayor — at a time when he was already receiving regular income from one of the developer’s companies.

Suarez’s executive assistant sent out an email invite to the mayor, four of his sergeants-at-arms and Kapoor for the meeting that August evening, and they all confirmed, according to emails obtained through a public-records request.

It remains unknown what the two men discussed on Kapoor’s 55-foot Viking Princess powerboat. Kapoor’s defense attorney, Schwartz, declined to elaborate on his client’s yacht outing with the mayor but said “no business was discussed that day.“

In a statement to the Herald, Anthony Alfieri, an ethics expert at the University of Miami School of Law, condemned what he described as Suarez’s “web of self-serving financial relationsh­ips with benefitsee­king private interests doing business within the City of Miami, in this case Rishi Kapoor and his company, URBIN.”

Alfieri said those extracurri­cular relationsh­ips show how the mayor has failed to “respect the bright-line boundaries” in the county ethics code prohibitin­g financial conflicts of interest for public officials.

Suarez adamantly denied that any of his outside jobs with Kapoor’s company and other employers resulted in conflicts of interest in an Oct. 6 statement to the Herald, saying: “I have balanced my work on behalf of the community and my private obligation­s to the best of my ability in compliance with the rules set forth for elected officials.”

On a local TV news show last year, the mayor said there was a conflict provision that was in the contract with Kapoor’s company and that Suarez said “prevented [the developer] from asking for anything related to the city.”

Kapoor’s former company, Location Ventures, provided a different interpreta­tion of the contract, however.

“The agreement specifical­ly makes mention that Mayor Suarez may recuse himself or resign from his advisory role should there be any conflicts of interest,” the company said in a statement nearly a year ago.

The Herald has learned that the company’s statement more accurately reflects the contract’s language.

Following the revelation­s about his private work for the Miami developer, the Herald wrote a series of stories about Suarez’s private jobs, which have made him a multimilli­onaire since he became mayor.

When WPLG-ABC 10’s Glenna Milberg asked Suarez in January whether he thought any of those employers would have hired him were he not the mayor, Suarez walked out of the interview.

“I’m done,” he said.

Jay Weaver: 305-376-3446, @jayhweaver Tess Riski: @tessriski Sarah Blaskey: 305-376-2811, @blaskey_S Joey Flechas: 305-376-3602, @joeflech

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