Miami Herald

Dolphins owner gives Super Bowl tickets to Gimenez

- BY JOEY FLECHAS, JIMENA TAVEL, AND DOUGLAS HANKS jflechas@miamiheral­d.com jtavel@miamiheral­d.com dhanks@miamiheral­d.com

Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez accepted a gift of two $4,000 Super Bowl tickets from Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross, according to an ethics report, a gift made at a time when the congressio­nal candidate is helping the real estate mogul bring Formula One racing to Hard Rock Stadium.

The planned gift was revealed in a memorandum from Jose Arrojo, the executive director of MiamiDade Commission on Ethics and Public Trust. In the document, issued Friday and obtained by el Nuevo Herald through a public records request, Arrojo opines that the county ethics code allows elected officials to accept gifts as long as they aren’t part of a quid pro quo transactio­n. Gimenez was able to accept Ross’ tickets because the commission found no evidence that Gimenez had requested the tickets from Ross or accepted them in exchange for a favor, Arrojo wrote.

The memo states that

“Mr. Ross has offered to gift, and Mayor Gimenez has accepted, two event tickets valued at $8,000.” The report does not say whether Ross actually gave the tickets to Gimenez. Gimenez’s office did not respond to inquiries about the mayor’s plans for the tickets.

Gimenez has been an ally of Ross in county government, negotiatin­g a subsidy deal in 2014 worth up to $5.75 million a year for the Dolphins and vetoing county legislatio­n that would hamper his efforts to bring Formula One racing to Hard Rock. His administra­tion also agreed to pay $4 million in Super Bowl expenses, including covering $1 million worth of hotel rooms for

NFL players this week. Rodney Barreto, chairman of the Super Bowl Host Committee, is an owner of the Coral Gables lobbying firm, Floridian Partners, which represents the Dolphins in county talks.

Gimenez’s Super Bowl plans were publicly hazy Friday evening. His press secretary, Patricia Abril, said his office was “not sure if he’s going” to the game. The statement was issued before she was asked about the reported gifted tickets from Ross.

This is the first Super Bowl for Gimenez as mayor. He was elected in 2011, and is now running in the Republican congressio­nal primary for Florida’s 26th District, seeking a seat held by freshman Democrat Debbie Mucarsel-Powell.

The Host Committee sent out form letters from Barreto to elected officials across Miami-Dade offering to let them purchase Super Bowl tickets at face value. Letters in early January sent to Miami-Dade commission­ers offered pairs of tickets worth $3,000 each. Emails turned over to the Miami Herald this week through publicreco­rd requests did not show any commission­er accepting the offer.

“Hi Rodney, Thanks so much for considerin­g me,” Commission­er Eileen Higgins wrote back Jan. 4. “It’s just a little out of my budget for the year, but I’ll see you at a couple of the other events.”

Like Gimenez’s office on Friday, other elected officials expressed uncertaint­y about whether they planned to attend the biggest sporting event of the year, and one requiring the hottest tickets in town. “I don’t know yet,” said Oliver Gilbert, mayor of Miami Gardens, the city that’s home to Hard Rock Stadium.

Gimenez remains a vital player in the future of Hard Rock. The lobbying team Ross employs for the Dolphins is still fighting antiFormul­a One county legislatio­n backed by Commission­er

Barbara Jordan, who represents Miami Gardens. A final vote is scheduled for Tuesday.

According to the ethics commission memo, Ross indicated he is paying for the tickets with his personal money — instead of using funds from any of the entities Ross is affiliated with — and that future invoices will prove this.

The ethics code requires officehold­ers to publicly disclose any gift worth more than $100, unless the gift is accepted as “official business.” In this case, Gimenez could argue the game is official business since he’s due to participat­e in a proclamati­on ceremony in his official capacity as mayor.

However, Arrojo asked him and any other local office who accepted tickets to report them “in abundance of caution, and to promote transparen­cy in local government.”

“We recommende­d he disclose the gift in a public filing, and he agreed,” Arrojo said. “It’s up to the voters and the general public to decide on the value of it and what that means.”

Gimenez isn’t the only mayor who’s been gifted tickets.

Miami Mayor Francis Suarez received that Host Committee letter but decided he wasn’t going to drop $6,000 for him and his wife to attend the game he hopes results in a victory for the Kansas City Chiefs over the San Francisco 49ers.

“I’m kind of leaning KC,” Suarez said. “I’m an AFC guy.”

Soon after, a wealthy friend and donor asked the mayor if he was going to the big game. Suarez said he replied no, but he had an offer to buy tickets. That’s when the donor, philanthro­pist and wealth advisor Eugene Frenkel offered to pick up the tab, Suarez said. The first-term mayor accepted the gift for him and his wife, which he told the Miami Herald he will disclose in a required quarterly report in which elected officials list gifts they receive. The mayor said his benefactor has no business with the city.

Frenkel is on the board for Make-A-Wish of South Florida, and the CEO of Legacy Wealth Advisors. He also gave a political committee controlled by Suarez $5,000 in 2017, when he was running for mayor.

Joey Flechas: 305-376-3602, @joeflech

Jimena Tavel: 305-376-2819, @taveljimen­a

Douglas Hanks: 305-376-3605, @doug_hanks

 ?? ROBERTO KOLTUN el Nuevo Herald file ?? Dolphins owner Stephen Ross gave Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez a pair of $4,000 Super Bowl tickets.
ROBERTO KOLTUN el Nuevo Herald file Dolphins owner Stephen Ross gave Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez a pair of $4,000 Super Bowl tickets.
 ?? Sun Sentinel file, 2013 ??
Sun Sentinel file, 2013

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