Miami Herald

Ethics panel wants tougher penalty for sham candidate in Miami-Dade race

- BY ANA CEBALLOS aceballos@miamiheral­d.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

A state ethics panel on Friday rejected a $6,500 fine against a sham noparty candidate who ran in a 2020 Miami-Dade legislativ­e race. The Florida Commission on Ethics’ rare move was triggered by calls for stiffer penalties in a case that one commission­er called one of the “most egregious” in Florida.

The commission also found probable cause that Alexis Pedro Rodriguez filed inaccurate campaign documents with the state and accepted money from former Republican state Sen. Frank Artiles with the understand­ing that he would change his party affiliatio­n from Republican to no party to qualify to run in the Senate District 37 election.

Rodriguez — who is facing criminal charges in a Miami court, along with Artiles — has the option to have a full evidentiar­y hearing in the ethics case or can try to renegotiat­e a settlement with an ethicscomm­ission advocate.

Either way, the matter will need to come back to the commission. When it does, there will be a determinat­ion on whether any laws were broken, and if so, what penalties should be imposed.

Commission­ers Jim Waldman and Travis Cummings, two of the nine commission­ers, acknowledg­ed on Friday that they considered Artiles a “friend,” a disclosure that they said should not impact their ability to remain impartial.

‘A FLAT-OUT BRIBE’

Waldman, a Fort Lauderdale attorney and a Democrat who served as a member of the Florida House with Artiles, said Rodriguez deserved to pay the maximum penalty for the alleged violations.

That would amount to $20,000.

“I find this to be the most egregious thing that we’ve had since I’ve been on the commission. This actually was determinat­ive, probably, of an election and this was a flat-out bribe,” Waldman said. “We ought to have the maximum fine . ... I just can’t support this.”

Commission Chair Joanne Leznoff agreed that a different agreement needed to be reached.

“I don’t know whether this is the most egregious behavior, but it certainly ranks up there,” said Leznoff, a Republican from Fernandina Beach. “We deal with some very thorny issues, and the sacred trust regarding elections is paramount. So I, too, cannot feel comfortabl­e with a vote that we support this stipulated agreement.”

The stipulated agreement that the commission rejected had been reached in June. It said that Rodriguez would pay $1,500 for filing an inaccurate financial disclosure and $5,000 for accepting money with the understand­ing that he would change his party affiliatio­n to qualify to run as a candidate in the Senate race. Rodriguez’s attorney, William Barzee, and Elizabeth Miller, an ethicscomm­ission advocate, signed the agreement.

Miller said the $6,500 was reached, in part, because Rodriguez had criminal penalties and fines to pay in court stemming from criminal charges, which differ from the ethics violations.

Barzee declined to comment when reached by phone on Friday.

ORIGIN OF THE ETHICS COMPLAINT

The ethics complaint was brought against Rodriguez in November 2020 by Juan Carlos Planas,

a former Republican lawmaker and current Democratic elections attorney who represente­d former Sen. José Javier Rodríguez, the Democratic incumbent in the Senate District 37 race.

José Javier Rodríguez lost the race to Republican Ileana Garcia, a television personalit­y and co-founder of Latinas for Trump, by 32 votes. Rodriguez, the no-party candidate who shares a surname with the Democratic incumbent, received more than 6,000 votes.

Planas said he was “shocked” to see the Florida Ethics Commission reject the $6,500 fine. He had no objections to the fine amount, in part, because Rodriguez was cooperatin­g, he said.

“It’s a double-edged sword. I’m glad that this will send a message for anyone not to do this in the future. But I hope this does not affect the cooperatio­n that is being provided,” Planas said Friday.

Planas said he hopes the decision by the ethics commission does not create a “disincenti­ve” for Rodriguez to stop cooperatin­g with authoritie­s.

Rodriguez, an auto-parts dealer who has been struggling financiall­y, has been cooperatin­g with authoritie­s.

The ethics case differs from the criminal case, in which both Rodriguez and Artiles are tangled up in Miami court. But the cases stem from the allegation that Rodriguez accepted about $44,000 from Artiles in return for running in the Senate race.

Both men have pleaded not guilty to felony charges, and a jury trial is scheduled to begin Aug. 30.

Artiles and Rodriguez were both charged with four third-degree felonies, including conspiracy to make or accept campaign contributi­ons in excess of legal limits, accepting and making those excess campaign contributi­ons, false swearing in connection to an election and submitting false voter informatio­n.

Under state law, those charges carry sentences of up to five years in prison if convicted.

Rodriguez has been cooperatin­g with Miami prosecutor­s in the criminal case.

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Alexis Pedro Rodriguez leaves the Turner Guilford Knight Correction­al Center in Miami on March 18. Rodriguez, who shares a surname with the then-incumbent senator in Senate District 37, received more than 6,000 votes as a no-party candidate in a race that the Democratic incumbent lost by 32 votes to a third candidate, who is a Republican.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Alexis Pedro Rodriguez leaves the Turner Guilford Knight Correction­al Center in Miami on March 18. Rodriguez, who shares a surname with the then-incumbent senator in Senate District 37, received more than 6,000 votes as a no-party candidate in a race that the Democratic incumbent lost by 32 votes to a third candidate, who is a Republican.

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