Miami Herald

Don’t let Carollo stage a coup in Miami Police Department. Give Chief Acevedo a chance

- BY FABIOLA SANTIAGO fsantiago@miamiheral­d.com Fabiola Santiago: 305-376-3469, @fabiolasan­tiago

Five months into the job, Miami Police Chief Art Acevedo — a national figure in policing, a Cuban American largely embraced in Houston’s Black community — is already on be-gone fire, the victim of only-in-Miami politics.

If Miami Commission­er Joe Carollo has his way, he will likely stage a coup to oust the chief at an upcoming City Hall meeting, armed with accomplice­s — and the ammunition that Acevedo handed them.

I could see this coming back when Acevedo marched into town, a famed lawman with an overload of “I’m-a-goodcop” testostero­ne on display — along with an unwise overconfid­ence that he understood us.

At a meeting with the Miami Herald’s Editorial Board, Acevedo made me nervous when he said even the right things with that combinatio­n of runaway energy and certainty that has made his name. Why the angst?

I’ve seen Miami eat people for breakfast when they tried to tell us who and what we need to be, especially newcomers who want to fix us. Acevedo had no fear at all of ruffling feathers, big or small. Lacking humility, he might not have realized that Miami can switch from a big city to a small town in an instant, with just the turn of a phrase.

OFFENSIVE ‘CUBAN MAFIA’ QUIP

And Acevedo delivered a whopper.

“It’s like the Cuban mafia runs Miami PD,” Acevedo admits saying while recently addressing his officers at a morning roll call. Many of them are Cuban Americans for whom this is not humor, despite what Acevedo thought, but rather a highly offensive epithet.

This is how the Castro regime has historical­ly cast the Cuban exile community. It’s pure propaganda. And every once in a while, somebody steps on the land mine.

Acevedo deeply regrets what he said. He quickly issued an unequivoca­l public apology to the Cuban-American community, with whom he marched on Calle Ocho during the protests in support of the anti-regime demonstrat­ions on the island.

A prolific social-media user, Acevedo spent a considerab­le time on

Twitter, answering people who attacked him and expanding his apology.

“My uncle was in the Bay of Pigs, my father & two other uncles were political prisoners & many of their friends executed,” he tweeted to one man. “I wasn’t referring to our community & would never ... have made the comment had I been aware of the history. I despise that regime with every cell in my body.”

The irony of the situation is that when Acevedo made his comments he was addressing the need for diversity “within our own ranks,” he explained in the public apology.

He was making the valid case, a source also told me, that because Cuban Americans are the dominant ethnic group, a minority-majority with power, they also have the responsibi­lity to be inclusive.

The officers — and Cuban-American Miami — did and do need to hear this point. I have made the same argument in columns. With economic and political power comes the moral responsibi­lity to help other communitie­s rise, too.

And taking inclusive policing from talk to practice is exactly why Miami needed — and still needs — Art Acevedo as police chief.

Acevedo is known for delivering on his embrace of relationsh­ip-based policing. He’s a police chief who sets the example.

But his enemies — Cuban-American politician­s and police officers angry that he also marched alongside Black Lives Matter protesters — are milking his gaffes for all they’re worth.

Add to this already boiling ethnic pot that, as a source told me, he’s in the cross-hairs of high-ranking officers upset that they were passed over for an outsider and in a titanic battle with the police union.

And then, there’s Carollo, the opportunis­t, a political shark smelling blood in the water.

“I’ll be damned if I’m going to let a new transplant come here and do whatever he wants,” Carollo said at a meeting Monday. “Each one of us are duly elected. And each one of us has deep roots in this community.”

The commission can’t fire the chief. But a noconfiden­ce vote at the Sept. 27 meeting could put pressure on City Manager Art Noriega to do so.

In fact, Carollo threatened Noriega on Monday with the reminder, “We are your bosses.”

MIAMI & OUTSIDERS

Miami is a tough town to navigate for people who have lived here for years, let alone for an outsider. And, despite his heritage, Los Angeles-raised Acevedo is one. Just because he’s a Cuban American doesn’t mean he comes to policing in complex Miami with deep knowledge and understand­ing about the Cuban-American community.

Acevedo deserves the chance to make things right. He can do it if he has the humility to learn the lessons of the past five months.

To be seen — and respected — as a leader in this community is a privilege that has to be earned.

Acevedo has the right talk, but walking the walk in Miami is complicate­d, and yes, political.

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