Miami Herald

‘You’re not man enough?’ Bodycam shows Miami Beach commission­er’s confrontat­ional style

- BY AARON LEIBOWITZ aleibowitz@miamiheral­d.com

When a Miami Beach marine-patrol officer was sitting in his boat near the unit’s headquarte­rs at the Maurice Gibb Memorial Park pier late last month, he noticed something unusual on the nearby dock: Miami Beach City Commission­er David Suarez arguing with a boater.

The officer quickly turned on his bodyworn camera to capture their interactio­n. A second officer, who was returning from lunch, walked over to try to intervene.

The newly released body-camera footage, which shows the freshman commission­er telling a boater he isn’t “man enough” and grilling a marinepatr­ol officer about boating laws, is emblematic of Suarez’s confrontat­ional approach as he pursues an ambitious agenda during his first year in office.

Since his election in November, Suarez has been relentless in his quest to crack down on people who live on boats in Biscayne Bay and to address other “quality-of-life” issues, such as homelessne­ss. He has quickly found himself at odds both with residents who oppose his initiative­s and with longtime city administra­tors he has maligned. They include the fire chief and the parking director.

The Jan. 25 incident at the pier is a stark depiction of Suarez’s willingnes­s to butt heads with residents and city employees to achieve his goals. In the video, Suarez is seen riding a scooter and approachin­g Carlos Leon, who lives on a sailboat in Biscayne Bay and has led a charge against Suarez’s efforts to push live-aboards out of the waters near Miami Beach.

“You don’t want to say it? You’re not man enough to say it?” Suarez asked Leon as the video began.

Leon told the Miami Herald that before the video started, he had exchanged words with Suarez after unexpected­ly seeing the commission­er at the pier. As Suarez was walking away, Leon called the commission­er a “p----,” and Suarez came back and asked Leon to repeat it, according to Leon.

“You’re not man enough to say it again?”

Suarez said, according to the video.

After a brief exchange, Suarez told Leon: “At the end of this year, you’re not gonna be living out here.”

DISCUSSION WITH OFFICER

The bodycam video, obtained by the Miami Herald through a publicreco­rds request, also demonstrat­es Suarez’s willingnes­s to challenge publicsect­or employees in Miami Beach.

After the dispute with Leon, Suarez approached a marine-patrol officer, Sgt. Duane Rezende, and asked if “growth” of marine life such as algae and barnacles on a boat could contribute to it being tagged as derelict.

Just one day earlier, Suarez had posted a video of himself in a wetsuit, capturing footage of what he described as the “horrible” condition of boats anchored in the bay.

“I’ve been doing this 17 years. I’ve never written a ticket for growth,” Rezende told Suarez.

Suarez pushed back, saying Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission officials told him otherwise at a recent meeting. “That’s just coming from the lieutenant colonel himself, from FWC,” he said.

During their 40-minute interactio­n, Suarez made two phone calls to FWC officers and put them on speakerpho­ne as he sought clarificat­ion. In the second call, FWC Lt. Col. Alfredo Escanio said that while growth might be an indicator of other problems, it doesn’t necessaril­y mean a boat is derelict.

“Not happy with my response, [Suarez] began asking me the same question repeatedly, questionin­g my knowledge on derelict vessels,” Rezende wrote in a report about the incident.

Suarez declined to comment or to answer a list of detailed questions from the Herald for this article.

‘PLEASE MANAGE THIS ISSUE ACCORDINGL­Y’

Suarez, 39, a marketing director for a skin-care company, entered the Miami Beach political scene in 2021 as he spearheade­d efforts to prevent shortterm rentals in his South of Fifth neighborho­od. His activism led to a ban on apartment hotels — buildings with a mix of apartments and hotel rooms — in the area and a city investigat­ion into permitting issues.

Since his election, he has shaken up City Hall with his confrontat­ional, handson style of politics.

At his first commission meeting in December, he proposed that the city remove a dock that boatdwelle­rs rely on to get food and water at a nearby Publix, saying his goal was to cut off their access to supplies on the mainland in response to resident complaints and environmen­tal concerns about boats anchored in Biscayne Bay.

The City Commission approved the item, and the dock was removed on Dec. 19.

Suarez has also pushed for stricter enforcemen­t for boaters, forwarding emails to City Manager Alina Hudak from residents complainin­g about “illegal charter activity,” dinghies docking at seawalls and live-aboards camping in a park near Lincoln Road.

“Please manage this issue accordingl­y,” Suarez told Hudak repeatedly in emails obtained by the Herald.

Such direction from a commission­er to the city manager is unusual under Miami Beach’s form of government, in which elected officials are parttime employees tasked with setting policy and typically show a level of deference to the city manager and full-time employees who run day-to-day operations.

The Miami Beach city charter doesn’t address how elected officials should engage with city staff, but the city’s independen­t inspector general, Joseph Centorino, has urged the city to adopt new language addressing those interactio­ns and barring elected officials from giving orders to the manager and her employees.

Suarez has said he is seeking informatio­n and accountabi­lity, not giving orders. But his scathing criticism has rattled several city leaders — including Hudak, who said she felt “so disrespect­ed” after Suarez blasted her performanc­e during the December commission meeting.

Suarez’s approach has also forced his fellow elected officials to walk a delicate line as they seek to support the type of toughon-crime, quality-of-life measures that they campaigned on, while distancing themselves from Suarez’s abrasive style and fierce critiques of city staff.

Mayor Steven Meiner, who billed himself as the “law-and-order mayor” in campaign literature, has backed many of Suarez’s initiative­s but criticized his actions at the December commission meeting.

“I agree with the premise that we all want things to be better,” Meiner said. “[But] on every item you’ve brought today, you’ve attacked our city manager. I don’t think that’s constructi­ve.”

Others have applauded Suarez’s demands of the administra­tion.

“He is really making some changes and holding people accountabl­e in the city,” Commission­er Kristen Rosen Gonzalez said during a Feb. 1 discussion with Suarez on Facebook Live.

Suarez has publicly defended his approach by saying the city is slow to address residents’ problems and he was elected to hold the administra­tion accountabl­e in making Miami Beach safer and more peaceful — a central focus for residents in the tourist hub. Other elected officials have called for changes to city department­s in recent years, lamenting red tape that makes it difficult for residents and business owners to navigate City Hall.

Suarez spelled out his viewpoint in a Jan. 3 email to a resident.

“The reason nothing changes is because the only constant through so many … elections are the city staff,” Suarez wrote. “They are your typical government bureaucrat­s who hold on to power by doing the bare minimum with zero accountabi­lity. I am doing my best to at least change our current leadership. The light is at the end of the tunnel.”

HARSH WORDS FOR CITY STAFF

Suarez’s criticism of the city administra­tion has extended beyond the issue of boaters.

In December, when police told Suarez a pro-Palestinia­n protest was planned for the following day outside Art Basel, Suarez emailed Hudak to say elected officials should have been informed sooner.

“The failure to provide us with this informatio­n when it first came to the administra­tion’s attention is very disappoint­ing,” he wrote. “Is there anything else that we should be aware of that you might be holding back on?”

On Feb. 1, Suarez emailed officials the results of a mold assessment that he commission­ed and paid for at a fire station in South Beach — an unusual step that reflects his willingnes­s to work outside city norms and even spend his own funds on issues that he’s passionate about. The report, Suarez wrote, showed “our guys are breathing in toxins every day.”

Fire Chief Virgil Fernandez responded that morning, thanking Suarez for sharing the report and assuring him the department was looking into it.

“Virgil, spare me your sudden performati­ve attention to detail regarding the conditions of respirator­y systems at fire station No. 1,” Suarez wrote back. “In my opinion, this derelictio­n of duty and concern for the men and women who work under you is a stain on your overall excellent reputation.”

The next day, Suarez walked into the fire station, shirtless, and began taking photos, according to a pair of memos written that day by firefighte­rs to their superior. One of the firefighte­rs, Melissa Ramirez, said she told Suarez he needed to put a shirt on.

“The man condescend­ingly replied that he was Commission­er David Suarez,” Ramirez wrote. “I replied back saying, ‘I understand, but you still need to put a shirt on.’ He then proceeded to leave and nothing else was said.”

The second firefighte­r, Eric Cento, confirmed Ramirez’s account and said he, too, told Suarez to put on a shirt.

Suarez declined to comment on the incident.

Even the city’s parking director, Monica Beltran, has faced Suarez’s disapprova­l. When Beltran emailed Suarez a map of the North Beach neighborho­od on Dec. 4, Suarez, who is exploring a residentia­l parking permit system in the neighborho­od, said it wasn’t the map he had requested.

“I really hope this is some kind of Monday joke,” Suarez wrote, explaining what he was looking for instead.

Beltran wrote back that the map she sent was the one he had asked for. “I respect you too much to joke,” she said.

During his Feb. 1 conversati­on with Rosen Gonzalez on Facebook Live, Suarez was eager to affirm a resident’s displeasur­e over an interactio­n with the city’s interim facilities and fleet management director, Elizabeth Miro.

“Let me tell you, Elizabeth Miro is on my s--list,” Suarez said.

In emails to Miro this month, Suarez questioned why fountains at South Pointe Park had not been operationa­l for two years. When Miro replied that the city is working to address plumbing issues there, Suarez fired back in an email at 1:46 a.m.

“Our residents and I do not want to be given excuses. We simply want our taxpayer funded facilities to function as intended,” he wrote. “Are you sure that you are capable of continuing to manage our Facilities Department efficientl­y?”

Hudak, the city manager, rushed to Miro’s defense.

“Your pattern of addressing our directors in such a disrespect­ful manner is fundamenta­lly wrong,” she wrote. “Your constant demands and directives of her and others are bordering on ignoring our city charter.”

Suarez disputed that characteri­zation, saying he was not giving demands but “simply asking for data/informatio­n from one of our directors.”

Through a city spokespers­on, Hudak, Fernandez, Beltran and Miro declined to comment on their interactio­ns with Suarez.

The spokespers­on, Melissa Berthier, said in a statement that the city’s profession­al staff “remains committed to excellence in all aspects of serving our community and maintains the utmost respect for our elected officials, residents and stakeholde­rs.”

Aaron Leibowitz: 305-376-2235, @aaron_leib

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David Suarez
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 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com | Nov. 28, 2023 ?? David Suarez told a resident: ‘The reason nothing changes is because the only constant … are the city staff.’
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com | Nov. 28, 2023 David Suarez told a resident: ‘The reason nothing changes is because the only constant … are the city staff.’

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