Miami Herald

Joe Carollo’s home could be up for auction soon. He’s trying to stop it

- BY JOEY FLECHAS jflechas@miamiheral­d.com

Miami Commission­er Joe Carollo’s Coconut Grove home is scheduled to be auctioned on March 19 — but the embattled politician is fighting to stop the sale.

On Feb. 2, U.S. Marshals began the process of seizing Carollo’s property to satisfy part of a $63.5 million judgment against him after a jury found he weaponized city resources to target two Little Havana men and their businesses to carry out a vendetta. On Friday, U.S. District Court Judge Rodney Smith rejected a separate attempt from Carollo to stop the men from collecting on the judgment.

The two businessme­n, William “Bill” Fuller and Martin Pinilla, own several Little Havana properties that have been fined and shut down by city officials citing code violations. Carollo was hit with the massive judgment after a trial in the spring of 2023, and even though Fuller and Pinilla have acknowledg­ed they don’t expect to see the full sum, they are going after the commission­er’s assets and wages.

The auction for the twostory, 5,243-square-foot residence is scheduled for noon on March 19. On Wednesday, Carollo filed a new motion in federal court to block the auction, arguing that his Morris Lane property is protected from seizure under the Florida Constituti­on. Court records show he and his wife, Marjorie Carollo, each filed affidavits with Miami-Dade County claiming the property, which he has owned since 2001, is the couple’s legal homestead under a state constituti­on provision that protects such properties from being seized to pay a legal judgment.

The constituti­onal definition of a homestead is separate from the homestead property-tax exemption typically associated with owner-occupied homes. As of Feb. 2, an applicatio­n for the tax exemption was pending. The applicatio­n was filed this year.

Carollo’s legal team is also arguing that the auction’s public notice, which was published in this week’s edition of the Miami New Times, has errors that prevent the sale from proceeding. Carollo has maintained he has unresolved motions that are in front of Smith, the federal judge who oversaw his trial, and prevent him from pursuing an appeal.

Carollo has not lived in the Morris Lane home for the better part of the last seven years. Before running for the District 3 seat in 2017, he moved into a West Brickell apartment. At that time, his home was in District 2. When the city redrew the voting map in 2022, Carollo’s home was included in District 3, allowing the Carollos to move back into the house. The redistrict­ing process is the subject of a separate federal lawsuit that is awaiting a judge’s order following a two-day trial in early February.

In an interview Thursday, Carollo said Fuller and his attorneys have acknowledg­ed in court that the commission­er moved back into the home in April 2023 and that he’s now defending his constituti­onal rights in the face of an unfair court proceeding.

“This is not just about me. This is about me and every homeowner in Florida,” Carollo said. “If they can get away with doing this to me because they feel they have a very prejudiced judge on their side ... then they could do it to every homeowner in Florida.”

A Fuller and Pinilla attorney interprete­d the facts differentl­y.

“When the trial started he was living in Little Havana. What he’s done since then is he’s tried to protect the [Grove home] by creating some kind of homestead claim,” Jeffrey Gutchess said. He said Carollo had “abandoned” his homestead, a move that he said the courts will weigh heavily.

The businessme­n’s lawyers have until Feb. 28 to respond, according to court records. No hearing had been scheduled as of Thursday.

Joey Flechas: 305-376-3602, @joeflech

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