Miami Herald

CORAL GABLES

- Tess Riski: @tessriski

after retiring from the U.S. Marshals Service in 2018. He told the commission he was sipping a glass of wine at his vacation home overlookin­g a mountain in North Carolina when he got the call from a friend about “an opportunit­y” coming up.

“And I prayed on it, looked at it, and I said, you know what, I’m going to put my name in the hat,” said Rojas, who did not identify the friend who recruited him for the job.

Rojas’ appointmen­t is the latest developmen­t stemming from a shakeup on the City Commission following an election last year where Castro and Fernandez defeated two candidates who had establishm­ent support, including the mayor’s endorsemen­t. The result has been a commission divided by two dueling political factions, with Lago and Anderson on one side, and Castro and Fernandez on the other. Menendez became a swing vote, although he has recently fallen in the latter camp in a series of contentiou­s votes.

After the fallout with Iglesias, Fernandez said he was contacted by Rojas, who met his criteria and expressed interest in the job. On Tuesday, Fernandez touted Rojas’ decades of law enforcemen­t experience.

“This individual also has the knowledge and ability to address the No. 1 concern our residents have today: Is there public corruption in Coral Gables?” Fernandez said.

Menendez said he shared those concerns.

“The city of Coral Gables is adrift in a cesspool of public corruption,” he said, “and I’m here to help navigate our beloved city out of the muck and to safe harbor. So I vote yes.”

The commission had not publicly discussed Rojas as a possible replacemen­t for Iglesias before Tuesday. Lago, Castro and Anderson all appeared surprised, saying they had not heard of Rojas.

Lago and Anderson had both advocated for a national search to find Iglesias’ replacemen­t, and they cited the process not being followed in their explanatio­ns for voting no. They said they wanted the chance to ask Rojas detailed questions and to vet his background.

“This is not the right way to do things,” Lago said, adding: “If you’re serious about this job, my advice to you is to go through a process. Not to just come up here and say, ‘I want the job, I have the votes, and I’m moving forward.’”

Anderson said Rojas should gain the trust of the community by going through a formal hiring process.

“Not just picked out of a hat, and that’s essentiall­y what this is,” Anderson said. “It’s the first time I’ve heard your name. I don’t have your resume.”

But Castro and Fernandez expressed urgency in hiring Rojas, saying they feared the mayor would derail their efforts to hire him if given the chance.

“Given the circumstan­ces that we’re in, I do not trust that he’s not going to sabotage this opportunit­y,” Castro said of the mayor.

Rojas told the commission he was ready to start as early as Wednesday. He began discussing his terms of employment and start date with the City Attorney’s Office shortly after the vote.

Lago described his colleagues’ actions Tuesday as a “shock and awe treatment.”

“We as the five people up here have a responsibi­lity to 51,000 residents in this community,” Lago said.

In 2013, Rojas was nominated by President Barack Obama and sworn in as the U.S. Marshal for the Southern District of Florida. Before becoming a U.S. Marshal, Rojas worked for the MiamiDade State Attorney’s Office and served as the deputy director of the South Florida Money Laundering Strike Force.

Rojas said he went to Coral Gables Senior High and grew up in the Shenandoah area, later attending the University of Alabama. He said he began his law enforcemen­t career at the South Miami Police Department before joining the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t. At FDLE, where he worked for about 25 years, he began as a narcotics agent and worked his way up to special agent in charge of the Miami Regional Operations Center.

Rojas said he is a Miami resident whose philosophy is “faith, family and service to the community.”

Speaking to the Herald after the vote, Lago said he’d rather look ahead than dwell on the past. “We hope that tomorrow is a brighter day,” he said.

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