Miami Herald

There’s a packed race for Miami-Dade sheriff. Here’s a look at who is raising the most money

- BY DOUGLAS HANKS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com

In the crowded race for Miami-Dade County sheriff, two candidates are ahead in raising cash from donors with fewer than five months to go before the August primary.

Republican Joe Sanchez, a former Miami commission­er on leave from his job as a trooper and publicinfo­rmation officer at the Florida Highway Patrol, has raised the most, with about $415,000 collected from donors to his campaign and political committee, Law and Order.

Democrat James Reyes — who oversees public safety under the county’s mayor, Daniella Levine Cava — finished the first three months of 2024 behind Sanchez by raising close to $400,000, according to campaign-finance reports made public this week.

The reports covering donations through March 31 offer the most detailed look yet at the finances of the race, which has attracted more candidates than any other MiamiDade election this year. The partisan contest has 17 contenders in the GOPheavy field. The contest will narrow to a pair of candidates after the Aug. 20 primary, with each party’s winner heading to a November showdown.

The election will be the first for a Miami-Dade sheriff since the 1960s, when voters abolished the office. Currently, Levine Cava oversees the MiamiDade Police Department as mayor. But a 2018 amendment to the Florida Constituti­on requires Miami-Dade to join other counties in the state with an elected independen­t sheriff by 2025, mandating the current contest.

Reyes rose through the ranks in the detention system at the Broward County Sheriff’s Office before Levine Cava recruited him to run MiamiDade’s

jails in 2022. She promoted him to chief of public safety weeks before he filed for the sheriff’s race in January. He inherited the political apparatus that was backing Levine Cava’s prior public-safety chief, Freddy Ramirez, before he dropped out of the Democratic primary for sheriff following a suicide attempt.

That apparatus included the Miami-Dade Safe and Secure political committee, which had $87,000 in the bank when Reyes joined the race and then proceeded to raise $392,000 from donors. With the dollars raised for Ramirez now available to him, Reyes reported more money in the bank as of April 1 than Sanchez did, with $327,000 in cash for Reyes compared to $289,000 for Sanchez.

With Reyes and Sanchez occupying the top tier on the fundraisin­g rankings, here is a look at how the other candidates landed based on their first-quarter reports:

RAISED MORE THAN $100,000

Democrat Rickey Mitchell, a retired county officer and funeral director, loaned himself $275,000 of the $292,000 that he has raised.

Republican Mario Knapp, a retired MiamiDade Police Department major, $260,000.

Republican Ignacio Alvarez, a retired MiamiDade Police Department major and a lawyer, $214,000.

Republican Ernesto Rodriguez, a Miami-Dade Police Department lieutenant, $175,000.

Republican Rosanna Cordero-Stutz, an assistant director at the MiamiDade Police Department, $166,000.

Republican John Rivera, a former president of the county police union and retired Miami-Dade Police Department officer, $143,000.

Republican Jose Aragu, a Miami-Dade Police Department major, $137,000.

RAISED FIVE FIGURES

Democrat John Barrow, a Miami-Dade Police Department major, $70,000.

Democrat Susan Khoury, a former investigat­or with federal inspectors general offices, $39,000.

Republican Ruamen de la Rua, an officer with the Miami Police Department, $16,000.

Republican Orlando Lopez, a Miami-Dade Police Department sergeant, with $15,000.

LESS THAN $10,000

Republican Jeffrey Giordano, a retired Miami police detective, $3,100.

Republican Jaspen Bishop, a Miami-Dade Police Department officer, $2,500.

Republican Rolando Riera, a Miami-Dade Police Department sergeant, $1,800.

Republican Alexander Fornet owns a credit-repair business and briefly worked for the MiamiDade Police Department in 2008. He has raised $180.

Douglas Hanks: 305-376-3605, @doug_hanks

 ?? DOUGLAS HANKS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com ?? There are 17 candidates running for Miami-Dade County sheriff in 2024, with a range of donation totals listed in the latest round of campaign-finance reports. Twelve attended a Jan. 18 forum held by the Hispanic Police Officers Associatio­n.
DOUGLAS HANKS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com There are 17 candidates running for Miami-Dade County sheriff in 2024, with a range of donation totals listed in the latest round of campaign-finance reports. Twelve attended a Jan. 18 forum held by the Hispanic Police Officers Associatio­n.

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