Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Miami police chief compares actions of some commission­ers to Cuban regime

- By Charles Rabin

On the eve of an emergency commission meeting that threatens to shorten his already brief tenure in Miami, police Chief Art Acevedo broke a brief silence and penned a scathing eight page memo that is likely to play a big part in today’s showdown.

The chief, sworn in only last April — and who has spoken very little publicly since today’s meeting was set to address a litany of issues with his performanc­e — wrote that the majority of commission­ers were interferin­g with an internal investigat­ion into a wellliked Sergeant-At-Arms he relieved of duty.

He also said that a secondin-command post he filled with a former co-worker from Houston was eliminated by commission­ers out of spite and that he had contacted the U.S. Department of Justice to review the city’s internal affairs process and some questionab­le usesof-force by officers.

“These events are deeply troubling and sad,” the chief wrote Friday to Mayor Francis Suarez and City Manager Art Noriega. “I have no choice but to memorializ­e and report the above series of improper acts, because the men and women of the MPD [Miami Police Department] and the wonderful community we serve, deserve leadership that is committed to the rule of law.”

Two weeks ago, commission­ers, enraged at a series of controvers­ial moves and blunders by Acevedo, chose to hold a special meeting to air out their concerns and grill the chief. Several of the five commission­ers were upset over the removal of Luis Camacho, a SergeantAt-Arms assigned to the mayor’s detail. Publicly, they questioned whether Camacho was removed without due process.

They also questioned the hiring of Heather

Morris, Acevedo’s former assistant in Houston, as his new deputy chief in Miami. Morris’s hiring, some commission­ers said, bypassed a host of qualified internal candidates.

But most of all, they were incensed over a statement the chief made during a roll call in early August in which he said the “Cuban Mafia” was running Miami’s police department. Acevedo, who said he intended the statement as humorous and later apologized, also admitted he was unaware it was a coin termed by Fidel Castro to paint Miami exiles who opposed his dictatorsh­ip as criminals.

The majority of Miami commission­ers either escaped from Cuba as young children or had family who suffered under Castro’s regime.

Technicall­y, Miami commission­ers don’t have the authority to remove the chief. That falls to the city manager. But a vote of no-confidence or removal can go a long way toward determinin­g his future. That’s because the city manager, Acevedo’s boss, works at the will of commission­ers. And Commission­er Joe Carollo said as much to Noriega a few weeks back, telling him that “we are your bosses.”

In summary at the end of his memo, Acevedo not only warned the informatio­n outlined in the memo would be forwarded to federal authoritie­s, he compared some of the actions taken by commission­ers to Communist Cuba.

“If I, or MPD, give in to the improper actions described herein, as a Cuban immigrant, I and my family might as well have remained in communist Cuba, because Miami and MPD would be no better than the repressive regime and the police state we left behind,” wrote the chief.

Today’s meeting is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. and Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Dr.

 ?? FILE ?? Miami police Chief Art Acevedo at Miami City Hall in Coconut Grove in March. Acevedo composed a scathing eight-page memo comparing the actions of some commission­ers to Cuba.
FILE Miami police Chief Art Acevedo at Miami City Hall in Coconut Grove in March. Acevedo composed a scathing eight-page memo comparing the actions of some commission­ers to Cuba.

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