Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Gobble gobble

Even though I explained already, residents keep asking me why the Commission majority voted to terminate the City Manager.  I already gave one example in detail, but here is another.

Manager awarded raises contrary to the City budget

Former City Manager Hector Mirabile wrote in the FY10-11 City Budget:
    “In this year’s budget, the city did not include any salary increases.”
Yet,on 1 Nov, 2010, one month after the budget went into effect, a police lieutenant received a $900 raise.

The City Manager wrote in the FY11-12 City Budget:
   “In this year’s budget, the city once again did not include any salary increases.”
But on 5 Oct, 2011, the third business day after the new budget went into effect, Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro received a $5,000 merit raise, retroactive to 3 Oct 2011, the first day of the fiscal year.  Here is the a personnel action form authorizing that raise, signed off by City Manager Hector Mirabile. Here is a subsequent employee status report confirming that Chief Martinez de Castro did in fact receive that merit raise.

Manager Mirabile awarded Chief Martinez de Castro that raise, despite the fact that the Chief's department had done business with his wife's Auto Tag Company three times that year.  Doing business with one's own family is a violation of the City's Ethics Ordinance that calls for forfeiture of one's position (not a merit raise).

On the same date, a department director received a $4,885 raise, and on 14 Nov 2011, another department director received a $3,066 raise. On 16 Nov 2011, a member of the police force received a step raise even though, as the Manager explained to the Commission, step raises had been frozen by Commission resolution several years prior.  On that same date, a member of the police force was restored to his prior rank while receiving a $767 raise over his prior salary at that rank.  

Since the two biggest raises took effect at the onset of the new fiscal year, it's obvious that they were planned with full knowledge that the budget book said no raises were budgeted.  The three raises in mid-Nov 2011, just 45 days into the new fiscal year also appear contrary to the budget statement.  Writing in the budget book that the budget “did not include any raises” while planning and executing raises was a violation of F.S. 837.06 False official statements, a 2nd degree misdemeanor.

Writing false statements in the budget books also violates the South Miami City 

Failure to follow the budget as written violates the City Charter:
2. Article III - City Manager, Section 5. Powers and Duties
B. Prepare the budget annually and submit it to the Commission and be responsible for its administration after adoption.

Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro has since been charged with 4 ethics violations by the Miami-Dade Ethics Commission – and yet City Manager Mirabile submitted another personnel action form to give the Chief ANOTHER merit raise, this one for $5,250.  The Manager and Chief signed this form the day after the Commission majority expressed its desire to terminate them both, and the day before the Manager was terminated.  

Still more pay for the Chief

The Manager already awarded the Chief other pay enhancements as well, such as $960 a year for having the bachelors degree he came in with (as Dave Barry says, you can't make this stuff up), and $9,713 a year to supervise the parking division, a task which the Finance Director used to do for no additional pay.  

In total, the Manager arranged for Chief's overall pay to increase 25% in two years, from $100,000 when the Chief was hired, to $124,673 when the Manager was fired.  During that time, the rest of the force received nothing, until this year when I proposed a 2% cost-of-living adjustment for all the staff. Indeed, while this most meritorious Chief and most excellent Manager were busy inflating the Chief's paycheck, they proposed not one dime in salary adjustments for the rank and file as a body - and everyone knew it.  So when a few vociferous clowns blame me for  morale problems in the SMPD, who do they think they're fooling?  Nothing affects morale so much as watching the guy at the top hogging the trough for himself.  (OK, now stop thinking about that Christmas ham and stay focused on the turkey).

We have a good staff

As you can see from the missing signatures on the two recent personnel action forms ($5,250 merit raise despite the Chief's 4 pending ethics charges, and $3,150 longevity pay despite his 4 year gap in City employment), staff did not process the recent raise requests before the Manager was terminated (bless them).  We have a good staff.

There's plenty more. But after this, if you remain convinced the Manager and Police Chief were working hard to care for staff morale and the City's best interest, then I probably can't do much to help you understand why the Commission majority lost confidence in their performance.


Have a good Thanksgiving, one and all.

p.s. If you're still hungry and can't face the leftovers...
see who made the New Times list of top five political turkeys of Miami-Dade politics.
[note: Mike Hatami spotted an error in the New Times piece, but says they wrote it and he can't correct it]

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Burglary in early 2011, followed by abuse in late 2012


6820 SW 64th Ct
South Miami FL 33143

Dear Neighbors,
You may have seen or heard that Commissioner Valerie Newman and ex-City of Miami Police Chief Ken Harms have accused me and my wife of improper behavior.
I want you to know that these accusations are absolutely false.  They are part of a political smear campaign against me and other members of the City Commission who are routing out some of the worst corruption this city has seen.  Last week the Commission fired the city manager, a man who had been protecting a corrupt police chief.  Now the police chief and his promoters, Valerie Newman and Ken Harms, are fighting back by attacking my family.  Remember, Newman and Harms strongly pushed the hiring of the city manager and police chief.  Unknown to me at that time, the manager and chief had a relationship that went back decades.
First I'll set the record straight:
Twenty months ago (March 3, 2011) a masked intruder came into our home early in the morning, terrified my family, and stole $6000 worth of computers.  At 6:13 AM that morning, I was awoken by a horrific scream from the 16-year-old exchange student who was part of our family that year.  I vaulted out of bed to defend her, as any parent would, without taking time to get dressed. 
She told police that when she came out of her own bedroom in the dim, pre-dawn light, to prepare for school, she saw someone in the kitchen area whom she first assumed was me.  When she realized it was a stranger wearing a bag over his head, she screamed and locked herself in the bathroom off the hallway.  My parents were visiting so the house was a bit cramped, but the exchange student always had her own bedroom.
The burglar who entered and robbed our house was never caught despite his reappearance in front of our home a few days later.  But now, nearly two years later, I am being accused of acting improperly as a host parent because I did not take the time to dress before going to the aid of our exchange student.  At the time of the robbery, the police interviewed the exchange student and concluded that there was no reason for concern about her welfare or that of our then 12-year-old daughter.
The current accusations are ‘supported’ by so-called ‘evidence’ that the police leadership ordered to be added to the police file 16 months after the burglary
Newman and Harms have even suggested I committed the burglary myself. 
So now, just days after the commission fired the city manager, and the police chief stands to lose his job, this ‘evidence’ of an almost two-year-old incident is pushed into the hands of any reporter who will stoop low enough to consider it a story. 
WHY WOULD ANYONE DO SUCH A THING TO ME AND MY FAMILY?
I have been investigating the Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro for the past nine months.  So far, he has been charged with 4 ethics violations by the Miami-Dade Ethics Commission and will stand for a hearing in January – if he’s found guilty, he automatically forfeits his position.  In addition, I have presented proof, uploaded to my blog last week, that the chief committed numerous misdemeanors.  The City Manager, whom the City Commission fired last week, had allowed Chief Martinez de Castro to repeatedly abuse the authority of his position.
For example, in the case of the burglary of our home –
  1. Original police investigation noted were 'lost' or destroyed despite the importance of retaining notes in an open investigation of a burglary.
  2. The police leadership ordered new records to be manufactured 16 months after the burglary occurred.
  3. The police chief released confidential records to his friends Valerie Newman and Ken Harms who further twisted the story when they took it to the press 20 months after the burglary of our home.
Who is safe with a man like Chief Martinez de Castro running the South Miami Police Department?  If a corrupt police chief will do these things to the elected Mayor, just imagine what he would do to the average citizen, or a member of our minority community, or a visitor?
If you got on the wrong side of this police chief, what would he do to YOU?
THAT is the real story here.  And it’s a shame, not only because our city does not deserve such abuse, but because it discourages rational and responsible people from taking part in municipal governance.  I ran for Mayor to serve my fellow citizens and to make our city a better place to live.  Instead I am embroiled in a morass of shenanigans, corruption, and cronyism.  But cleaning up this mess is necessary for our future as a city, so I remain undeterred.  This corrupt excuse for a law enforcement official MUST GO.
I look forward to returning as soon as possible to the productive issues that will move our city forward.  In the meantime, my family and I thank you for your support.

Regards,

Philip K Stoddard

Philip Stoddard, Ph.D.
Mayor of South Miami


p.s. Read a detailed account by The Straw Buyer 
if you are impatient, start at the bottom.

p.p.s.  There have been several new burglaries in the neighborhood this month 
- take extra care.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

My efforts to clean up city government


“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.”
Edmund Burke      .

What follows are transgressions that amount to unethical violations of law by Police Chief and former City Manager


Police swear to arrest forms, reports, court documents, and testimony.  An oath by any police officer, but especially the Chief, must AT ALL TIMES be truthful because it is a rock in the very integrity of our legal system.  There is no room for falsity, short cuts, or deceptive statements under oath for Police Officers who have the authority to charge the residents of our city with a crime. 

Chief Martinez de Castro's administration is shoddy, partisan and unprofessional.  They lose notes, rough up citizens, and most of all, undermine the fragile integrity of the law enforcement process where the individual rights of citizens can be easily abused by heavy hand of the state.

The Miami Dade Commission on Ethics has already found 4 Counts of Probable Cause against Chief Martinez de Castro and those charges are now pending.

What follows are MORE transgressions that warrant Chief Martinez de Castro' removal from office and prosecution.  What is significant here is that most of these transgressions are confirmed by public documents signed by the Chief and/or former City Manager, so the truth of the evidence is not in doubt.  Many of these signatures are specified as equivalent to a sworn oath.  


Below I layout this obviously unethical conduct.  I reserve other transgressions that are more nuanced for later, so as to not overwhelm the reader.


When I first became Mayor we set out to clean up city government.  I was a neophyte to politics drafted into service by friends and neighbors who wanted to turn our city towards a more transparent and civic direction.


To this end we mistakenly paid consultant Ken Harms, who immediately attacked the then current city Police Chief and vociferously urged the city to hire Hector Mirabile as City Manager who would bring in their mutual friend Orlando Martinez de Castro as Police Chief.  Harms shamelessly continues to aggressively support his friends despite the conduct I delineate below.  And he is attacking me and my family publicly and personally with false accusations.


To my regret, Martinez de Castro and Hector Mirabile were brought into our city under my watch, I feel an obligation, a responsibility, to remove them from our midst.  

Of course, this cannot be my decision alone, and so I will lay out for you here some of the facts that explain why Mirabile needed to be removed and why Martinez de Castro still does.  I encourage our citizens to have an open discussion on these matters and I publish this material to aid that discussion.

A little history on the State Forfeiture Fund

Three years ago when Orlando Martinez de Castro was gunning for Bobby Richardson’s job as South Miami Chief of Police, he told us to look at Chief Richardson's use of the State Forfeiture Fund.  So, a few months back, when we saw that Chief Martinez de Castro's department had improperly used the State Forfeiture Fund to purchase tags and titles from his wife's auto tag company, I looked into Chief Martinez de Castro’s own record with the State Forfeiture Fund.  Not a pretty picture.  In fact, it's a morass of misdemeanors.  Conviction on any one of them will cost the Chief his job.  The former city manager appears to have been complicit, having personally authorized several of these transactions.  In addition, the Chief directed staff to assist his family's businesses.  

Below, I detail what I believe to be:

Laws governing the use of State Forfeiture Funds

Chapter 932.7055-5.a  Florida Statutes allows police to seize money and property that are used in narcotics crimes and to use those assets to support programs to reduce illegal drug use, and to provide a police department with equipment or new expertise for special investigations not currently available.  The law specifically forbids using forfeited funds for normal operating expenses of a police department.  These conditions are reinforced by a Florida Attorney General opinion. This distinction was put in place by the State Legislature to protect the rights of citizens by eliminating incentive for police commanders to confiscate citizen’s personal property to operate their departments.

The following conditions must be met before State Contraband Forfeiture funds can be expended:
1. The proposed use must meet the requirements of F.S. 932.7055 and the Attorney General’s opinion.
2. The Chief of police must write a letter certifying that the requested use meets the conditions for legitimate use under the statute.
3.  The elected body of the municipality must approve the use of forfeiture funds for the specific expenditure.

Chief Martinez de Castro's use and misuse of State Forfeiture Funds

Of 33 purchase requisitions charged to the State Forfeiture Fund account during the tenure of Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro, the Chief personally certified 32.  Of those, 20 met the statutory requirements for legitimate use.  The remaining 12 of those charges appear not to comply with the use requirements of F.S. 932.7055-5.a.  Those 12 requisitions were for normal operating expenses of the Police Department, which are strictly forbidden under the statute and the Florida Attorney General’s written opinion.

For not a single purchase of 33 charges against the State Forfeiture account did Chief Martinez de Castro write a letter certifying that the use met requirements of F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

For 15 of the 33 expenditures, Chief Martinez de Castro obtained City Commission approval before authorizing the expenditure as required under F.S. 932.7055. However, Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro personally certified 17 requisitions which had no Commission approval, constituting 17 separate violations of F.S. 837.012 Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Here's what the fine print in the certification box reads:
"I HEREBY CERTIFY THAT THE ABOVE MATERIAL, EQUIPMENT, OR SERVICE IS ESSENTIAL AND A PROPER REQUEST AGAINST THE CODES CHARGED."
Note: as per F.S. 92.52 an affirmation is equivalent to an oath for the purposes of state perjury statutes.

I go through all the improper requisitions in detail below, but here's an example of one such requisition.
[click here for full sized].  Chief OMC improperly certifies a requisition against the State Forfeiture Fund to pay $1,587 for the September Dade Chief's dinner, a fine event I'm told, but not allowable under F.S. 932.7055.  The request was never brought before the Commission, so the expenditure was not authorized through resolution.  However, the Manager signed the form anyway to authorize payment from the State Forfeiture Fund.  By my count, that's three violations of State statutes over paying for a meal.

On another requisition, Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro got his subordinate, Major Ana Baixauli, to certify the requisition in his place, even though only the Chief of Police is authorized by statute to certify a purchase against state forfeiture funds.  According to HR records, the Chief was in town at the time.  That was the only one of 33 requisitions against the SFF that the Chief did not personally certify.  By inducing a subordinate to certify requisitions that did not comply with F.S. 932.7055 in violation F.S. 837.012, Chief Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 777.04 Attempts, solicitation, and conspiracy.

Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro directed his staff to engage his wife’s expert services in obtaining automobile titles and tags for 3 forfeiture vehicles.  Staff complied and sent the Chief a memo (attached) stating the intention to purchase titles through his wife’s tag agency, Airways Auto Tag Agency.  Two weeks later, while the Chief was in town, the memo was initialed by Major Ana Baixauli, who then signed off on the requisition, charging purchases against the State Forfeiture Fund.   The Chief requested an accounting of all Forfeiture Fund purchases – the Airways charge was #2 on the list.  However the Chief wrote a summary, which the Manager forwarded to the Commission, that omitted only the Airways charge.  Deliberately leaving out information is a violation of the South Miami City Charter – Citizen's Bill of Rights, Truth in Government.

Directing his staff to use a company belonging to his wife is a violation of:
Note that willful violation of Ordinance Sec. 8A-1 calls for immediate forfeiture of one’s position.

Spreadsheet summary of charges to the State Forfeiture Fund (SFF)

Why misuse of state forfeiture funds is a big deal
In none of these cases above were State Forfeiture moneys stolen or used for personal expenses, however, they were often improperly used to fund normal operating expenses of the department such as the Dade Chief's banquet for $1,587.  These uses are explicitly banned by Florida statutes because they encourage the police leadership to step outside boundaries of the law and confiscate more possessions of citizens than they would otherwise.  Indeed, we have reason to believe this risk is real in the South Miami Police Department. A whistle-blower in the police department has alleged illegal confiscation of flat screen televisions from private citizens and placement of those TVs into the offices of the police command staff.  I'm looking into it.  Second, Chief Martinez de Castro has been drafting an ordinance to significantly expand the department’s powers of confiscation and forfeiture.  Thus the improper and unauthorized use of State Forfeiture moneys not only violates Florida Statutes, but poses a real threat to the private property rights of citizens in South Miami.

If anyone is obligated to follow the letter of the law, it the Chief of Police.  We citizens receive a ticket when we fail to produce a driver's license or Proof of Auto Insurance.  For sure, we citizens would be prosecuted for making a false statement under oath, and we citizens are prosecuted for diverting money on our tax returns.  No one can be above the law, ESPECIALLY THE POLICE CHIEF.
___________________________________________________________________

The Chief's dishonest statement about city resident Michael Davidson-Schmich

Michael Davidson-Schmich was arrested on a disorderly conduct charge after exercising his first amendment rights.  Davidson-Schmich says he politely told a cop to set an example.  The cop insists it was not polite. Finger wagging was involved, described as index vs. middle by the two parties. Either way both actions by Mr. Davidson-Schmich were protected speech.

On September 21, 2012, Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro emailed Commissioner Valerie Newman, in response to a question she had asked him whether Michael Davidson-Schmich’s had ever filed a formal protest of his arrest.  The Chief wrote to City Manager Hector Mirabile: “The answer is NO he never did, even though we made numerous appointments but he failed to show.”   
Here is the Chief's email.  

Commissioner Valerie Newman forwarded this email to city residents, inserting derogatory text into the Deputy Clerk's note.  Her alteration of that public document is currently under investigation by the Miami-Dade Ethics Commission (a body she publicly derided last week as "a kangaroo court").

I personally searched Mr. Davidson-Schmich’s email for evidence of appointments.  I found email  (linked here) indicating that Internal Affairs investigator Sgt. Jeff Griffin had tried to schedule an appointment with Mr. Davidson-Schmich for the day before the Davidson-Schmich’s family was to leave town for their annual summer trip to Germany.  Mr. Davidson-Schmich had responded back by phone that he was busy packing that day, and could not come in. 

Since an appointment exists only when both parties agree, no appointment was made and no appointment was broken.  There were no subsequent attempts to schedule appointments in Mr. Davidson-Schmich’s email, and nobody has produced evidence to show any appointments were actually made, or that Mr. Davidson-Schmich failed to show up.

Thus, Chief Martinez de Castro’s written claim of "numerous appointments" where Mr. Davidson-Schmich failed to show, was both false and misleading, a violation of:

___________________________________________________________________

Manager awarded raises contrary to the City budget


City Manager Hector Mirabile wrote in the FY10-11 City Budget:
“In this year’s budget, the city did not include any salary increases.”


City Manager Hector Mirabile wrote in the FY11-12 City Budget:
“In this year’s budget, the city once again did not include any salary increases.”

On 3 Oct, 2011, the first business day after the new budget went into effect, 

On 14 Nov, 2011, a department director received a $3066 raise for promotion to “Chief Coordinating Officer” a position that doesn’t exist in the city’s approved HR classification. On 16 Nov, 2011, a sergeant received a step raise even though, as the Manager explained to the Commission, step raises had been frozen. On that same date, a sergeant was restored to the rank of lieutenant, receiving a $767.52 raise over his previous lieutenant salary.  

Since they took effect on the first business day of the new fiscal year, it's obvious that the raises the Manager awarded to the Chief and CFO were planned with full knowledge that the budget book said no raises were budgeted.  The three raises in mid-Nov 2011, just 45 days into the new fiscal year also appear contradictory to the budget statements.

Writing in the budget book that the budget “did not include any raises” while planning and executing raises was a violation of F.S. 837.06 False official statements.
Writing false statements in the budget books also violates the South Miami CityCharter Citizens Bill of Rights – Truth in Government.

Failure to follow the budget as written violates the City Charter:
2. Article III - City Manager, Section 5. Powers and Duties
B. Prepare the budget annually and submit it to the Commission and be responsible for its administration after adoption.
___________________________________________________________________

Carpet contract:  public deception and alteration of public documents


 On 20 Mar 2012, city CFO Alfredo Riverol had emailed the Manager about an approved contract to purchase carpeting for the Community Center, the Police Station, and the Code Enforcement Department.  The CFO’s email appears to have been sent in response to a verbal request by the Manager. Mr. Riverol made uncharacteristically vague statements about budgetary caution, but in the middle he made this very direct point to the Manager:
“The funds allocated within the CIP Fund [city budget Capital Improvement Planfor carpet installation included, and was primarily for, the installation of carpet within the Community Center second floor….”
Indeed, the approved city budget contained funds only for carpeting the Community Center, and not other city departments.  To spend this money on other departments would not be a legitimate use of funds.

Hector Mirabile’s City Manager Report, which he read aloud before the City Commission on 20 Mar 2012, and handed to Commission members in printed form, contains this text:
Since the City's fiscal year is still a ways away and the current U.S. economic conditions is less than certain staff realizes that the prices of certain commodities such as petroleum product including fuel may have an adverse impact in our budgeted estimates even though we took a conservative position. With the continued destabilization of the Middle East and the threats of Iran impacting oil commerce traffic along the Strait of Hormoz [sic] it is in the City's best interest to hold the replacement of the rugs in the police and code enforcement departments until next fiscal year. This will allow $9,391 to be available for reallocation should the need arise.

The Manager’s report feeds the Commission and the public a load of nonsense about Middle East oil traffic to convince the City Commission that because of his global financial vision, he was prudently canceling part of a contract to protect the city from overspending in a dangerous financial climate, when, in reality:
 (1) At the advice of his CFO, the Manager was back-tracking on his plan to spend funds outside the approved City Budget (budget page attached) and contrary to best accounting practices.  In fact, the portion of the carpet purchase that the Manager was canceling fell outside the budget the Commission had approved, a fact that the Manager had never mentioned to the City Commission.
(2) The City was on strong financial footing. Short of a true and tangible fiscal emergency, capital improvement funds would not be held back from needed and budgeted repairs.

On 22 March 2012, two days after presenting his Manager’s report and giving a copy to each member of the City Commission, the City Manager altered his City Manager’s Report, removing the paragraph with the “Straits of Hormoz” explanation. He posted the altered document on the city website (0320 CM Brief to Comm Mar 20 2012.pdf).  Because the report had already been given out to the Commission it  constituted a public document.

Violations
The Manager’s deceptive statement in his Manager’s Report, fabricating fiscal concerns and concealing a prior violation of the city budget procedure, violates:

Altering the published Manager’s Report, a public document, is a violation of:
(iii) F.S. 839.13 Falsifying Records

___________________________________________________________________

City Manager Hector Mirabile has been terminated after losing the trust of the Commission.   To restore the integrity of our Police Department, Chief Martinez de Castro must go as well.  
___________________________________________________________________

Appendix 1: some requisitions to the State Forfeiture Fund bearing improper certification

Full details are in Appendix 2.  "OMC" squiggle signatures below belong to Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro.


___________________________________________________________________

Appendix 2: details of violations involving the State Forfeiture Fund (SFF):

Item #            SFF 2010-11-12
Goods or services obtained:            Re-key police department by Dade Lock & Key.
Requisition #            12524
Date signed            11/08/10
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Authorized by            nobody
Purchase Order #            11567
Date issued            10/12/10
Amount            $2,357.56

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.a  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.a because re-keying a police department is a normal operating expense, contrary to statutory requirements & Attorney General ruling.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the service requisitioned was in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro did not obtain the City Commission’s permission for the expenditure, as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) The service requisitioned did not comply with F.S. 932.7055-5.a,
(2) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a
(3) The purchase had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.



Item #            SFF 2010-11-30
Goods or services obtained:            Repair forfeited pickup truck by Midway Ford for undercover use.
Requisition #            12530
Date signed            11/30/10
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Authorized by            Hector Mirabile
Amount            $3,302.45

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the service requisitioned was in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro did not obtain the City Commission’s permission for the expenditure, as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a
(2) The purchase had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.



Item #            SFF 2011-01-06
Goods or services obtained:            Gun repair parts by Lou’s Police Distributors
Requisition #            12555
Date signed            01/03/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Authorized by            Hector Mirabile
Purchase Order #            11587
Date issued            01/06/11
Amount            $9,998.

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.a  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.a because keeping police firearms in good repair is a normal operating expense of the department since every officer is so equipped.  Using State Forfeiture funds for routine expenses is contrary to statutory requirements & Attorney General ruling (“section 932.7055, Florida Statutes, requires that contraband forfeiture trust funds be used only for the expressly specified purposes set forth in the statute or for other extraordinary programs and purposes, beyond what is usual, normal, regular, or established.”).  Officers carrying the sort of guns in this purchase is normal, regular, and established.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the goods requisitioned were in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) The service requisitioned did not comply with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(2) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.


F.S. 777.04 Attempts, solicitation, and conspiracy.

Hector Mirabile conspired on above violations of F.S. 932.7055 by approving requisition when certification was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a and F.S. 932.7055-5.b. 


Item #            SFF 2011-02-23
Goods or services obtained:            Purchase of title & tags for 3 forfeited vehicles from Airways Auto Tag Agency
Requisition #            PD 9358
Date signed            02/23/11
Certified by            Ana Baixauli
Amount            $525.00

Statutes violated:

F.S. 112.313-3 Standards of conduct for public officers, employees of agencies, and local government attorneys, Sec 3: Doing business with one’s agency.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 112.313-3 by permitting the city to do business with his wife’s tag agency, because “No employee of an agency acting in his or her official capacity as a purchasing agent, or public officer acting in his or her official capacity, shall either directly or indirectly purchase, rent, or lease any realty, goods, or services for his or her own agency from any business entity of which the officer or employee or the officer’s or employee’s spouse or child is an officer, partner, director, or proprietor or in which such officer or employee or the officer’s or employee’s spouse or child, or any combination of them, has a material interest”.

F.S. 932.7055-5.a  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Expenses incurred preparing forfeited vehicles for auction must be paid from the general fund to be reimbursed from auction proceeds.  Surplus funds are deposited to State Forfeiture Trust fund. In this case, Major Ana Baixauli certified use of State Forfeiture Trust Funds to process forfeited vehicles in violation of F.S. 932.7055 sections 4 and 5.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the service requisitioned was in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Major Ana Baixauli and Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro did not obtain the City Commission’s permission for the expenditure, as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.

South Miami Code of Ordinances Sec. 8A-1. - Conflict of interest and code of ethics ordinance.
Family members of City employees are forbidden from doing business with the city.  Airways Auto Tag Agency belongs to the wife of Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Ana Baixauli falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when
a) it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) The service requisitioned did not comply with the terms of F.S. 932.7055.
(2) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a
(3) The purchase had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.
b) use of the Chief’s family company violated city ordinances.

F.S. 777.04 Attempts, solicitation, and conspiracy
1. Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro directed his staff to seek advice from his wife’s company on the procedures for obtaining titles for these forfeited vehicles. 
2. Prior to issuance of the requisition, Chief Martinez de Castro was the recipient of a staff memo directing use of his wife’s company. 
3. Chief Martinez de Castro signed every other of ~30 requisitions certifying use of State Forfeiture Funds, and was in town when Ana Baixauli signed this requisition in his place.
4. Chief Martinez de Castro received an email and spreadsheet from the Finance (see supporting materials) which showed the use of this tag agency.  He could have corrected the problem at that time by reimbursing the Forfeiture Fund from the General Fund.

Orlando Martinez de Castro solicited his staff to violate F.S. 112.313, F.S. 932.7055, and the city’s code of ethics ordinance by referring staff to his wife’s company, being fully aware from the staff memo to him that they planned to use that company’s services, and for having his second in command, Major Ana Baixauli, certify the requisition in his place.

F.S. 837.06  False official statements
Major Ana Baixauli was asked by the Miami Herald about the failure to obtain Commission approval for this purchase.  On 04/12/2012 she emailed back:
“All I can say is it was an unintentional error. I have checked my records and that was the only error I found.  We work hard to avoid these types of mistakes but in the end, we only human. [sic]”

Her written statement was a bold-faced lie.  She was in the process of making another unauthorized charge to the State Forfeiture Fund.  In fact, every purchase charged to the State Forfeiture Fund between 07/28/11 and 04/28/12 lacked approval by the City Commission.  Major Baixauli’s records include all of 18 charges lacking Commission Approval.  Her false statement was published in the Herald and misled the City Commission to believe the unauthorized charge to the Forfeiture Fund reported by the Herald was an accidental and isolated incident, rather than part of a deliberate, systematic, and persistent pattern of statutory violations.



Item #            SFF 2011-03-10b
Goods or services obtained:            Annual maintenance contract on ticketing software from Advanced Public Safety.
Requisition #            PD 9380
Date signed            03/10/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Authorized by            Hector Mirabile
Amount            $4,725.

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.a  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.a because the maintenance contract on ticket generation software is a normal operating expense of the police department, contrary to statutory requirements & Attorney General ruling (“section 932.7055, Florida Statutes, requires that contraband forfeiture trust funds be used only for the expressly specified purposes set forth in the statute or for other extraordinary programs and purposes, beyond what is usual, normal, regular, or established.”).  The city has previously used General Funds to pay $4725 to Advanced Public Safety on 02/01/2008, 11/20/2008, 04/28/2009, 12/17/2010.  A $4,725 check to Advanced Public Safety drawn on the general fund was voided on 03/11/2011, and the expense was subsequently charged to the State Forfeiture Fund.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the goods requisitioned were in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) The service requisitioned did not comply with F.S. 932.7055-5.a,
(2) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a
(3) The purchase had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.


F.S. 777.04 Attempts, solicitation, and conspiracy.
Hector Mirabile conspired on above violations of F.S. 932.7055 by approving requisition when certification was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a and F.S. 932.7055-5.b.
   

Item #            SFF 2011-07-28
Goods or services obtained:            Annual maintenance contract on GPS units in police cars from GPS International Technologies (GPS IT).
Requisition #            PD 9620
Date signed            07/28/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Amount            $484.40

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.a  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.a because the annual GPS location service applies to all police cars.  The GPS units being operated under this contract replaced GPS units that were removed from police cars two years prior. GPS location of police cars would be considered a normal operating expense of the police department, contrary to statutory requirements & Attorney General ruling (“section 932.7055, Florida Statutes, requires that contraband forfeiture trust funds be used only for the expressly specified purposes set forth in the statute or for other extraordinary programs and purposes, beyond what is usual, normal, regular, or established.”). 

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the goods & services requisitioned were in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) The service requisitioned did not comply with F.S. 932.7055-5.a,
(2) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a
(3) The purchase had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.


Item #            SFF 2011-08-15
Goods or services obtained:            Vests & shoes for sergeants and officers from
Lou’s Police Distributors
Requisition #            PD 9554
Date signed            08/15/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro and Ana Baixauli
Amount            $1,679.04

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.a  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro and Ana Baixauli violated F.S. 932.7055-5.a because vests and shoes are normal operating expenses of the department since every officer is so equipped.  Using State Forfeiture funds for routine expenses is contrary to statutory requirements & Attorney General ruling (“section 932.7055, Florida Statutes, requires that contraband forfeiture trust funds be used only for the expressly specified purposes set forth in the statute or for other extraordinary programs and purposes, beyond what is usual, normal, regular, or established.”).  Officers wearing the vests and shoes in this purchase is normal, regular, and established practice.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the goods requisitioned were in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro and Ana Baixauli falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) The service requisitioned did not comply with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(2) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(3) The purchase had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.


Item #            SFF 2011-05-03
Goods or services obtained:            Assorted petty cash expenditures.
Requisition #            PD 3439
Date signed            05/03/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Amount            $30.25

Item #            SFF 2011-09-09
Goods or services obtained:            Assorted petty cash expenditures.
Requisition #            PD 9585
Date signed            05/03/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Amount            $256.66

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.a  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.a because the charges include a hodgepodge of expenses from parking for a chief’s conference to batteries for a radar gun.  At least some of these are normal operating expenses, contrary to statutory requirements & Attorney General ruling.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the charges paid were in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro did not obtain the City Commission’s permission for the expenditures, as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) At least some of the charges did not comply with F.S. 932.7055-5.a,
(2) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a
(3) The payments had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.


Item #            SFF 2011-09-15
Goods or services obtained:            Computer supplies from Tiger Direct
Requisition #            PD 9596
Date signed            09/15/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Amount            $494.07

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.a  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.a because computer maintenance is a normal operating expenses of the department.  Using State Forfeiture funds for routine expenses is contrary to statutory requirements & Attorney General ruling (“section 932.7055, Florida Statutes, requires that contraband forfeiture trust funds be used only for the expressly specified purposes set forth in the statute or for other extraordinary programs and purposes, beyond what is usual, normal, regular, or established.”).  Maintaining computers is normal, regular, and established practice.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the goods requisitioned were in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) The service requisitioned did not comply with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(2) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(3) The purchase had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.


Item #            SFF 2011-09-16
Goods or services obtained:            Village of Pinecrest for Miami-Dade County Association of Police Chiefs September dinner
Requisition #            PD 9602
Date signed            03/10/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Authorized by            Hector Mirabile
Amount            $1586.81

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.a  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.a because a monthly police chiefs’ association dinner would be considered a normal operating expense of the police department, contrary to statutory requirements & Attorney General ruling.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that expenditure of State Forfeiture Trust funds for the chiefs’ dinner was in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro did not obtain the City Commission’s permission for the expenditure, as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) The service requisitioned did not comply with F.S. 932.7055-5.a,
(2) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a
(3) The purchase had not been approved by the City Commission.

Item #            SFF 2011-09-22
Goods or services obtained:            Flashlights from Lou’s Police Distributors
Requisition #            12757
Date signed            09/15/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Purchase Order #            11737
Date issued            09/22/11
Amount            $1,344.36

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.a  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.a because purchasing flashlights is a normal operating expense of the department since every officer is so equipped.  Using State Forfeiture funds for routine expenses is contrary to statutory requirements & Attorney General ruling (“section 932.7055, Florida Statutes, requires that contraband forfeiture trust funds be used only for the expressly specified purposes set forth in the statute or for other extraordinary programs and purposes, beyond what is usual, normal, regular, or established.”).  For officers to carry the sort of flashlight in this purchase is normal, regular, and established.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the goods requisitioned were in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro did not obtain the City Commission’s permission for the expenditure, as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) The service requisitioned did not comply with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(2) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(3) The purchase had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.


Item #            SFF 2011-09-26a
Goods or services obtained:            Cable to lock impounded bicycles (originally paid to Ace Hardware with Bank of America credit card)
Requisition #            PD 9616
Date signed            09/26/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Amount            $99.23

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.a  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.a because securing property in custody is a normal operating expense of the department.  Using State Forfeiture funds for routine expenses is contrary to statutory requirements & Attorney General ruling (“section 932.7055, Florida Statutes, requires that contraband forfeiture trust funds be used only for the expressly specified purposes set forth in the statute or for other extraordinary programs and purposes, beyond what is usual, normal, regular, or established.”).  For a police department to secure property in custody is normal, regular, and established.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the goods requisitioned were in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro did not obtain the City Commission’s permission for the expenditure, as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) The service requisitioned did not comply with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(2) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(3) The purchase had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.


Item #            SFF 2011-09-26b
Goods or services obtained:            Office furniture, eyewash station, and filing supplies for Police Dept accreditation purchased from Galloway Office Supply
Requisition #            PD 9618
Date signed            09/26/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Amount            $943.95

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.a  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.a because office furniture, complying with accreditation rules, and filing accreditation materials are normal operating expenses of the department.  Using State Forfeiture funds for routine expenses is contrary to statutory requirements & Attorney General ruling (“section 932.7055, Florida Statutes, requires that contraband forfeiture trust funds be used only for the expressly specified purposes set forth in the statute or for other extraordinary programs and purposes, beyond what is usual, normal, regular, or established.”).  The City has been pursuing accreditation for years using General Funds.  For a police department to provide chairs and comply with accreditation rules is normal, regular, and established.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the goods requisitioned were in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro did not obtain the City Commission’s permission for the expenditure, as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) The service requisitioned did not comply with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(2) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(3) The purchase had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.


Item #            SFF 2011-10-03a
Goods or services obtained:            Lodging for 2 dispatch officers in training program paid to Comfort Suites.
Requisition #            PD 9613
Date signed            10/03/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Amount            $179.90

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the goods requisitioned were in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro did not obtain the City Commission’s permission for the expenditure, as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
 (1) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(2) The use of funds for this purpose had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.


Item #            SFF 2011-10-03b
Goods or services obtained:            Dispatch officer training program per diem expenses to Joellen Barinas.
Requisition #            PD 9614
Date signed            10/03/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Amount            $72.00

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the goods & services requisitioned were in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro did not obtain the City Commission’s permission for the expenditure, as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
 (1) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(2) The use of funds for this purpose had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.


Item #            SFF 2011-10-03c
Goods or services obtained:            Dispatch officer training program per diem expenses to Karen Lopez.
Requisition #            PD 9614
Date signed            10/03/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Amount            $72.00

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the goods & services requisitioned were in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro did not obtain the City Commission’s permission for the expenditure, as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
 (1) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(2) The use of funds for this purpose had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.


Item #            SFF 2011-10-06
Goods or services obtained:            Dog food and vitamins from South Dade Animal Hospital.
Requisition #            PD 9380
Date signed            03/10/11
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Amount            $71.72

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.a  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.a because dog food and dog vitamins are normal operating expenses of the police department, which has long maintained K9 units.  Charging a normal operating expense to the State Forfeiture Fund is contrary to statutory requirements & Attorney General ruling (“section 932.7055, Florida Statutes, requires that contraband forfeiture trust funds be used only for the expressly specified purposes set forth in the statute or for other extraordinary programs and purposes, beyond what is usual, normal, regular, or established.”).  The city has previously used General Funds to purchase these items from South Dade Animal Hospital on a regular basis since at least 2008.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the goods requisitioned were in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro did not obtain the City Commission’s permission for the expenditure, as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) The service requisitioned did not comply with F.S. 932.7055-5.a,
(2) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a
(3) The purchase had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.


Item #            SFF 2011-04-11
Goods or services obtained:            Police Explorer’s competition
Requisition #            PD 12945
Date signed            03/29/12
Certified by            Orlando Martinez de Castro
Purchase Order #            11870
Date issued            04/11/12
Amount            $3,548.00

Statutes violated:

F.S. 932.7055-5.a  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.a because the travel programs for the Police Explorers is not a listed or approved use for State Contraband Forfeiture Trust moneys (“Such proceeds and interest earned therefrom shall be used for school resource officer, crime prevention, safe neighborhood, drug abuse education and prevention programs, or for other law enforcement purposes, which include defraying the cost of protracted or complex investigations, providing additional equipment or expertise, purchasing automated external defibrillators for use in law enforcement vehicles, and providing matching funds to obtain federal grants. The proceeds and interest may not be used to meet normal operating expenses of the law enforcement agency.”).

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Orlando Martinez de Castro violated F.S. 932.7055-5.b. by failing to write a letter as Chief of Police certifying that the goods requisitioned were in compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.

F.S. 932.7055-5.b  Disposition of liens and forfeited property.
Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro did not obtain the City Commission’s permission for the expenditure, as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.

F.S. 837.012  Perjury when not in an official proceeding.
Orlando Martinez de Castro falsely certified requisition was “a proper request” when it was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.b because:
(1) The service requisitioned did not comply with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(2) The requisition lacked a letter from the Chief of Police certifying compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a.
(3) The purchase had not been approved by the City Commission as required by F.S. 932.7055-5.b.

F.S. 777.04 Attempts, solicitation, and conspiracy.
Hector Mirabile conspired on above violations of F.S. 932.7055 by approving requisition when certification was not in full compliance with F.S. 932.7055-5.a and F.S. 932.7055-5.b.