Miami-Dade County

Miami Commissioner Joe Carollo cleared in public corruption investigation

Miami City Commissioner Joe Carollo listens to public comments during a commission meeting at Miami City Hall on Thursday, April 10, 2025.
Miami City Commissioner Joe Carollo listens to public comments during a commission meeting at Miami City Hall on Thursday, April 10, 2025. Special for the Miami Herald

Prosecutors in the Broward State Attorney’s Office have cleared Miami City Commissioner Joe Carollo of criminal wrongdoing following a yearslong investigation into accusations that he stalked a Little Havana businessman and threatened a former police chief.

In a closeout memo Monday, Assistant State Attorney Alexandra Weil said the state “cannot prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Carollo’s actions rose to a criminal offense as it pertains to his dealings with” Ball & Chain owner Bill Fuller and Art Acevedo, the former Miami police chief.

Weil wrote that the matter can be referred back to the city of Miami for a possible administrative investigation. Broward County sometimes investigates public corruption matters out of Miami-Dade County because of conflicts of interest. Julio Gonzalez, who heads Broward’s Public Corruption Unit, signed off on the memo.

Fuller previously won in a federal civil lawsuit against Carollo, with a jury awarding him and businessman Martin Pinilla $63.5 million. Jurors found that Carollo weaponized police and code enforcement officers in retaliation against Fuller and Pinilla after they supported his 2017 election opponent.

Acevedo, meanwhile, filed a lawsuit in 2022 against Carollo and two other commissioners who voted to fire him in 2021, accusing the defendants of violating his First Amendment rights and illegally retaliating against him for “speaking out against corruption and abuse of power by the City of Miami Commission.” That lawsuit is ongoing.

The positive news for Carollo lands the same week as a campaign fundraiser that Miami First, the political committee tied to the commissioner, is hosting to raise money for his potential mayoral campaign.

A flyer for a fundraiser for Joe Carollo.
A flyer for a fundraiser for Joe Carollo.

Carollo said Tuesday that he has not decided if he’s running for mayor, saying that other people organized the event. The commissioner faced scrutiny for the timing of the fundraiser, which was scheduled on the same day as the memorial services for Commissioner Manolo Reyes, who died last week.

Reached for comment, Carollo acknowledged that the timing wasn’t ideal but said it wasn’t intentional.

“This is something that had been planned way before,” Carollo said. “It’s not in my control to cancel something that others have done, and this has got nothing to do with Manolo.”

“I wish it would’ve been on another day, but that’s the day that it fell on,” he added.

This story has been updated to accurately reflect the author of the closeout memo.

This story was originally published April 16, 2025 at 8:07 PM.

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Tess Riski
Miami Herald
Tess Riski covers Miami City Hall. She joined the Miami Herald in 2022 and has covered local politics throughout Miami-Dade County. She is a graduate of Columbia Journalism School’s Toni Stabile Center for Investigative Journalism.
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