1/3 Art Acevedo Miami Police Chief's inappropriate remarks about the "Cuban mafia" running the Miami PD prompted further investigation into his history of misconduct and inappropriate behavior as a police chief in Austin and Houston. This included failing to properly investigate sexual assault cases, reprimanding officers who made light of rape, and overseeing declining murder solve rates. He was repeatedly reprimanded by the city of Austin for poor judgment and leadership failures.
1/3 Art Acevedo Miami Police Chief's inappropriate remarks about the "Cuban mafia" running the Miami PD prompted further investigation into his history of misconduct and inappropriate behavior as a police chief in Austin and Houston. This included failing to properly investigate sexual assault cases, reprimanding officers who made light of rape, and overseeing declining murder solve rates. He was repeatedly reprimanded by the city of Austin for poor judgment and leadership failures.
1/3 Art Acevedo Miami Police Chief's inappropriate remarks about the "Cuban mafia" running the Miami PD prompted further investigation into his history of misconduct and inappropriate behavior as a police chief in Austin and Houston. This included failing to properly investigate sexual assault cases, reprimanding officers who made light of rape, and overseeing declining murder solve rates. He was repeatedly reprimanded by the city of Austin for poor judgment and leadership failures.
1/3 Art Acevedo Miami Police Chief's inappropriate remarks about the "Cuban mafia" running the Miami PD prompted further investigation into his history of misconduct and inappropriate behavior as a police chief in Austin and Houston. This included failing to properly investigate sexual assault cases, reprimanding officers who made light of rape, and overseeing declining murder solve rates. He was repeatedly reprimanded by the city of Austin for poor judgment and leadership failures.
Miami’s new police chief is already “in hot water” after remarking that “It’s like the Cuban mafia runs Miami PD.” “Cuban Mafia” is a particularly offensive slur because Fidel Castro’s regime used it to denigrate Cubans living in Miami. This is just the latest in a long and documented history of Miami Police Chief Art Acevedo’s inappropriate behavior and misconduct: When Art Acevedo was an officer with the California Highway Patrol, a woman with who he Took sexually explicit had a months-long affair sued him in federal court for $5 million, claiming, according to the photographs of a woman Los Angeles Times, that Art kept “sexually explicit Polaroid photographs” in the glove box of his state-issued car and showed them to his law enforcement buddies. Acevedo who later sued him for acknowledged that he took the photographs, but said that he gave them back to the sexual harassment woman after their affair ended. Acevedo said that a colleague in the California Highway Patrol accidentally saw the photographs in the glove box of Acevedo’s personal vehicle. The women and Acevedo reached a settlement, but the details are confidential. Three sexual assault survivors sued Acevedo for denying “female victims of sexual assault in Austin and Travis County” their right to “equal access to justice and equal Sued for not taking protection of the law”. The women said that they have been failed by the “people sworn to protect them” and that government officials like Art Acevedo “have instead disbelieved, rape seriously dismissed, and denigrated female victims of sexual assault, failed to have DNA evidence tested for years at a time, refused to investigate or prosecute cases of sexual assault against female survivors…”. In particular, the lawsuit alleges that Acevedo: Allowed “a massive backlog of untested rape kits” to pile up during his tenure, which ballooned to 2,700 by the time he left Austin to become the Houston Police Chief in 2016. Tolerated a toxic culture for women, allowing “a wall in [the department’s] sexual assault unit on which numerous pictures of female victims were posted —each one representing a ‘false report’ that officers had unilaterally determined had no merit. Officers posted pictures of these ‘debunked’ female accusers on the wall as a matter of pride, as trophies of their ‘investigations.’” Participated in the toxic culture by, for example, referring to allegations of sexual assault between police officers on his force as “bad sex” or “something the female officer just regretted after the fact, despite evidence demonstrating injury to the female officer”.
1/3 Art Acevedo Miami Police Chief
During the last year of Acevedo’s tenure, the Austin Police Department made 132 arrests for rape despite at least 747 reported rapes that year. The Department claimed that it Couldn’t be bothered to “cleared” another 256 cases by what they called “exceptional” clearance. However, an arrest people who investigation showed that the department systematically misclassified cases as cleared committed sexual assaults by exceptional means. A leading expert on police investigations of sexual assault cases told ProPublica that classifying rape cases in this way was “misleading at best and duplicitous at worst.” The Sergeant who supervised the Sex Crimes Unit during Acevedo’s tenure said that she felt pressure from the department’s leadership to “clear” more cases by using the exceptional circumstances designation. This practice is harmful because, in the Sergeant’s own words, “It gives a false sense to the community that this case has been thoroughly investigated and closed… it’s not truthful.” Two Austin Police officers accidentally recorded themselves whistling at a woman who was walking past them. The officers can be heard saying on the recording, “Go ahead and call the cops. They can’t unrape you.” Both officers start laughing and one officer “They can’t unrape you.” says again, “They can’t unrape you!” Acevedo gave the men a slap on the wrist and allowed them to remain employed as Austin Police officers. Less than a year later, one of the officers from the recording was involved in another caught-on-camera disgrace for what local news described as “belittling a homeless woman” in a wheelchair. The officer can be heard saying “I don’t give a shit. I want you to get this stuff out of here” referring to the woman’s belongings. The woman said, “Please, sir” and “I’m sorry” and again, “Please, sir, I’m trying to be honest with you.” The officer responded, “And I am being honest with you. I’m being brutally honest with you. I am not liking what I’m seeing under these overpasses.” Acevedo called the behavior “rude” and “unprofessional,” but proceeded to give the officer another slap on the wrist. As recently as 2011, the Houston Police Department solved 89% of the murders that happened in the city. That was before Art Acevedo came to town. An investigative report Acevedo did not take solving in the Houston Chronicle from 2020—the last full year Acevedo served as Chief of the Houston Police Department—found that the murder clearance rate had plummeted to murders seriously, either 49%. In fact, the murder clearance rate under Acevedo was lower each and every year that he served as police chief in Houston than in any of the six years that preceded his arrival. An internal audit revealed that members of Acevedo’s staff blamed him for making policy decisions that reduced the overall numbers of homicide detectives. Asked to comment on the Houston police department’s declining murder solve rate under Acevedo’s leadership, a leading national expert on clearance rates told the Chronicle that “those levels are low by almost any standards.” Acevedo was the subject of numerous disciplinary memoranda from the City of Austin. Here are some illustrative snippets. Repeatedly reprimanded In a 2011 memo from the Austin City Manager, with the subject line “management by the City of Austin improvement,” the city manager raised with Chief Acevedo, “operational and judgement concerns I expect you to improve” before further chastising the chief: “I expect you to exercise proper judgement…” Art Acevedo was reprimanded again in 2013 for threatening to launch a baseless internal affairs investigation into the husband of a defense lawyer who was an officer on Acevedo’s force. The 2013 memo from the City Attorney called Acevedo’s behavior “inappropriate and unacceptable,” and directed him “to apologize … in person and in writing.” A 2016 memo from Austin’s city manager informed Acevedo that the city had formally reprimanded him and docked him five days of pay for inappropriate public comments following the killing of an unarmed, naked teenager by an Austin police officer. The city manager wrote: “this matter again concerns me with your lack of judgement” and “your failure to follow my directives in this matter.” The city manager continued: “I want to make clear that future misconduct or ... showing further poor judgment in the performance of your job duties, will lead to additional personnel action up to and including termination.” An internal investigation into Acevedo’s behavior, memorialized in the memo, found that Acevedo committed “the offense of insubordination” against the city manager, echoed that he “exhibited poor judgement”, and recommended that 2/3 Art Acevedo Miami Police Chief the Chief “be made aware of the perception by staff that retaliation by him is real.” Acevedo had to apologize again after he made insensitive remarks again following the arrest of a young woman outside the University of Texas campus. The police handcuffed and arrested the young woman for disregarding traffic signals while she was jogging and And then he did it again then failing to provide the officers with identification. After a community uproar over the arrest, which was captured on video, Acevedo held a press conference where he told reporters the young woman was “lucky I wasn’t the arresting officer” because the officers had not “charged her with resisting” arrest, explaining that “I wouldn’t have been as generous.” Acevedo continued: “In other cities, there’s cops who are actually committing sexual assaults on duty, so I thank God this is what passes for a controversy in Austin, Texas.” That’s the opening lines of a federal lawsuit filed against Acevedo during his tenure as “Murder, corruption, lies, Houston’s police chief. The lawsuit stemmed from a botched drug raid that left two sex, and perjury – the people, and their dog, shot dead by Houston police officers. In the immediate aftermath of history of the Houston the raid, Acevedo told the media that his team had “heroically made the entry” and that he was “really proud of them.” But, a Washington Post investigation, detailed the Police Department, and in inconsistencies between Acevedo’s version of events and video and documentary particular, the Houston evidence provided by neighbors and independent investigators. Most damningly, gunshots Police Department’s can be heard on a recording captured outside of the home a full 30 minutes after Acevedo Narcotics Squad 15 plays said the raid had ended. The officers also said that the shots were fired inside the home, out like a scene from but investigators found that the woman was killed by a bullet that was fired outside of the Training Day.” home, casting further doubt on the officers’ claims. Nonetheless, even six months after the raid, Acevedo continued to praise Squad 15, saying of the officers who killed the family: “I still think they’re heroes—and they are heroes,” and even describing the officers as “victims”. Art Acevedo has made so many false claims that a national journalism outlet did an entire story on the “Five Times Miami’s New Police Chief Got It Wrong On Public Safety”. Engages in fact-free, Here are two of the low lights: anti-science fear- mongering On bail reform: A rigorous study of bail reform measures that Houston put into place as a result of a federal lawsuit that declared its bail scheme unconstitutional found that the new measures did not lead to increased crime. Those results reflect the results of other empirical research done in cities like Philadelphia where similar reforms have been implemented. Ignoring these facts, Art Acevedo told reporters that he’s not sure what these people who implemented the bail reforms could be thinking: “I’m not sure what the end game is, because chaos is not what the American people want.” On juvenile justice reform: A robust body of scientific research documents the differences between juvenile and adult brains. That research has fueled bipartisan reform of the way children are treated in the criminal legal system. But Art Acevedo just doesn’t get it. He recently told the Washington Post: “So, imagine what's going to happen if reformists get their way. Look, I'm a refugee. English is my second language, I grew up in a rough little town, and guess what? My brain didn't develop, and some would argue it still hasn't developed, but I didn't go around shooting people, robbing people, stabbing people, beating people.”
Findings of Investigation Into The Actions of Ellsworth Culver Related To Sexual Abuse and The Actions of The 1990S Mercy Corps Board of Directors Related To The Handling of Reports of Sexual Abuse