Art Acevedo Miami Police Chief 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: Took sexually explicit photographs of a woman who later sued him for sexual harassment Sued for not taking rape seriously
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When Art Acevedo was an officer with the California Highway Patrol, a woman with who he had a months-long affair sued him in federal court for $5 million, claiming, according to the 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 acknowledged that he took the photographs, but said that he gave them back to the 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 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, 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”.