A Miami Beach resident, veteran and repeat political candidate says city police questioned her at home over a critical Facebook post she wrote about the Mayor — and she has posted a video online to prove it.
One of the officers appears to have provided security to Meiner and two City Commission candidates at a campaign event in October.
More on that later.
In the video, which Raquel Pacheco posted to Instagram, two Miami Beach Police officers arrived unannounced at her Flamingo Park home. They questioned her about a comment she made on a Facebook post in which Mayor Steven Meiner described the city as a welcoming place.
Pacheco asked, through her front door, whether she is facing criminal charges.
“Am I being charged with a crime? OK, you are here to investigate a statement that I allegedly made on Facebook,” Pacheco said, before opening the door once the officers confirmed they weren’t there to arrest her.
The officers say they wanted “to have a conversation” about the comment, which Pacheco neither confirmed nor denied she wrote. They said they were there “to prevent someone from getting agitated or agreeing with the statement” and acting violently.
The comment at issue described Meiner as someone “who consistently calls for the death of all Palestinians” — a reference to the Mayor’s since-aborted effort to evict a theater for screening a documentary about the West Bank critical of Israel — and “REFUSES to stand up for the LGBTQ community.”
“We’re not saying it’s true or not,” the shorter of the two officers said before re-reading the post’s reference to Palestinians. “That could probably incite somebody to do something radical. That’s all we’re here to talk about, and we wanted to get your side of it.”
He then advised Pacheco to “refrain from posting things like that.”
Pacheco said she will “maintain my First Amendment rights.”
“This is America, right?” she said.
She then posted the video online, writing in part, “If you need further evidence that Miami Beach has descended into a (fascist) nightmare, you’re not paying attention.”
Raquel Pacheco, a Miami Beach resident, veteran and repeat candidate who has been openly critical of Mayor Steven Meiner and Israel, said a police visit to her home over a Facebook comment was meant to intimidate her. The city Police Department denies that was the purpose. Image via Raquel Pacheco.
She later told reporters the experience felt like intimidation.
“My overwhelming feeling was that freedom of speech as I know it died at my front step yesterday,” Pacheco said in an interview with CBS News. “It’s an incredibly, incredibly sad thing.”
In a statement to Axios Miami, the Miami Beach Police Department said the visit was conducted “out of an abundance of caution,” citing heightened national concerns about antisemitism and the fact that the post referenced an elected official. The Department characterized the encounter as a “brief, consensual” check to ensure there was no immediate threat, emphasizing its commitment to constitutional protections.
A Department spokesperson confirmed that Meiner’s Office flagged the post, prompting Intelligence Unit detectives to review it. Meiner defended the police follow-up in a statement to Axios, calling the Facebook claim false but framing the response as a safety assessment.
“This is a police matter,” he said in a statement. “Others might have a different view and that is their right.”
Photos of an October campaign event that Miami Beach business owner Margueritte Ramos posted on Facebook show the shorter of the two officers leaning against a wall in a home, where Meiner addresses a small audience.
On the left, Miami Beach Mayor Steven Meiner addresses attendees at a campaign event in October. On the right, the same officer who questioned Raquel Pacheco at her door this week can be seen on the far right, leaning against the wall and wearing what appears to be the same clothes he wore at Pacheco’s doorstep. Images via Facebook.
A group photo taken outside the event features Meiner and 2025 Commission candidates Fred Karlton and Minique Pardo Pope, both of whom lost their respective races. Many of the attendees wear hats that read, “Miami Beach Mayor Steven Meiner.”
A group photo of the campaign event featuring several people wearing hats that read, “Miami Beach Mayor Steven Meiner.” Meiner is eighth from the left. Lawyer and unsuccessful City Commission candidate Monique Pardo Pope is on the bottom right. Commission candidate Fred Karlton, who also lost his bid, can be seen in another photo. Image via Facebook.
Pacheco, a U.S. Army National Guard veteran and former Chair of the Miami Beach Personnel Board, ran unsuccessfully for the Miami Beach Commission in 2021 and Senate District 36 in 2022. While she declined in the video to confirm whether the comment was hers, it came from her Facebook account, and she previously shared posts online accusing Israel of genocide using Nazi-era language like “final solution.”
Meiner, who is Jewish, has not publicly called for the death of Palestinians. Meiner has drawn criticism for opposing LGBTQ-friendly measures in the city, including one to rename a street after San Francisco politician Harvey Milk and another condemning the Miami-Dade School Board for rejecting recognition of LGBTQ History Monty.
Former Commissioner David Richardson accused Meiner of “building a record of voting against the LGBTQ community.” Meiner said he took offense to the claim, pointing to his vote for a measure designating October as LGBTQ History in Miami Beach.
In an interview with the Miami Herald, Pacheco described the police visit as an “intimidation tactic” meant to stifle her right to free speech. She has since enlisted the services of lawyer Miriam Haskell of the nonprofit Community Justice Project, who told the Herald the police “were sent to intimidate her and chill dissent, plain and simple.”
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers are making the rounds in Jacksonville, and a city official is advising her Instagram followers on how to avoid arrest and how to react if they are taken into custody.
Yanira Cardona, the city’s Hispanic Outreach Coordinator appointed by Mayor Donna Deegan, says people who are taken in should “comply,” but they should have a plan because “they’re out in Jacksonville.”
“We are living in very difficult times, but my best advice is: 1. Have a plan in place with your lawyers. 2. Give someone you trust power of attorney for your business and your children. 3. If you are stopped by law enforcement, please cooperate and follow their instructions/orders,” she wrote Wednesday, with a video explaining where people should be most careful.
The video was posted during business hours on a weekday and appears to be filmed in an office in City Hall, though the barking of a dog at one point suggests that may not be the case.
“ICE is out and about,” she said. “They are doing speed traps. They are, they’ve been seen on Emerson, on Beach Boulevard, on Atlantic and on the highway. They are targeting, literally, they’re targeting any lawn care companies, any AC company construction vans. They’re literally stopping them just to make sure that they have their paperwork.”
“I wish I could do more, and I wish I could say more. But this is the best I could do,” Cardona added.
We have reached out to the Mayor’s Office to see if this video was officially sanctioned, if it was filmed on city property with public resources, and if Cardona’s post on her private Instagram account reflects the city’s official position.
“Flying cars” carrying passengers will be coming to Florida in late 2027 or 2028 as the skies turn into a booming multimillion-dollar industry, transit officials said during a House subcommittee hearing.
“There’s a lot of anticipation. There’s a lot of excitement. There’s a lot of private equity to get this moving forward quickly,” said Will Watts, the Assistant Secretary and Chief Operating Officer at Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT).
Watts said demonstration flights will be happening this year to show off the technology that officials believe will transform transportation.
In developing a statewide aerial network, the Interstate 4 corridor is the top priority route to be established so vertiports can fly passengers, carry micro freight and help with emergency management, officials said.
The rest of the phase one plan for city-to-city travel targets routes from Port St. Lucie to Miami, Tampa to Naples, Miami to Key West and Pensacola to Tallahassee, according to FDOT’s presentation to state lawmakers.
Phase two listed the routes from Daytona Beach to Jacksonville, then Sebring out east and west, followed by Orlando to Lake City and Tampa to Tallahassee followed by Jacksonville to Tallahassee.
Appealing to business travelers and tourists, vertiports could be responsible for anywhere from 220,000 trips to 1.4 million trips in the opening year.
“These numbers can grow, we believe, when we get into 2050 to over 11 million on the low end and almost close to 20 million annual trips on the high end,” Watts said.
Watts estimated that the first year could bring a more than $40 million profit as vertiports could fly to large commercial hubs, executive airports and also provide inner city transportation.
The state is preparing to help usher in a new era of transportation.
“What was originally as sci-fi in movies and old cartoons like the Jetsons is potentially becoming a reality,” Transportation Secretary Jared Perdue said during Wednesday’s hearing. “This is here to stay and it’s going to happen and it could potentially have a very big impact on congestion relief and safety for transportation in the state of Florida. We have fully embraced the concept.”
The vertiports will be a privately operated service, though FDOT officials are currently in discussions to plan for zoning and what infrastructure is needed, as the amount of traffic in the sky would likely overwhelm air traffic controllers.
In addition to transporting passengers and goods that weigh 1-2 tons, the vertiports could help with emergency management, such as for organ donors, where every minute matters.
While John Guard was not selected to fill the latest opening on the Florida Supreme Court, he likely will end up in the judiciary nonetheless.
The former acting Attorney General and current Senior Counselor to Attorney General James Uthmeier has been picked for the 2nd District Court of Appeal, pending Senate confirmation.
His future was clouded by his role in money moving from a Medicaid settlement to the Hope Florida Foundation back in 2024, money that didn’t go to charitable aims, but instead was routed ultimately to political advertising during that year’s political cycle.
Guard was among those subpoenaed over his role in the Hope Florida scandal. He signed the controversial settlement with Medicaid insurer Centene, but not before privately raising concerns, according to the Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times, which obtained emails documenting the conversations.
The emails show Guard removed references to his office in drafts of the settlement in a series of back-and-forth conversations over the course of 22 days.
Guard’s nomination last year for a U.S. District Court judgeship by President Donald Trump was ultimately stalled, with an administration source claiming it wanted to avoid a “nasty confirmation fight.” His nomination was not renewed this year.
During his interview with the Supreme Court’s Judicial Nominating Commission, Guard said the appellate court position was not his first choice.
“I think the best legal job is probably to serve on the Florida Supreme Court. And I say that because you’re the head of the judicial branch. You’re kind of responsible for helping with the legitimacy of our core system and maintaining the rule of law,” Guard said.
“If I were to rank them … I would say Supreme Court Justice, (U.S.) District Court Judge, and District Court of Appeals Judge. But I think between the District Court and the District Court of Appeals, there’s not that much difference,” he added.