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Video | Rivero turns himself in Saturday evening
But 14 days after
the Miami-Dade
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Housing program changes pledged
Housing Agency cut
Rivero a
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Unfolding scandal
check for $806,000
in November
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House of Lies' special report 2004, he wired the
bulk of the
money to a title company to
buy his 3,600-square-foot house in cash, according to an arrest
warrant signed by Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Stan Blake.Prosecutors charged Rivero,
a 36-year-old lawyer and civic leader, with two first-degree
felonies: grand theft and committing an organized scheme to defraud.
If convicted, he would serve a minimum of 21 months in state prison.
MORE CHARGES LIKELY
Prosecutors say they are
still examining Rivero's financial and property records and more
charges are likely. They are also tracking deals struck by other
affordable-housing developers, several with ties to Rivero.
Rivero surrendered to law
enforcement agents late Saturday at the Miami-Dade Public Corruption
Investigations Bureau, where he arrived in a black Mercedes C240 and
was immediately searched and cuffed. He was then taken to the Turner
Guilford Knight Correctional Center, where he is being held on $1
million bail, with the special condition that he prove the money
used to post bail was not obtained fraudulently.
''It's repugnant that
Rivero, who knew the desperate need for housing for the poor,
instead stole the money to build his own castle,'' said State
Attorney Katherine Fernández Rundle, whose office has been
investigating along with the Miami-Dade police public corruption
unit.
Rivero's attorney, Lilly
Ann Sanchez, said in a written statement, ``Mr. Rivero is an
outstanding member of the community whose hard work earned him the
respect of his peers, the public and even Florida's governor.''
Sanchez added that Rivero
has so far returned $1.5 million of the public's money, including
the money that was supposed to go to the Little Havana affordable
housing project. Prosecutors, however, say the return of public
money does not absolve fraudulent acts.
The case against Rivero
will be prosecuted by Richard Scruggs, special assistant to the
state attorney for public corruption.
MISSPENDING EXPOSED
Rivero's arrest comes 34
days after The Miami Herald published an investigative series that
exposed widespread misspending at the Housing Agency, which in
recent years paid a group of developers, including Rivero, more than
$12 million for affordable houses that were never built.
Overall, the newspaper
found, Rivero's companies received almost $1.7 million from the
Housing Agency for projects now scrapped. Though he held on to the
cash for years, the county only recently filed suit to recoup the
money.
Rivero's projects also
received $530,000 from the city of Miami and $750,000 for the
county-funded, nonprofit MDHA Development Corp., run by Rivero's
business partner and longtime friend.
In four years, he has not
built a single house for the poor.
Instead, Rivero started
buying a series of personal properties and an office for more than
$4.9 million, The Miami Herald found, including the home prosecutors
now say he purchased with the public's money.
That house is about a mile
from an 11,000-square-foot estate that Rivero and his wife have been
building in the High Pines neighborhood wedged between Coral Gables
and South Miami. The house comes with an elevator, billiard room,
wine cellar, four-car garage, pool, spa and fountain.
WIRED PAYMENTS
During their investigation
of his current home, prosecutors discovered that Rivero wired the
$711,000 payment for the house to First Colonial Title Services -- a
company operated by another affordable-housing developer, Reynaldo
Diaz. The firm did the title work to help Rivero buy the
three-bedroom South Miami house.
Diaz and Rivero have done
business before, records show.
A mortgage lender, Diaz
provided both himself and Rivero with a required ''letter of
intent'' promising private financing so they could qualify for
Housing Agency loans in 2002.
Diaz was loaned $940,000 to
build 28 houses for the poor, but delivered only two. He recently
struck a settlement with the county to repay the money. Diaz could
not be reached for comment late Saturday.
Prosecutors say Rivero not
only used the Housing Agency's money to buy his current home, but
also spent at least $25,000 for windstorm insurance, a swimming
pool, marble, granite, architectural fees, windows and renovations.
Records show Rivero paid at least $6,000 for renovations to the
house to Civic Construction, the same general contractor he was
allegedly using to build homes for the poor.
''We will continue to
investigate diligently to identify and arrest those who have schemed
to deny housing to those most in need of it in our community,'' said
Maj. Michael Trerotola, who heads the corruption unit.
Rivero spent Saturday night
in jail and is expected to spend tonight there as well. He is
scheduled to appear before a judge Monday morning for a bail
hearing.
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