Broadcast Blunder, Part 2

For about five months, complaints have ricocheted around Miami and Washington, D.C., concerning the peculiar news judgment exercised this past April by Radio Martí director Roberto Rodriguez-Tejera. Radio Martí, the official voice of the United States government to the people of Cuba, ignored for almost four hours the dramatic April…

In Too Deep

The German chemical tanker Igloo Moon cut through the predawn stillness in the waters off the coast of South Florida. It was 4:30 a.m. on Wednesday, November 6, 1996, when Chief Mate Peter Stubler sent one of his crewmen on a routine inspection of the ship. Stubler liked to call…

Spoiled Island

Development dreams and political schemes have a way of running aground on Watson Island. And they may be heading that way again soon. Since April of last year, Miami officials have been quietly working out a deal to bring a sprawling cruise-terminal operation to one of the city’s most forsaken…

Blood in the Streets

For the past two years, a drug gang has rampaged through Opa-locka, clashing with a network of local dealers. The resulting violence has left at least seven people dead, though law enforcement and street sources say the actual number of fatalities may be more than that. Another half-dozen people have…

Instantly Illegal, Part 2

At a hearing last week, the City of Miami’s code-enforcement board reached a unanimous decision regarding Lambda Passages, the seventeen-year-old gay and lesbian bookstore at 7545 Biscayne Blvd. The powerful board determined that Lambda owner John Drew was in violation of city laws prohibiting the sale or rental of adult-oriented…

Second Effort

The sixth fight on the boxing card at Miccosukee Indian Gaming this past August 12 was a four-rounder pitting lightweights Luis Ernesto Delis of Cuba against Rudolfo “Rude Boy” Lunsford of St. Petersburg. By the time the match got under way around midnight, at least half the audience had either…

Less for Moore, Part 2

Just when it seemed the wheels of economic justice in Miami-Dade County had ground to a halt, they began revolving again — at least for thirteen small businesses located in some of the most blighted parts of town. Last year their owners applied for commercial-revitalization grants from the county’s Office…

The Salsa Doctor Is Out

Manuel Gonzalez Hernandez could sit still no longer. As the torch singer onstage held a low note, he flew off his barstool and hurried toward the man with a pencil-thin mustache nursing a drink at a round table in the middle of the Radical nightclub. Gonzalez Hernandez, better known as…

Instantly Illegal

In June 1998 John Drew purchased Lambda Passages, secure in the knowledge he had made a good business investment. After all, the gay and lesbian bookstore at 7545 Biscayne Blvd. had been operating successfully for fifteen years. In transient Miami that qualified Lambda Passages as a venerable institution, an excellent…

Off with Her Head

She has a way of making bureaucrats tremble. Combative and cantankerous, she combines a lawyer’s knowledge of federal housing regulations with an advocate’s passion for defending the disenfranchised. The resulting compound can be explosive. Detractors have disparaged Barbara Pierre as a “gang leader”; some have sought court injunctions against her…

Exiled in Havana

Even a casual observer in Havana would notice the striking disconnect between the slogans emblazoned on billboards across the city and the actual mood of the Cuban people who pass underneath them. “Imperialists, You Don’t Scare Us at All!” reads one towering graphic depicting a Cuban soldier facing off against…

Cruel or Usual Punishment?

On October 6, 1970, fourteen-year-old James Ingraham was late for school. When he got to his shop class at Liberty City’s Drew Junior High School, he broke a glass. For these two transgressions, Ingraham was taken to principal Willie J. Wright’s office to be paddled. When Ingraham protested, Wright called…

Love and Violation, Part 3

In the wake of a two-part New Times cover story, and following multiple death threats made against the subject of that story, the Aventura Police Department has reopened its investigation into rape charges filed by Bridget Garcia, a certified nursing assistant who worked for an Aventura widow. Aventura Police Chief…

A Hole So Foul

Craig Grossenbacher still can’t believe his eyes when he looks at the aerial photograph and sees a five-acre swath of sea grass gouged out from the floor of Biscayne Bay. The trench is on the south side of the Port of Miami, along Fisherman’s Channel. That is the path by…

DeFede: Deconstructing Alex

Alex Penelas is a politician who never loses but rarely succeeds. He’s won every race he has ever entered, whether it was for Hialeah City Council or the Miami-Dade County Commission. Four years ago he took the grand prize of South Florida politics, becoming the first executive mayor of Miami-Dade…

Broadcast Blunder

Only a few months ago, Miami-Dade County had pretty much lost its already tenuous grip on reason. The place was in a blind frenzy over Elian Gonzalez, and it seemed that no one escaped the mass contagion. Just across the Florida Straits, in the other Cuba, arose equally zealous public…

At Long Last Busted

Standing in a courtroom late last week, prominent businessman Manuel Diaz handed over to his lawyer his tie, gold watch, and belt. A bailiff then quietly cinched tight the handcuffs and escorted his charge to the county jail for booking. Only then were investigators from the Miami-Dade Police Department’s public-corruption…

Nightlife on the Edge

Despite being in business since March 17, Club Space, the nightclub pioneer in downtown Miami, held its “official” grand-opening party five months later, on August 19. In keeping with the grand traditions of hype, the opportunity to capitalize on such a misnomer was not lost on promoters Emi Guerra and…

Love & Violation, Part 2

For nearly two years Aventura widow Regina Greenhill expressed nothing but praise for her former aide, Bridget Garcia. Bridget, a certified nursing assistant, had treated the 87-year-old Regina with great care, spending every day of the week cooking her meals, driving her around town, and allowing her to live an…

Schoolhouse Knocks

The Liberty City Charter School is difficult to find, nestled as it is between a middle school and I-95 among the tree-lined streets and neat ranch-style houses of the tiny city of El Portal. It presents an unassuming face, one two-story building with an entry flanked by fluted white columns,…

A Whack at PWAC

There are paperback books, LP records, baskets, computer keyboards, and even a vintage Polaroid camera for sale at the People With AIDS Coalition thrift shop at 270 NE 39th St. The charity donates some of its used wares — furniture, kitchen utensils, and clothes — to indigent people who usually…

Eads’s Greed

Has Harvey C. “Jack” Eads been employed by the City of Coral Gables for twelve or thirty years? For the manager of the City Beautiful, that’s the two-million-dollar question. The city contends the answer is thirty, despite the fact that Eads’s first day as city manager was in 1988. When…