Florida Amendment 10 clarified: SHERIFF - Page 3
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  1. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    Strong bw lol the only thing you will get in md county is a hispanic male due to ignorant ethnic voters which may or may not be good a blk or anglo cant carry the demographics
    No different now. A dumb Hispanic male was put in charge by a corrupt mayor so what is the difference? Vote YES and senda message of dissent to the Dancing Queen.

  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    No different now. A dumb Hispanic male was put in charge by a corrupt mayor so what is the difference? Vote YES and senda message of dissent to the Dancing Queen.
    At the end of the day we can’t get worse than what we have and we could get better. So why not.

  3. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    Strong bw lol the only thing you will get in md county is a hispanic male due to ignorant ethnic voters which may or may not be good a blk or anglo cant carry the demographics
    Your reading comprehension is seriously lacking. We were referring the the Miami-Dade Corrections Department and whom the new elected Sheriff will select to lead that challenged-filled department. Demographically speaking, Black-American's families are generally led by a strong matriarchal figure; noticed I typed "generally." Through all travails, Momma is always there to lead the family as best she can. It is the type of compassionate, strong leadership the new elected Sheriff will be looking for in candidates expressing an interest in serving as Dade's Corrections Department Director. No, we will not be searching outside Dade, as within our County, there are plenty of folks who can rise to the occasion and lead. That applies to MDPD as well. What has been missing for nearly 51 years is an elected Sheriff that will lead with clear and decisive commands; that is, this is what I expect you to accomplish at M-D Corrections, MDPD, etc. and here are the resources to get it done. With the exemption of the Fire Department and Medical Examiner's Office, which we believe are the examples to follow, police and other departments within the Sheriff's orbit, can expect from the elected Sheriff a clear vision for their respective mission.

  4. #24
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    Ramos for sheriff !

  5. #25
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    No more Directors...

    “It is the type of compassionate, strong leadership the new elected Sheriff will be looking for in candidates expressing an interest in serving as Dade's Corrections Department Director. No, we will not be searching outside Dade, as within our County, there are plenty of folks who can rise to the occasion and lead. That applies to MDPD as well.”[QUOTE]

    And you don’t seem to understand how an elected Sheriff works either. Once elected, he/she would replace the “Director” of both Departments, most likely combining the houses into one Administration, one Personnel Management, and one Management team. It’ll save a boatload of money, but everything you know about how it works today will most likely be gone. The person chose to mind Correction’s matters will likely be from within, but not necessarily. Just look at other Sheriff’s Offices across the state, and see for yourself how it works. Elected Sheriff’s are a political machine that typically answer directly to the largest voting base, or they’ll find themselves out of office. Not sure if that will be better or not for MD County, but it will definitely be different.

  6. #26
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    Sheriff

    AL Rolle, Homestead Police Chief for Sheriff

  7. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    Your reading comprehension is seriously lacking. We were referring the the Miami-Dade Corrections Department and whom the new elected Sheriff will select to lead that challenged-filled department. Demographically speaking, Black-American's families are generally led by a strong matriarchal figure; noticed I typed "generally." Through all travails, Momma is always there to lead the family as best she can. It is the type of compassionate, strong leadership the new elected Sheriff will be looking for in candidates expressing an interest in serving as Dade's Corrections Department Director. No, we will not be searching outside Dade, as within our County, there are plenty of folks who can rise to the occasion and lead. That applies to MDPD as well. What has been missing for nearly 51 years is an elected Sheriff that will lead with clear and decisive commands; that is, this is what I expect you to accomplish at M-D Corrections, MDPD, etc. and here are the resources to get it done. With the exemption of the Fire Department and Medical Examiner's Office, which we believe are the examples to follow, police and other departments within the Sheriff's orbit, can expect from the elected Sheriff a clear vision for their respective mission.
    “Momma” is always there cause all the daddy’s are gone

  8. #28
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    Juan Perez for Sheriff! Or Gimenez for Sheriff with Juan Perez as under sheriff. Ya heard it here first suckas. Wait and see.

  9. #29
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    I guess the days of the brown gown are gone. As a sheriff's department are we going to be mandated to wear the green and white uniforms.

  10. #30
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    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    I guess the days of the brown gown are gone. As a sheriff's department are we going to be mandated to wear the green and white uniforms.
    Amendment 10 passed, so Miami-Dade County must now elect a sheriff. In theory, the county commissioners could only fund an elected Miami-Dade sheriff to operate only the jail (or court services), while leaving an appointed director (or chief) to run the police department. The commissioners control the purse strings.

    In 1968, the Jacksonville police merged with the Duval County sheriff.
    They have an elected sheriff with a unionized police department.
    They wear navy blue uniforms (or is it black?) and wear shields instead of stars (click here)
    The side of their patrol cars says sheriff, but the back says police.

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