Miami

Judge rules Miami Commissioner Carollo's home not be seized in $63M verdict

In an order released Wednesday, Judge Rodney Smith ruled the property falls under a homestead exemption and can't be seized to satisfy the judgment

NBC Universal, Inc.

Miami Commissioner Joe Carollo's Coconut Grove home won't be seized to satisfy a $63.5 million court judgment against him, a judge has ruled.

In an order released Wednesday, Judge Rodney Smith ruled the property falls under a homestead exemption and can't be seized.

Smith, who has been overseeing the Carollo case, said he's adopting the recommendations of U.S. Magistrate Judge Lauren Louis, who'd sided with Carollo back in July in his fight to have the property considered his homestead.

Carollo was found liable in June of 2023 in a federal civil lawsuit brought by two businessmen who accused him of trying to destroy their businesses as political retaliation.

A judge rejected a lawsuit that requests to remove Miami Commissioner Joe Carollo from office. NBC6's Ana Cuervo reports

The jury found Carollo violated the plaintiffs' First Amendment rights and awarded them more than $63 million.

Bill Fuller, the owner of the Ball and Chain restaurant and club in Little Havana, and fellow businessman Martin Pinilla claimed Carollo weaponized the city’s police and code enforcement departments to shut down several of their businesses in Little Havana because they supported his political opponent.

In her filing, Louis said the burden was on Fuller and Pinilla to show that the property on Morris Lane isn't exempt.

Carollo testified that he'd changed his driver's license to the property in April 2023 and the address is on his voter ID card that was issued in April 2023, a few mons before the judgment.

Carollo said he'd been living in an apartment before the district map was changed in 2022 to include the Coconut Grove home in his district, but said his intention was always to permanently live at the home.

Louis found Fuller and Pinilla didn't prove otherwise.

"The objective evidence is sufficient to show Defendant’s intent to permanently reside at the Morris Lane Property as his homestead," Louis wrote in the filing. "Thus, the Court concludes that Plaintiffs did not meet their burden to prove that Defendant left the Morris Lane Property with no intention of returning or that Defendant established a new permanent residence at another place."

Carollo has denied any wrongdoing, and has appealed the $63.5 million judgment.

In November of 2023, a federal court ordered the city of Miami to garnish the commissioner's wages, but Carollo is fighting that order.

Contact Us