Street of shame? Miami commission could name street for Angel Gonzalez

Street of shame? Miami commission could name street for Angel Gonzalez
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Former commissioner with corruption past could get street named for him

Just when you think Miami City Hall has run out of ways to test the public’s tolerance for political amnesia, along comes a proposal that feels like satire — except it’s real, it’s on the agenda, and it needs four votes to pass.

On Thursday, a resolution sponsored by Commissioner Miguel Gabela asks the Miami City Commission to co-designate Northwest 14th Terrace between Northwest 32nd and 37th Avenues as “Angel Gonzalez Way.”

Yes, that Angel Gonzalez. The former District 1 commissioner who didn’t just leave office quietly — he resigned after pleading guilty in a public corruption case involving a no-show job for his daughter with a city contractor doing business in his district.

But if you read the resolution — and Ladra did — you wouldn’t know any of that. Call it selective memory, the City Hall edition.

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The resolution reads like a tribute carved in marble.

It praises “exemplary service,” “achievements,” and “meaningful contributions.” It highlights Gonzalez’s years in office and his work with the Allapattah Business Development Authority.

What it does not mention, por supuesto, is the corruption scandal that forced his resignation in 2009.

That case involved Gonzalez’s daughter being paid tens of thousands of dollars by a contractor who received city work in Gonzalez’s district — work Gonzalez voted on without disclosing that his daughter worked there.

Joseph Centorino was the prosecutor when Angel Gonzalez pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor of abusing his office in 2009.

Prosecutors called it corruption. Gonzalez called it a plea deal. Voters called it disgrace. You can still watch him plead guilty on YouTube.

And City Hall? Apparently, City Hall calls it “exemplary service.”

Here’s the part that makes the proposal even harder to swallow: The 2009 corruption case wasn’t Gonzalez’s first brush with election-related wrongdoing. Back in 1997, he pleaded guilty to voter fraud tied to one of the most notorious absentee-ballot scandals in Miami history — the same era that helped topple an entire mayoral administration.

That’s two guilty pleas tied to public wrongdoing. Two.

Yet on Thursday, commissioners will be asked to vote to permanently stamp his name onto a street sign.

A public honor. A civic tribute. A legacy marker.

A total joke.

Then there’s the geography.

Because the street proposed for co-designation — Northwest 14th Terrace between Northwest 32nd and 37th Avenues — doesn’t just sit in District 1. It leads directly to Gonzalez’s own home. The one he and his wife bought in 2010 for $222,000 that is assessed at $264,000 now but had a market value of $1.2 million, according to the Miami-Dade Property Appraiser.

That little detail doesn’t appear in the resolution either.

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Community activist Elvis Cruz is furious — and not quietly so. In a letter to commissioners, he called the proposal “shameful” and warned against what he described as “convenient amnesia.”

He didn’t mince words. “Criminals, especially elected public officials, should be punished, not praised,” Cruz wrote, asking commissioners — practically begging them — not to do this. “Isn’t Miami already overloaded with too much dysfunction and corruption?”

That sentiment is likely to echo through public comment if the item is not suddenly withdrawn, which it should be.

Because for many residents, this isn’t just about a name on a sign. It’s about precedent.

What’s next? Joe Carollo Avenue? Alex Diaz de la Portilla Boulevard? Humberto Hernandez Terrace?

Street names aren’t random decorations. They’re civic endorsements. They tell future generations who mattered and why.

So what message does this send? That corruption is forgivable? That resignation after a guilty plea is just a footnote? That time washes away misconduct if enough years pass?

Because if that’s the standard, City Hall might need to start ordering a lot more street signs.

Gabela did not return a calls from Ladra. But under city rules, naming the street requires four out of the five commissioners to agree, meaning this isn’t a casual gesture. It’s a deliberate decision. A public statement. A choice to elevate one version of history while quietly ignoring another.

And the timing matters, too.

Because this proposal arrives at a moment when voters are already questioning transparency, accountability, and the long memory of local government. Or lack of it.

If commissioners approve the resolution, Miami will officially add “Angel Gonzalez Way” to its map. But the real change won’t be geographic. It will be symbolic.

Because once that sign goes up, the message will be clear: In Miami politics, redemption doesn’t require accountability. Just time.

And friends on the dais.

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If the commission rejects the proposal, that sends a very different signal: That memory still matters. That breaking the public trust carries consequences. That not every political career ends with a commemorative sign and a ribbon-cutting.

And that voters — and residents — still expect some lines not to be crossed.

This isn’t just about Angel Gonzalez.

It’s about standards. And whether Miami is willing to honor its past honestly — or rewrite it into something more convenient.

Because once a street gets named, history doesn’t just remember. It celebrates.

And tomorrow, the Miami City Commission will decide whether this is a legacy worth celebrating — or a mistake better left in the archives.

The Miami Commission meeting begins at 9 a.m. Thursday at City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, and can also be watched on the city’s website or, also live, on it’s YouTube channel.

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