Miami names Edwin López next police chief — as Political Cortadito predicted

Miami names Edwin López next police chief — as Political Cortadito predicted
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So, Ladra was right. Again.

The City of Miami Police Department didn’t exactly conduct a nationwide talent hunt complete with consultants, community forums, glossy binders and kumbaya listening sessions before naming its next chief. Nope. Instead, Mayor Eileen Higgins and City Manager James Reyes went with the same ol’ Miami way: pick the guy they already wanted and call it leadership.

And that guy is Edwin López.

The city announced Friday that López — currently chief of the Doral Police Department and former head of the Miami-Dade Schools Police Department — will replace retiring Chief Manuel Morales later this year.

Read related: No search? No problem! Has Miami’s new police chief already been chosen?

Cue the press release adjectives: “integrity,” “transparency,” “community policing,” “collaborative leadership style,” “organizational morale.” Miami City Hall practically emptied the corporate-word-salad buffet onto the page.

“Our City Manager, James Reyes, made a thoughtful decision in selecting Chief Lopez, a homegrown leader, dedicated public servant, and 28-year veteran who has spent his career serving our community with professionalism and integrity,” Higgins said in her statement.

“Miami is one of the safest big cities in America, and we are going to keep it that way by supporting our officers, strengthening community trust, and staying focused on what matters most: keeping every neighborhood safe,” she added. Because she can.

You know what wasn’t in the press release? His salary and benefits package. Or his start date, though sources say it is in July.

City Manager Reyes focused on Lopez’s experience, which is basically comprised of 25 years within the insular Miami-Dade Public Schools Police Department, leaving as chief in 2023 to become top cop in the sleepy city of Doral, population 87,331. The population of the City of Miami is roughly 509,000. Besides that one mass shooting at the Martini Bar, it’s pretty quiet. 

But, yeah, he’s ready for prime time, Reyes says.

Read related: The Miami police chief, a private foundation, and a very public complaint

“Chief Edwin López brings an exceptional record of leadership, a deep commitment to transparency, and a proven approach to community policing that has earned the trust of the communities where he has served,” Reyes said in his statement (he doesn’t answer Ladra’s calls, just like Art Noriega). “We are confident that he is the right leader to carry forward the Miami Police Department’s proud legacy while addressing the evolving needs of our growing and diverse city.”

Word salad, right?

“Chief López is widely recognized for his collaborative leadership style and his ability to strengthen organizational morale within the departments he has led,” Reyes continued. Because he can. “His appointment reflects our commitment to placing experienced, community-focused leadership at the helm of the City of Miami’s Police Department.”

But buried beneath all the praise is the bigger story: what didn’t happen.

There was no transparent national search. No public vetting. No months-long process where residents pretend they have input while consultants cash checks. No dramatic finalist interviews. No effort to signal reform or independence after years of controversy surrounding policing, politics and power inside City Hall.

Instead, Reyes quietly handpicked a known quantity with deep local ties and institutional relationships (read: loyalty). Like Ladra predicted, they wanted predictability, not disruption.

And that says a lot.

This administration isn’t looking for a crusader. They’re not looking for a headline-maker. They’re looking for somebody who understands the ecosystem, knows where the bodies are buried politically, and won’t flip over the table at a time when Miami’s political class desperately wants stability — or at least the appearance of it.

López fits that mold perfectly, even though las malas lenguas say he wasn’t the first choice.

Read related: New Miami Police chief could have a familiar and friendly Miami-Dade face

López is homegrown. He’s disciplined. He’s well-liked in law enforcement circles. He doesn’t come with the radioactive baggage some other names floating around carried. He’s not a flamethrower or a camera hog. And perhaps most importantly, he is viewed as someone who can manage personalities at a department where internal factions can become their own telenovela.

Las malas lenguas are already whispering that López may bring a few trusted officers from Doral Police Department with him to Miami. Because what’s a new administration in South Florida without a little migration package? Nothing official yet, of course. Just the usual cafecito-fueled chatter racing through police and political circles faster than a leaked group text.

Meanwhile, over in Doral, Mayor Christi Fraga gave López the kind of glowing farewell statement usually reserved for retiring popes and beloved sitcom dads, praising his integrity and leadership while lamenting his departure.

“Chief Lopez has been an exceptional leader for our city — someone who has led with integrity, strengthened trust within our community and elevated the Doral Police Department in meaningful ways. We are incredibly proud of him and this next step in his career, even as we know we will truly miss him in Doral,” Fraga said in a two-page statement posted on the platform formerly known as twitter.

Fraga tried to give the city and her own leadership credit for his promotion.

“Doral has always been a city that develops and builds strong leaders, and Chief López’s next opportunity is a reflection of the caliber of leadership that exist within our organization,” Fraga said, adding that there is no decision yet on who will replace Lopez (more on that later).

Read related: Trump finally gets his G20 at Doral — porque nunca dejó de quererlo

To be fair, López does arrive with a relatively solid reputation compared to some of the political landmines Miami has stepped on before. But he’s not completely unblemished.

Jose Seiglie, a former major with Doral who sued the city for wrongful termination and retaliation in June of 2024, has cast doubts on his alleged leadership skills and abilities. While López is not a defendant on the federal complaint, Sieglie — a former Miami officer who was at Doral for 11 years and made major in 2020 —  said in the lawsuit that the department was led by an “inexperienced and overwhelmed police chief” and that issues included mismanagement, a sudden exodus of officers and allegations about how investigations and crime stats were handled.

Maybe that’s why people say Miami will eat him alive.

Por supuesto que Ladra hopes López is the best thing that ever happened to Miami. But the process matters. Or at least City Hall always says it matters — right up until it becomes inconvenient.

Because if Miami truly wanted the “best candidate in America,” there would have been a search. There would have been scrutiny. There would have been competing visions for the future of policing in one of the country’s most politically combustible cities.

Instead, this looked more like succession planning.

Not that anybody at City Hall is complaining. Quietly anointing a successor is much cleaner than opening the door to outsiders asking uncomfortable questions. People still remember Art Acevedo.

This kind of independent, government watchdog reporting is crucial to transparency and democracy. And more so every day. Help shine a light on the darker corners of our community with a contribution to Political Cortadito. Click here. Ladra thanks you for your support.

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