A woman in Miami Beach got an unexpected knock on her door this week—not from a neighbor, but from the police. Their mission? To ask about a Facebook comment.
Raquel Pacheco, a U.S. Army National Guard veteran and longtime Miami Beach resident, started recording the moment she opened her front door to two officers on Monday. One showed her a phone screen. The message in question? A sharply-worded reply to a post by Miami Beach Mayor Steven Meiner.
In her response, Pacheco called Meiner’s message—one celebrating the city as a “safe haven for everyone”—superficial and hypocritical. She accused him of ignoring Palestinians and LGBTQ residents and pointed to what she described as a pattern of discriminatory behavior. “Careful, your racism is showing,” she wrote in one reply.
Her more pointed follow-up came on a community page, where she said the mayor “calls for the death of all Palestinians,” tried to shut down a theater for screening a Palestinian-Israeli documentary, and “refuses to stand up for the LGBTQ community.” The post was capped with clown emojis.
That was enough for officers to show up in person. In the video, one officer tells her that comments like hers could “probably incite somebody to do something bad.” Pacheco refused to speak without an attorney and shut the door minutes later, stunned.
Miami Beach Police later called the visit a “brief, consensual encounter,” citing concerns about “recent national concerns regarding antisemitism.” Mayor Meiner stood by the department, saying police followed up because of language they deemed “inflammatory” and potentially threatening.
But Pacheco, who says she voted for Meiner in 2023 before growing disillusioned with his leadership, sees it differently.
“There were cops at my door because of something I said,” she told The Washington Post. “It felt like such a foreign, alien feeling.”
Now she’s lawyering up and filing public records requests, ready to fight if things escalate. Though she identifies as progressive, Pacheco said she’s “conservative when it comes to the Constitution,” calling the incident a violation of her First Amendment rights.
She also isn’t backing down. Next time she sees a post from an elected official? She plans to do exactly what she did before: type her thoughts and hit send.
Because in her words: “This is freedom of speech. This is America, right?”














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