A voting fraud scandal is the talk of the tower at The Club at Brickell Bay, one of the largest condominiums in Miami.
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An Instagram post shows Karl de Borbon and his wife dining out at Sexy Fish. He is running in Monday’s election for a ninth term as president of the board at The Club at Brickell Bay. State officials will monitor the election after allegations of voter fraud have arisen stemming from last year’s election and a June 8 vote. |
For the past year, the Miami Herald has
been digging into the clash between residents at Brickell
Bay and tourists vacationing in short-term rental units
owned by investors — units that violate the city of Miami’s
ban on Airbnbs in multifamily residential buildings. The
Herald investigated allegations of corruption and harassment
by the board president, and how life has become miserable
for the people who live there. Look for the Herald’s
investigation shortly.
Lozier and other candidates running against de Borbon
believe that a new board could balance the interests of
residents, investors and guests, use Airbnb fees for the
benefit of the building and create a model of coexistence.
De Borbon and the HOA attorney said proper procedures have
been followed and no improprieties occurred during voting.
De Borbon, president since 2018, said he has always run
honest campaigns and never tampered with ballots.
He said his challengers resent his popularity and his skill
in keeping maintenance fees low, building a $6 million
reserve fund and making improvements at the 22-year-old
building, which he touted in a mass email to owners.
“Forgeries? How could that be done?” de Borbon said. “I have
no idea. Prove it.”
Alleged ballot irregularities
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Ballots from the 2025 Club at Brickell Bay election. Some Club owners say the ballots were forged and show similar handwriting, and the word “Bay” is missing in the condo name line. |
The ballot contains a line where the
owner writes the name of the condo. But on dozens of ballots
audited and photographed in The Club’s office by Lozier and
others and shown to the Herald, the name is printed the same
way – the club at BRiCKELL, and is missing the word Bay.
“I can confirm I’ve never voted and that’s not my
handwriting,” Jones said. “I wouldn’t write in all caps, and
some of the letters are printed, some are in cursive.”
Jones and others who emailed the HOA with complaints got the
same response from the HOA attorney stating the HOA adhered
to Florida law on the “distribution, collection and
tabulation of ballots.” The HOA “remains committed to
maintaining the accuracy and transparency of its election
processes” and asked owners to notify management in writing
with their concerns — which they already had.
Another anomaly with the June 8 vote was the historic high
number of 489 ballots cast, say longtime homeowners who
attended the meeting where the ballots were tallied. De
Borbon and the board needed 75 percent of the 643 unit
owners to approve the pool deck waterproofing project
proposal, which did not contain a price tag or bid from a
contractor.
“That’s a blank check for the board,” Handal said.
Added Lozier: “The board controls millions of dollars, Karl
controls the board and can cut whatever deals he wants with
vendors.”
Criticism comes with the job, de Borbon said.
“We are financially clear and healthy but some people are
never happy,” he said.
Typical voter turnout is low at The Club, where only about
100 of the 643 units are occupied by homeowners or long-term
tenants. The rest are owned by investors who live elsewhere
and rent units by the night on short-term vacation rental
sites such as Airbnb.
Katherin Fernandez, an original homeowner at The Club and
former board member, is part of a group that has been
fighting the condo’s transformation into an Airbnb hotspot.
They want short-term rentals of less than 30 days to end. De
Borbon runs six Airbnbs in the building under his host name
Mr. Wonderful.
“I considered it an honor and privilege to serve my
neighbors,” said Fernandez. “We pay fees in the expectation
that the HOA board, HOA attorney and property management
company will protect homeowners and the integrity of our
elections.”
Owners have raised objections about a proxy vote called by
De Borbon at a May 18 meeting on the pool project and bylaw
change. They notified the board that the votes were cast
without their authorization.
De Borbon “was the chief proponent of a limited proxy vote
marred by claims of widespread forgery,” Javier Zayas-Bazan,
an attorney representing owners, wrote to the board on June
12.
He also requested voting and communications records, stating
“this Board election scheduled for June 22, 2026, and the
May 18, 2026 limited proxy vote will be the subject of
intensive investigative and legal scrutiny.”
De Borbon dismisses the accusations as coming from a small
group of disgruntled owners. The majority, he maintains,
supports his leadership. “I campaign, yes, but I campaign on
my success,” de Borbon said. “It’s crazy to think I would
hurt the building or kill investment because I’m an investor
myself and I live here, too.”
