Agency profiles
Miami-Dade S.O. logo
Official source profile

Miami-Dade S.O.

Sheriff Department | Doral, FL

Official websiteTransparency pageVideo channelRecords portalBodycam policyUse-of-force policy
1
Tracked releases

Published incidents tied to this agency

69 days
Average release

1 measured release

0/1
Within 30 days

No state requirement listed; using 30 days as a general benchmark

1
Official videos

0 TBL video views

Release Timing

Calculated from published incidents with both an incident date and release date.

1 release measured
Average release
69 days
Median release
69 days
Fastest release
69 days
Slowest release
69 days

Source Coverage

Published incidents
1
Official videos
1
Cited sources
7
Latest release
Jun 10, 2026

Latest Release Timing

Recent tracked releases with incident date, release date, and measured delay.

0% within 30 days

Agency Transparency Indicators

These indicators describe source availability and release infrastructure. They do not grade the agency or determine whether any action in a specific incident was lawful or unlawful.

6 / 10 located

Dedicated transparency page

Located

Agency maintains or links to a public critical incident, transparency, or release page.

Public video channel

Located

Agency uses YouTube, Vimeo, or a similar public platform for video releases.

Release timing visible

Located

Incident and release dates can be identified for at least one tracked release.

Source records linked

Located

Tracked releases include cited source records or source links.

Official video located

Located

At least one tracked release includes an official video source.

Official website available

Located

Users can identify the agency's official website for additional public-record context.

Public-record instructions available

Not located

Users can identify how to request public records or submit a records request.

Bodycam policy public

Not located

A body-worn camera policy or related public-safety video policy is linked.

Use-of-force policy public

Not located

A use-of-force policy or policy manual section is linked.

Complaint or oversight process linked

Not located

Complaint process or oversight body information is linked.

Linked Incidents

1 published incident tied to this agency.

Researcher Quick Facts

Jurisdiction
Doral, FL
Agency type
Sheriff Department
Latest tracked release
Jun 10, 2026
Video platforms
youtube
Official websiteTransparency pageVideo channelPublic records portalPolicy manualComplaint processOversight board

Last profile review: not yet recorded

State Disclosure Context

Public-records and body-camera release context for Miami-Dade S.O..

Florida treats body-worn camera footage as public records in general, but BWCs are subject to a specific exemption. Under 119.071(2)(l), a body camera recording is confidential and exempt from disclosure, with narrowly defined disclosure paths: to the person recorded (or their personal representative) in portions relevant to that person; to another government agency in the furtherance of official duties; or pursuant to a court order. Disclosures to the broad public are not allowed absent the above exceptions. The exemption applies retroactively and is currently scheduled to sunset on October 2, 2029 unless reenacted. Agencies using BWCs must have policies addressing use, retention, and release (943.1718). Retention requirements include at least 90 days, with longer retention often set by agency policy; agencies must respond to public-records requests promptly and within a reasonable time, per the Government-in-the-Sunshine Manual. For researchers, this means access to BWC footage requires navigating these exemptions, possibly seeking a court order or redacted footage, and understanding that non-subjects may generally not receive full footage. ([flsenate.gov](https://www.flsenate.gov/Laws/Statutes/2024/119.071))
Release deadline
There is no hard statutory deadline for releasing BWC footage to the public. The public records law requires custodians to acknowledge requests promptly and to respond in good faith, with a reasonable time based on complexity and volume of records. Florida’s Government-in-the-Sunshine Manual indicates a duty to acknowledge requests promptly and to respond within a reasonable time, rather than a fixed deadline; agencies may cite complexity and redaction needs when justifying delays. See 119.071 exemptions for BWCs and the Sunshine Manual guidance on timely response. ([flsenate.gov](https://www.flsenate.gov/Laws/Statutes/2024/119.071))
View state resource map

Incident Types

Officer-Involved Shooting, Gun1

Severity Mix

Critical1