Particularly for Miami, I would not. I think he's probably worth a Top 20 pick to a team like Minnesota but more of a Top 40 for Miami.
Payton Turner is probably my favorite DE fit for Miami. Ellerson Smith is about as good as any of the OLB options - if Miami leans into more of a pass rusher. If he's there, and he could be, because he's not a great fit for a lot of teams, Zaven Collins would be the ideal OLB at 36 - after Parsons, who can obv also play Mike.
But, there's a lot of defensive talent to sift through at 36 and even 50 (based on projections), and Terrace Marshall and Elijah Moore are currently projected in that range, but, like Eric Stokes, I think they end up going earlier. Elijah Molden is my favorite player of the options that I view as realistic. There's definitely a world where I go Pitts/WR, Horn, Molden with the first three picks. DeVonta Smith didn't fall to 18, Marshall and Moore didn't fall to 36, and Horn somehow fell to 18, but I wouldn't skip tiers because the team needs just this and this.
I do see the holes at edge, and I think the value will line up to fill those holes, but the draft is about acquiring players who move the needle the most for your team. Those are the best players. Not many players in a given class make a lasting impact, and the draft is about adding as many good football players at valuable positions as possible. FA is for needs. FA creates your floor.
If you have enough great players, your holes become a lot easier to fill, because you really only need competence to support greatness. If you have a roster full of good players, but you lack those transcendent talents at key positions, your margin of error is smaller, and your holes are glaring. The Colts are a good example. Their best player is a Guard.