![]() ![]() Everybody was making money off cocaine at the time.â€īecause of this dramatic rise in crime and violence, the Miami Police Department went on a hiring spree, almost doubling the number of officers to meet the increasing demands of the city.Īnd in the process, they lowered their standards.Īs a result, many of the new officers turned out to be criminals, including several who were convicted of ordering execution style murders.Īnd they became rich beyond their dreams, splurging for houses, sports cars, exotic vacations and mistresses.īut after an initial mistrial, many ended up so broke, they were forced to seek out court-appointed lawyers. They would then spend that money in restaurants and on clothes and on cars. “These were the people who would get paid $10,000 to unload a boat filled with cocaine. €œEven the people at the bottom rung of the business were making about $120,000 a year,†said Alfred Spellman, who along with Billy Corben, produced the documentary Cocaine Cowboys. An era when everybody was making money off the cocaine trade, whether you were directly involved or not. And saw its peak in 1982 when Miami became the Murder Capital of the World for the second year in a row. And then intensified the following year with an inner-city riot and the Mariel boatlift. It was an era that began with Colombian cocaine cowboys shooting it out on the streets of Miami in 1979. The Miami River Cops case marked the end of the most violent and vicious era in the history of Miami €œI was offended when I learned that they were real cops,†he said. He spent so many hours in court testifying against the cops, that he ended up enrolling in law school and becoming an attorney. Īs part of the task force called Centac 26, Alvarez became the lead investigator in the Miami River Cop case. €œI have not heard from these guys in years,†said Alex Alvarez, a Miami attorney who was a narcotics detective for the Miami-Dade Police Department at the time (back when it was Metro-Dade). And the others have maintained a low profile since their release. Today, the Miami River Cops have all been released from prison, including two that became fugitives in 1987 and were not apprehended until 1994.Īt least one was sent back to prison after committing a string of armed robberies in 2003.Īnd another became a chef since his release although it is not clear where he is working now. By the end of the year, five cops had been arrested.īy the time it was all over, more than 100 cops has been arrested, fired, suspended or reprimanded for corruption, coercion and cocaine rip-offs unveiled during the Miami River Cops investigation, including 20 who were convicted and sent to prison. Within a month after the bodies were found floating in the river, ten Miami police officers were being investigated. Real cops who would go down in history as the Miami River Cops – or as they liked to call themselves, “The Enterprise†– the most notorious gang of corrupt cops ever to don the badge in Miami. They each had guns tucked in their waistbands.Īt first, investigators believed police impersonators were to blame for the rip-off, which was not a rare occurrence at a time when drug rip-offs were taking place almost daily, and police uniforms and equipment could be purchased over the counter at a number of police stores throughout Miami.īut it wasn’t long before investigators determined that these were real cops who had committed the rip-off. They were all dressed in designer jeans and wore jewelry. ![]() When police fished the bodies out of the water, they discovered that each of the men had been carrying between $800 to $1,000 in large bills in their pockets. The other three had managed to swim to shore. The following morning, the bloated bodies of three men were found floating in the river behind Jones Boat Yard. They were solely interested in the cocaine – 350 kilos in all – with a street value of $9 million. They were not interested in making arrests. The men raiding the boat did not go after the men jumping overboard. On a balmy summer night in July 1985, during the height of the Miami Vice popularity, eight men dressed in police uniforms stormed a boat on the Miami River, surprising six men who were unloading several millions dollars worth of cocaine.Īt first, it appeared to be a police raid, but when one of the officers shouted, “kill ‘emâ€, the cocaine traffickers on the boat knew it was something more sinister and began jumping overboard. Above: The trailer for “Dirty Water” a film based on the true story of the Miami River Cops.
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