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Monday, March 13, 2017

FREDDIE D'AGOSTINO RETIRES

Update: David Troyer, a legendary Miami ASA who headed the narcotics division during the cocaine cowboy heydays, wrote in about this case:

Anonymous David E. Troyer said...

I was the 24-year-old ASA, fresh out of law school in Philadelphia, who had weekend bond hearing duty in 1982 when that case came in. I remember that A-form like it was yesterday, and remember thinking to myself, "Toto, we are not in Kansas anymore." The A-form recited, "This unit was southbound on US 1 Dixie Highway, when I saw the subject standing under the Metro Rail station holding a human head. This unit told the subject to "Drop that head," at which time the subject flung the head at this unit." I also recall homicide detectives following the trail of blood a few blocks to an apartment, where they found the headless body of a woman, clothed only in a tank top that read, "Sticks and stones may break my bones, but whips and chains excite me." For what it's worth, I do not recall the officer throwing the head back at the defendant.
Dave Troyer, ASA 1982-1990


City of Miami Commander Freddie D'Agostino retired on Friday after a long and distinguished career punctuated by one distinctly Miami 1980's moment. 

D'Agostino was a beat cop. A local guy who patrolled little Havana and Coconut Grove. One year, when he joined SWAT, he received 75 commendations. President Clinton named him one of the top ten police officers in the nation that year. 

In 1985, before most ASAs and some judges were born, Miami was a town in the grip of the crack epidemic. Those buildings on Brickell- faux art deco that now look faded and dated? Built and funded with narco cash flowing through local banks. In 1979,  rival drug dealers opened fire on each other at Dadeland Mall with machine guns as shoppers dived for cover.  Griselda Blanco filled the ME's morgue with bodies, ordering hits with a glance or a twitch of her pinky. 
It was chaos. 
In 1980, after four Miami Police Officers were acquitted in the death of Arthur McDuffie, the city erupted and burned and we and our fellow lawyers walked into the Metro Justice Building under the protection of the National Guard that Governor Graham ordered deployed. 

ASAs left their jobs on a Friday, and had $50,000 in cash on cases by the end of the month- if the first month was slow. 

Time Magazine trashed Miami on the cover as "Paradise Lost?

It was an exciting and glorious time to be a criminal  lawyer at the center of it all. Herald Crime Reporter Edna Buchanan covered it all- showing up at crime scenes, big cocaine busts (nobody really got worked up over a case less than five kilos) and won a Pulitzer Prize for her reporting. 

And one day thirty-two years ago at the Metro-Rail station by Bird Road, while on routine patrol, a man threw the severed head of his girlfriend at twenty-four year old  Officer Freddy D'Agostino, who- startled, threw it back. The man threw it again at Officer D'Agostino. Yes, Officer D'Agostino was hit not once-but twice- with a severed head. 

And now 32 years later, having done his duty and given back to his community and made Miami a safer place for all of us, Commander D'Agostino has retired. 

The Herald covered his career and retirement here

Thank you Commander D'Agostino. We've been in court with you more than a few times. You were always one of the good guys. Well done. Well done indeed. Enjoy a well deserved retirement. 

From Occupied America...Fight the Power!


9 comments:

David E. Troyer said...

I was the 24-year-old ASA, fresh out of law school in Philadelphia, who had weekend bond hearing duty in 1982 when that case came in. I remember that A-form like it was yesterday, and remember thinking to myself, "Toto, we are not in Kansas anymore." The A-form recited, "This unit was southbound on US 1 Dixie Highway, when I saw the subject standing under the Metro Rail station holding a human head. This unit told the subject to "Drop that head," at which time the subject flung the head at this unit." I also recall homicide detectives following the trail of blood a few blocks to an apartment, where they found the headless body of a woman, clothed only in a tank top that read, "Sticks and stones may break my bones, but whips and chains excite me." For what it's worth, I do not recall the officer throwing the head back at the defendant.
Dave Troyer, ASA 1982-1990.

Bill said...

Miami Dade cops were involved in the McDuffie murder....not Miami.

Anonymous said...

Can't believe you're giving Millan a free pass.

Anonymous said...

Whatever happened to the defendant who chopped up the head?

Anonymous said...

PTI

Anonymous said...

Chopped a head? Give him welfare. The occupied America is clearly to blame. Fight the power. Give illegals free shit. Penalize legal Americans who work and pay taxes. It's all the whit'd males fault. Everything is. If you have a problem, Blame whitey. Fight the power of the duly elected government. ( or vote and stop being illegal and felons, one or the other)

Anonymous said...

The head was thrown at Ofc. Derek Ayckart. Freddy took all the credit...LIAR!!!!!

Anonymous said...

D'Agustino has taken credit for an incident that did NOT involve him,D'Agustino was only a back-up unit and arrived after the incident.
The officer that got the severed head thrown at him was Ofc. Derek Aycart.

The case number for the incident in question is 0611229J and anyone can request a copy at Miami Police Records Unit.

The narrative on the report reads as follows:

On the above date, time and place, Ofc. Derek Aycart received a call reference an assault. On arrival, he saw the offender Alberto Mesa, standing naked next to a Metro rail post.
Mesa held the head of a young white female in his right hand.
Mesa told Ofc. Aycart that she was the devil and that he killed her. He threw the head at Officer Aycart and it landed on the street.
Aycart put Mesa in his police car.Mesa was hysterical and violent.Mesa's brother Rene Mesa, who lives one house away came out and told officer Aycart and other officers that his brother came to his house naked, screaming that he killed someone and to call the police.
Rene Mesa then took the officers a few blocks to 2798 SW 33 Ave. where Alberto Mesa lived.

He opened the door and the officers found the victim on the floor, at the entrance to the bathroom.She had her head cut off and had 40-50 stab wounds on her chest, pubic hair area and legs.
She was identified as Dina Tormos, aka Drewsilla Taylor white female 21 YOA.It was learned from the offender's relatives and other witnesses that Meas recently had developed an intense interest in religion, which appeared to have created a conflict between him and the victim.

Anonymous said...

I was told to read this post by a friend. I never said I took credit for the incident in fact Aycart which to this day is still a great friend of mine will tell you what exactly occurred. your facts are incorrect if you wish to ask him or I which I did back him up however read the commendation by a legendary Lieutenant of the homicide office that wrote the two us on this incident. Again I don’t want credit and Aycart did in fact get the call and handled it until I got there to help him out. I’m sure you are police officer that didn’t get the facts correctly and know the press sometimes can change words that you say.