25th Anniversary of the Miami FBI Shootout
via Trigger Pull Tactical by Trigger Pull Tactical on 4/12/11
Over the years in the various academies and classes I've been too, I've heard the famous 1986 FBI Miami shootout mentioned a hundred or more times. I would often wonder about the incident, and think how powerful it must have been to be mentioned that many times, so many years later. I'm glad not only the FBI, but all the other agencies learned something from that tragic day. Hopefully all Federal agencies are working together with locals better than they did back then. Be safe out there... By Curt Anderson
Associated Press
Quoting Grogan, Hanlon said: "There's not going to be any trial when we find these guys." As soon as their car stopped, the suspects opened fire with a shotgun and a .223-cal. Ruger Mini-14 rifle, which packed more power and carried more ammunition than anything the agents had. Some had semiautomatic handguns and one had a 12-gauge shotgun, but many only were armed only with difficult-to-reload revolvers. Only two wore body armor, and even that wasn't strong enough to stop the rifle's rounds. Grogan, 53, and 30-year-old Dove were both shot and killed by Platt with the rifle. Platt also shot the five other agents who survived before one of them _ Edmundo Mireles Jr. _ shot and killed both suspects despite having use of only one arm. He survived and was awarded the FBI's Medal of Valor. Mueller called the shootout "one of the most difficult and dangerous days in the history of the bureau." More than 140 shots were fired in a little over five minutes. One witness said he thought an episode of TV's "Miami Vice" was being filmed until he saw the blood. Webster, who is also a former federal judge and ex-CIA director, said the Miami battle changed FBI thinking on weaponry. Before then, use of more powerful firearms was considered too risky because of possible injuries to bystanders. "This brought home that we were outgunned. We shouldn't let that happen again," Webster said. "We translated some of that day into improvements to make (agents') chances of survival that much better." FBI agents now carry a .40-cal. semiautomatic handgun and all have access to body armor in potentially violent situations. Training was changed so that agents could better cope with similar confrontations. Since 1925, 36 FBI agents have been killed in the line of duty, including one who died in the 9/11 terror attacks in New York. At Monday's ceremony, each name was read aloud and a single rose placed in a vase to memorialize them.
Keep Doing God's Work Warriors,
Trigger Pull

