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BenchRecon Data · Florida officer discipline

Miami Police Department: officer-discipline records

32 FDLE/CJSTC certification-discipline records for Miami Police Department, 20122025, covering 31 distinct officers. 7 involve a crimen-falsi (truthfulness) offense — the conduct that Brady, Giglio, and FRE 608(b) make impeachment material.

Aggregate analysis, data as of 2026-06-17. Reproducible from public records. No individual officer is named.

32discipline records (31 officers)
7with a crimen-falsi (truthfulness) offense
6crimen-falsi records that also ended in revocation (small sample — a raw count, not a rate)

What the records show

Within the crimen-falsi group for Miami Police Department (records can list more than one offense), the most frequent offense strings:

  • 1 Fraud (Found Guilty of Fraud & Related Activity in Connection with Computers), Impersonation (Found Guilty of Aggravated Identity Theft (4 counts)), Computer Offense (Found Guilty of Trafficking in Unauthorized Access Devices), Computer Offense (Found Guilty of Possession of 15 or More Unauthorized Access Devices)
  • 1 False Information to LE During Investigation
  • 1 Extortion (Found Guilty of Interference with Commerce by Extortion Under Color of Official Right (4 counts)), Fraud (Found Guilty of Access Device Fraud), Impersonation (Found Guilty of Aggravated Identity Theft (2 counts))
  • 1 Pled Guilty to False Statement (to Federal Agents)
  • 1 False Statement, Perjury (in Official Proceeding)

Why this matters in a courtroom

A CJSTC discipline record carrying a crimen-falsi offense reflects the administrative record on an officer's character for truthfulness. Under Brady and Giglio, courts have addressed the disclosure of impeachment evidence bearing on a government witness's credibility. For the legal framing and the statewide figures, see the full Florida officer-discipline study.

Methodology & limitations

  • Source: public Florida FDLE/CJSTC officer certification-discipline records, grouped by the employing-agency value FDLE itself records, here Miami Police Department. Snapshot: 2026-06-17. Every figure is reproducible from a published script against the source data.
  • Crimen-falsi classification: verbatim offense text matched for truthfulness offenses (perjury, false statement/report, falsifying, forgery, fraud); any clause carrying a dismissal, nolle prosequi, acquittal, exoneration, or cleared marker is removed before classifying.
  • What the data does NOT show: a discipline record is not proof of guilt in any individual matter and does not reflect current certification status. These are statewide certification-discipline records, not local internal-affairs files. This page reports aggregates only and identifies no individual officer.
  • Small sample: with 7 crimen-falsi records, percentages (including the revocation share) are omitted as noisy — the raw counts are indicative, not rates, and should not be read as a misconduct rate for the agency.

Check a specific Miami Police Department officer

Officer Lookup searches the FDLE/CJSTC discipline records for a named officer, with every entry cited to the underlying public record.