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View Full Version : Major Armando Aguilar Jr In IA



Unregistered
10-02-2019, 11:30 AM
Well now the fox is guarding the hen house. Major IBalmea and others were finally transferred out of IA for incompetence and their involvement in covering up investigations.

Unregistered
10-02-2019, 12:04 PM
Just because you and the CIP say so.

Unregistered
10-02-2019, 12:41 PM
Aguilar and Ortiz are best friends 👬 👍

Unregistered
10-02-2019, 12:49 PM
It’s time to clean up IA. Some people have been there scamming for too long.

Unregistered
10-02-2019, 01:50 PM
Aguilar and Ortiz are best friends 👬 👍
Nestor and Max have none

Unregistered
10-02-2019, 02:14 PM
Nestor and Max have none

Actually Aguilar is distancing himself from Ortiz he has political ambitions.

Unregistered
10-02-2019, 03:55 PM
Actually Aguilar is distancing himself from Ortiz he has political ambitions.

So with all the criminal and civil investigation Ortiz has pending do you think Aguliar will ROD him?

Unregistered
10-02-2019, 03:59 PM
So with all the criminal and civil investigation Ortiz has pending do you think Aguliar will ROD him?

He was sent there to protect what his father started in return next chief guaranteed

Unregistered
10-02-2019, 11:00 PM
Who was his father?

Unregistered
10-03-2019, 02:47 PM
Who was his father?

Mr. Aguilar..

Unregistered
10-03-2019, 08:04 PM
What cover-ups! If your part of the family and friends then your good.

Unregistered
10-04-2019, 03:40 AM
Tapate el culo bien porque lo que viene es un arroz con mango.

Unregistered
10-12-2019, 04:18 PM
How many of Whortizs complaints have been covered up already?

Unregistered
10-12-2019, 06:03 PM
Six Miami police officers are indicted in slaying Cover-up charged in beating death

https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bs-xpm-1993-07-25-1993206025-story.html


MIAMI -- Yet another explosive criminal case involving a killing by police is being rekindled with new federal indictments charging six Miami officers with planting evidence and conspiring to cover up the beating death of a drug dealer almost five years ago.

Four of the six officers named in a grand jury indictment last week have been tried once in the death of Leonardo Mercado. Their acquittal on civil rights charges in December 1990 led to violent protests and the burning of several businesses in Miami's largely Puerto Rican Wynwood neighborhood.

This time, those four officers, along with two others not previously charged, are accused of fabricating evidence, including planting a knife in the kitchen where Mr. Mercado died, and agreeing to lie about it.

"A lot of people are very happy about this," Bill Rios, executive director of the Wynwood Community Development Corporation, said Friday, a day after the indictments were announced. "This validates the community's belief that there was a conspiracy."

The trial of the six officers, expected to begin this fall, will once again focus attention on police actions that have led to violent deaths and equally violent community reaction. Since 1980, Miami has been rocked by four major riots sparked either by killings by police or jury verdicts involving such killings.

Mr. Mercado, 35, died Dec. 16, 1988, minutes after six officers from Miami's Street Narcotics Unit stopped to question him about a death threat one of the officers had reportedly received. Punched and kicked so hard that footprints were visible on his face, Mr. Mercado was a victim of what a police spokesman later called "just a frenzy." His death was ruled homicide.

Six officers went to trial on federal civil rights and conspiracycharges, and after six weeks of testimony, all were freed after the jury either acquitted them or could not decide on a verdict. One of the six officers originally charged died two years ago in a sky-diving accident. Another, Thomas Trujillo, has been granted immunity and is expected to testify.

"This indictment should assure people that the system can check itself," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Bruce Udolf.

In pursuing charges of evidence-planting and conspiracy, prosecutors hope to use statements the defendants made to police internal affairs investigators. Those statements were suppressed in the first trial.

Charged for the second time in the Mercado case are Officer Pablo Camacho, 46; Officer Charles Haynes, 34; Officer Nathaniel Veal Jr., 34; and Officer Andy Watson, 36. All were allegedly involved in the beating. Faciyng charges for the first time are Officer Armando Aguilar, 37, and Jesus Aguero, 30, who was fired from the force
ast December after being accused of receiving unlawful compensation and committing perjury.

Over the past 4 1/2 years, Officer Camacho, Officer Haynes, Officer Veal and Officer Watson have each received more than $180,000 in pay while under suspension from duty. During a normal work day, they are required to stay at home and check in with the internal affairs office twice a day.

Unregistered
10-12-2019, 06:17 PM
And very happily retired collecting my pension. So FU you all.

Unregistered
10-12-2019, 06:38 PM
Almost there!!!! Chief of police like daddy and mommy promised

Unregistered
10-12-2019, 09:34 PM
If that incident would had happen today, he would have been serving time in a federal jail and Jr would be flipping burgers in Burger King 🍔

Unregistered
10-12-2019, 10:47 PM
But it didn’t. Go turn on your body worn camera and gps. I’ll collect my pension bitach

Unregistered
10-12-2019, 11:21 PM
Six Miami police officers are indicted in slaying Cover-up charged in beating death

https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bs-xpm-1993-07-25-1993206025-story.html


MIAMI -- Yet another explosive criminal case involving a killing by police is being rekindled with new federal indictments charging six Miami officers with planting evidence and conspiring to cover up the beating death of a drug dealer almost five years ago.

Four of the six officers named in a grand jury indictment last week have been tried once in the death of Leonardo Mercado. Their acquittal on civil rights charges in December 1990 led to violent protests and the burning of several businesses in Miami's largely Puerto Rican Wynwood neighborhood.

This time, those four officers, along with two others not previously charged, are accused of fabricating evidence, including planting a knife in the kitchen where Mr. Mercado died, and agreeing to lie about it.

"A lot of people are very happy about this," Bill Rios, executive director of the Wynwood Community Development Corporation, said Friday, a day after the indictments were announced. "This validates the community's belief that there was a conspiracy."

The trial of the six officers, expected to begin this fall, will once again focus attention on police actions that have led to violent deaths and equally violent community reaction. Since 1980, Miami has been rocked by four major riots sparked either by killings by police or jury verdicts involving such killings.

Mr. Mercado, 35, died Dec. 16, 1988, minutes after six officers from Miami's Street Narcotics Unit stopped to question him about a death threat one of the officers had reportedly received. Punched and kicked so hard that footprints were visible on his face, Mr. Mercado was a victim of what a police spokesman later called "just a frenzy." His death was ruled homicide.

Six officers went to trial on federal civil rights and conspiracycharges, and after six weeks of testimony, all were freed after the jury either acquitted them or could not decide on a verdict. One of the six officers originally charged died two years ago in a sky-diving accident. Another, Thomas Trujillo, has been granted immunity and is expected to testify.

"This indictment should assure people that the system can check itself," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Bruce Udolf.

In pursuing charges of evidence-planting and conspiracy, prosecutors hope to use statements the defendants made to police internal affairs investigators. Those statements were suppressed in the first trial.

Charged for the second time in the Mercado case are Officer Pablo Camacho, 46; Officer Charles Haynes, 34; Officer Nathaniel Veal Jr., 34; and Officer Andy Watson, 36. All were allegedly involved in the beating. Faciyng charges for the first time are Officer Armando Aguilar, 37, and Jesus Aguero, 30, who was fired from the force
ast December after being accused of receiving unlawful compensation and committing perjury.

Over the past 4 1/2 years, Officer Camacho, Officer Haynes, Officer Veal and Officer Watson have each received more than $180,000 in pay while under suspension from duty. During a normal work day, they are required to stay at home and check in with the internal affairs office twice a day.


Okay Jerry we know you did such a great job of putting cops in jail. What about the photos your tried to use that weren’t the true crime shots. Thank god the Medical examiner took crime scene pictures also before you had the bushes cut down to help out the witness statements. You should have been in a chair right next to them in a pin stripped suit.

Unregistered
10-12-2019, 11:41 PM
And very happily retired collecting my pension. So FU you all.

Surely, you are, but in those few, but unavoidable moments when your conscience breaks free, you know you slid. *

"The Lord is slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love, forgiving iniquity and transgression, but he will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquities of the father on his children, to the third and the fourth generation." Numbers 14:18

Continue to enjoy your retirement and pension, but know this: We all have it coming!*

Unregistered
10-13-2019, 12:30 AM
Six Miami police officers are indicted in slaying Cover-up charged in beating death

https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bs-xpm-1993-07-25-1993206025-story.html


MIAMI -- Yet another explosive criminal case involving a killing by police is being rekindled with new federal indictments charging six Miami officers with planting evidence and conspiring to cover up the beating death of a drug dealer almost five years ago.

Four of the six officers named in a grand jury indictment last week have been tried once in the death of Leonardo Mercado. Their acquittal on civil rights charges in December 1990 led to violent protests and the burning of several businesses in Miami's largely Puerto Rican Wynwood neighborhood.

This time, those four officers, along with two others not previously charged, are accused of fabricating evidence, including planting a knife in the kitchen where Mr. Mercado died, and agreeing to lie about it.

"A lot of people are very happy about this," Bill Rios, executive director of the Wynwood Community Development Corporation, said Friday, a day after the indictments were announced. "This validates the community's belief that there was a conspiracy."

The trial of the six officers, expected to begin this fall, will once again focus attention on police actions that have led to violent deaths and equally violent community reaction. Since 1980, Miami has been rocked by four major riots sparked either by killings by police or jury verdicts involving such killings.

Mr. Mercado, 35, died Dec. 16, 1988, minutes after six officers from Miami's Street Narcotics Unit stopped to question him about a death threat one of the officers had reportedly received. Punched and kicked so hard that footprints were visible on his face, Mr. Mercado was a victim of what a police spokesman later called "just a frenzy." His death was ruled homicide.

Six officers went to trial on federal civil rights and conspiracycharges, and after six weeks of testimony, all were freed after the jury either acquitted them or could not decide on a verdict. One of the six officers originally charged died two years ago in a sky-diving accident. Another, Thomas Trujillo, has been granted immunity and is expected to testify.

"This indictment should assure people that the system can check itself," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Bruce Udolf.

In pursuing charges of evidence-planting and conspiracy, prosecutors hope to use statements the defendants made to police internal affairs investigators. Those statements were suppressed in the first trial.

Charged for the second time in the Mercado case are Officer Pablo Camacho, 46; Officer Charles Haynes, 34; Officer Nathaniel Veal Jr., 34; and Officer Andy Watson, 36. All were allegedly involved in the beating. Faciyng charges for the first time are Officer Armando Aguilar, 37, and Jesus Aguero, 30, who was fired from the force
ast December after being accused of receiving unlawful compensation and committing perjury.

Over the past 4 1/2 years, Officer Camacho, Officer Haynes, Officer Veal and Officer Watson have each received more than $180,000 in pay while under suspension from duty. During a normal work day, they are required to stay at home and check in with the internal affairs office twice a day.


Okay cousin Jerry we know you were the lead here trying to screw over the cops. How short did you have the bushes cut, so they worked with the witness statement before you had ID take pictures. Thank goodness the medical examiner took their own that night. Maybe you should have been seated next to them. You and the Reyes clan must have come from the same seed pod.

Unregistered
10-13-2019, 01:18 AM
You know what eventually god wrath will get you! Hope you have confess yours sins and asked for forgiveness. Either way we all know what happen that day. Now your son is in IA. Can you Look at him in the eyes and tell him the truth?

Unregistered
10-13-2019, 02:12 AM
You know what eventually god wrath will get you! Hope you have confess yours sins and asked for forgiveness. Either way we all know what happen that day. Now your son is in IA. Can you Look at him in the eyes and tell him the truth?

Okay cousin Jerry lied

Unregistered
10-13-2019, 05:48 PM
Major doing a good job cleaning up IA. Can’t wait for all these scammers to get kicked out. You have been here for too long and have become lazy. Time for new people to take over.

Unregistered
10-14-2019, 06:15 PM
Ibalmea messed up and he is out.

Unregistered
10-18-2019, 01:31 AM
Major doing a good job cleaning up IA. Can’t wait for all these scammers to get kicked out. You have been here for too long and have become lazy. Time for new people to take over.

Ortiz do you mean doing a good job for you?

Unregistered
02-19-2020, 05:17 PM
Aguilar and Ortiz are best friends 👬 👍

Armando’s father will be at every union meeting he brought Ortiz to the union back in the day

Unregistered
03-31-2020, 09:17 PM
When is the promotion to chief of police ?

Unregistered
05-07-2020, 05:07 PM
When is the promotion to chief of police ?

Soon papa deal is done no fake interviews no national search

Daddy secured this spot