The Miami-Dade Police Department Airport Operations Bureau maintains a constant state of readiness in response to the needs of passengers as they travel through Miami International Airport (MIA). The Airport Operations Police are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. If you find that you need police assistance while at MIA, you can call 305-876-7373. To contact Major Juan Villalba Jr. or Captain Alain Cuenca, please call 305-876-7373.

The General Investigations Unit (GIU)

The General Investigations Unit (GIU) consists of two investigative squads - the Crime Analysis Unit (CAU), which includes two Police Crime Analysts: an Intelligence Analyst and a Community Service Officer.


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GIU detectives provide and are responsible for initiating and conducting follow-up investigations for burglaries, larcenies, assaults, auto thefts, ticket fraud and other offenses that do not fall under the scope of Police Headquarters units.

Crime Analysis Unit (CAU)

The Crime Analysis Unit (CAU) function is to collect data and information relating to crime and then analyze and disseminate this information to departmental elements as well as other concerned law enforcement agencies in a timely manner.

Specialized Projects and Operations Unit

The Special Projects Unit is responsible for the accomplishment of special projects and activities as they relate to incidents at MIA. These activities include but are not limited to developing and coordinating training sessions to enhance the performance of the Miami-Dade Police Department Airport Operations Bureau Officers, as well as coordinate activities between the Airport Operations Police and Aviation Department.

Incident Containment Team (ICT)

The primary goal of ICT is to enhance the overall safety and security of MIA, its employees and the traveling public. The mission of ICT is to provide the immediate response to a threat, actual terrorist or major criminal event.

Motorcycle Unit

The Motorcycle Unit provides a highly mobile group of officers to respond quickly to the rapidly changing traffic flow at MIA. The objective of the unit is to minimize traffic congestion by placing personnel in locations where needed to expedite the flow of traffic and enforce laws of the State of Florida and ordinances of Miami-Dade County. The Motorcycle Unit also complements the Miami-Dade Aviation Department with selective enforcement action of the upper and lower drives of the MIA property.

K-9

Our Explosive Detection Canine Team program prepares dogs and handlers to quickly locate and identify dangerous materials that may present a threat to transportation systems at MIA. They have the ability to rule out the presence of dangerous materials in unattended packages, structures or vehicles, allowing the free and efficient flow of the passengers and commerce through MIA.


To give officers more information before they encounter a potential suspect, Guerette is working with the City of Miami Police Department to build and evaluate what is known as a real-time crime center or RTCC.

That proved to be so successful, department officials wanted to continue with a second phase to develop the real-time crime center, which has become an increasingly popular concept nationally, Guerette said.

Housed within the City of Miami Police Department, the RTCC is located in one room, with multiple TV screens and computers throughout. Workers are stationed at computers with access to closed circuit television cameras throughout the city. These cameras are also connected to a gunshot detection system that alerts the center when a gunshot is fired.

The project is an example of the many recent technological developments in law enforcement, such as body-worn cameras and biometrics, that have had far-reaching effects on police agencies, said Professor Lisa Stolzenberg, chair of the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, a part of the Steven J. Green School of International & Public Affairs.

Guerette and his students will conduct an impact evaluation of the RTCC, analyzing crimes that were relayed by the real time crime center and comparing them to those that were not. Their evaluation will focus on violent crimes throughout a three-year period.

The Miami Police Department has enacted changes to how it treats immigrant victims of crime in response to an investigation by Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting. The story found that dozens of law enforcement agencies across the country routinely undermine visa protections for immigrants.

Miami, like other departments serving large immigrant populations, had created barriers that were never envisioned when Congress created the U visa program 20 years ago to improve trust between police and the immigrant communities they serve.

Eleven other states have passed U visa certification statutes. Departments in California and Nevada, for example, are required to certify cases within 90 days and follow the federal criteria. Other laws are broader. In Connecticut and Delaware, the law instructs agencies only to assign an officer to review requests.

A statewide mandate in Florida likely would face strong opposition from the Republican-controlled state Legislature, which passed a law last year that requires local law enforcement to cooperate with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

The bill was signed into law by Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, but Democrats succeeded in including an amendment that protects crime victims and witnesses who come forward to police from being reported to ICE.

In Miami, it's used for cases big and exceedingly small, as one case Reason recently reviewed showed: Miami police used facial recognition technology to identify a homeless man who refused to give his name to an officer. That man was arrested, but prosecutors quickly dropped the case after determining the officer lacked probable cause for the arrest.

The case was barely a blip in the daily churn of Miami's criminal justice system, but it shows the spread of facial recognition technology and the use of retaliatory charges against those who annoy the police.

Lisa Femia, a staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), which advocates for digital privacy rights, calls the case "a particularly egregious example of mission creep with facial recognition technology."

According to a police incident report, a man, who Reason is not identifying because he was ultimately not prosecuted, was sleeping on a bench in a parking garage at Miami International Airport on the morning of November 13, 2023, when he was approached by a Miami-Dade County police officer.

"While on routine patrol at the Miami International Airport I observed defendant sleeping on a bench in the Dolphin garage, covered with a blanket and unbagged personal items on airport luggage cart," the officer wrote in his report. "The bench is provided for passengers waiting for vehicles to and from the airport. It is not designated for housing."

The report notes that Miami-Dade police have been directed to address homelessness at the airport and that the officer initiated contact to see if the man had been previously issued a trespass warning.

Under Florida law, police can demand identification from a pedestrian only when there is reasonable suspicion that they have committed a crime. For example, two Florida sheriff's deputies were disciplined in 2022 after they arrested a legally blind man for refusing to show his ID.

This officer had other means at his disposal, though. "I identified defendant via facial recognition from Clearview, with assistance from C. Perez, analyst at the MDPD real time crime center," the report says.

Clearview AI is a facial recognition technology company that created a massive database by scraping social media sites like Facebook and YouTube. It first came to public notice in 2020 after a New York Times investigation revealed the company's questionable methods and its partnerships with numerous local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies around the country.

As the Marshall Project reported recently, real time crime centers have also popped up in police departments around the country, allowing departments to harness both public and private surveillance networks to feed information to officers in the field.

"Further investigation revealed defendant was not on the airport trespass list," the police report continues. "However, his failure to truthfully identify himself resulted in an unnecessary delay of investigation and required additional resources for a proper identification."

However, the Miami-Dade State Attorney's Office dropped the charge the same day it was filed. A spokesperson for the office said in a statement to Reason that "the case was dropped due to the legal determination that there was insufficient probable cause to justify the arrest."

Facial recognition technology has been controversial. Reuters reported that about two dozen state or local governments banned it between 2019 and 2021, although many jurisdictions have repealed or chipped away at those bans in the years since.

"Taken together, you've got a system that can quickly, cheaply, and easily ascertain where people have been, who you've been with, what you've been doing," Femia says. "It changes what it means to leave your house and be just a private citizen going about your day."

Femia says it's not hard to imagine facial recognition technology being used to track people engaged in protected free speech activity, such as whistleblowers, union organizers, and protesters. The latter is not hypothetical; several major cities used facial recognition technology to identify Black Lives Matter protesters in 2020.

The staff at Miami-Dade College Padrn Campus graciously hosted the event where Rep. Salazar personally awarded 75 police officers from Miami-Dade County with Certificates of Special Congressional Recognition. 152ee80cbc

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