Miami Herald (Sunday)

Miami police force homeless people to move away from ‘Bad Boys 4’ film production

- BY MICHAEL BUTLER mbutler@miamiheral­d.com Miami Herald staff writer Joey Flechas contribute­d to this report. Michael Butler: @mikeviimus­ic

Matthew Williams’ mood was somber Thursday as three police cars sat parked near the homeless encampment on Southwest North River Drive where he lives in downtown Miami. Officers were refusing to leave until he moved all of his belongings somewhere else, he said.

“It’s because of that new movie that’s filming,” Williams said as he filled a grocery cart with his personal items. “They moved us because we were too close to their set. They didn’t want the fancy movie people from out of town seeing the homeless exist in Miami.”

“Bad Boys 4,” an action movie starring Will Smith and Martin Lawrence, is filming in the area. Road closures have been announced throughout Miami and Fort Lauderdale.

Williams, 44, says he previously worked as a line cook at a Bayside Marketplac­e restaurant before he became overwhelme­d with costs of living and became homeless. The production was approved by government officials and promised to add $20 million to the local economy, according to Variety. The film studio Columbia Pictures spent $500,000 on added police support to manage traffic during the four days of filming in Miami.

A spokespers­on for Will Smith’s production company, Westbrook Studios, referred questions to Columbia Pictures’ parent company, Sony, which did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Officer Michael Vega of the Miami police affirmed that it is illegal to put a tent anywhere on city property and said that the police officers were enforcing that law. He added that the group was in a restricted area and that “no one other than those approved by the film crew can be in that area.”

“It is not that Miami police doesn’t want them to see the homeless population,” Vega said. “They can see it through all of downtown Miami.”

Police recommend that individual­s seek shelter at Camillus House, the

Chapman Partnershi­p center or the Salvation Army.

“They’re offered to go to a shelter, and if they refuse, then they have to leave the area,” Vega said. “Before the officers tell them to move, they are offered help, and most refuse to accept it.”

As traffic zoomed by Friday afternoon, Felicia Evans sat outside her tent at a new location on Northwest Third Court and expressed her grievances with the city.

Evans, 55, previously worked as a certified nursing assistant and has been part of the group moving around Miami with Williams.

According to Evans, all three of the city’s recommende­d shelters are at capacity and have no beds.

“We don’t have too many places to go,” she said. “They’re filming for Will Smith, and we can’t go that way. It’s difficult. I don’t know what the next steps are going to be because all of the shelters are full.”

Evans says she has been without a home for the past nine months and is concerned for her safety as well as that of her pregnant niece, who is also living on the streets. Her caseworker has yet to help her find shelter.

Evans said she was not able to fall asleep in her tent until 6 a.m. Friday because she was worried about strangers stealing from her or harming her. Her identifica­tion card and an air mattress have already been stolen, she said.

“We need help,” she said. “What’s next for us to do?”

The city of Miami was recently ordered to pay $300,000 to four people experienci­ng homelessne­ss whose belongings were disposed of by city officials. As part of the settlement, the city agreed to stop trashing people’s personal belongings immediatel­y, according to attorneys for the plaintiffs. The city agreed to collect, photograph and temporaril­y store what they pick up off the street to allow owners to recover them, the attorneys said.

 ?? ALIE SKOWRONSKI askowronsk­i@miamiheral­d.com ?? Eli, a veteran, walks with her dog on Thursday after she and her partner packed up all of their belongings when city of Miami police told them to vacate the area by the Miami River in downtown Miami.
ALIE SKOWRONSKI askowronsk­i@miamiheral­d.com Eli, a veteran, walks with her dog on Thursday after she and her partner packed up all of their belongings when city of Miami police told them to vacate the area by the Miami River in downtown Miami.

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