Miami Herald

Charge dropped against NFL player Quinton Dunbar but fellow player Deandre Baker is charged in robbery

- BY DAVID OVALLE dovalle@miamiheral­d.com

The Broward State Attorney’s Office is dropping the armed robbery case against Seattle Seahawks cornerback Quinton Dunbar, but will prosecute New York Giants cornerback Deandre Baker.

Prosecutor­s made the announceme­nt Friday, nearly three months after Dunbar and Baker, both South Florida natives, were arrested on suspicion they stole jewelry and money from people, at gunpoint, at a house party in Miramar.

Deandre Baker

Miramar police detectives believe the robbery was retaliatio­n for $70,000 in gambling losses from a party the night before.

“We’re absolutely delighted that the Broward State Attorney’s Office came to the same conclusion we did: that Quinton Dunbar should never have been arrested,” defense lawyer Andrew Rier said. “We wish Mr. Dunbar the best of luck.”

The football players have been free on bond since their arrest in May as Broward prosecutor­s decided whether to file formal charges.

The Broward State Attorney’s Office said in a press release on Friday that Baker, 22, is being formally charged with four counts of robbery with a firearm. Dunbar, 28, won’t face charges “due to insufficie­nt evidence.”

Police initially said Dunbar was seen helping Baker, although victims conflicted on whether he was armed. Dunbar’s lawyers had blasted the victims as criminals who were looking to shake down the football players, demanding $50,000 or they would leak the story to the news website TMZ.

Bradford

Cohen,

Baker’s lawyer, ripped the arrest as

“disgusting.”

“To charge a young man based on admitted liars testimony is why we need a change in Broward from the old guard,” Cohen said on his Instagram page, urging people to vote for a reform-minded State

Quinton Dunbar

Attorney in the fall election; the county will select its first new top prosecutor in over four decades.

The high-profile case took another twist earlier last month when court and police documents revealed that four victims told police they were paid $55,000 two days after the incident, allegedly at the downtown Miami office of Dunbar’s then-attorney, Michael Grieco. Law enforcemen­t began an investigat­ion into whether the alleged payoffs, orchestrat­ed by a man named Dominic “Coach” Johnson, amount to witness tampering.

According to a Miramar police report obtained by the Miami Herald last month, the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t concluded that Grieco’s role could not be proven as a crime, although the investigat­ion was still considered ongoing.

The Broward State Attorney’s Office said Friday it was not handling any allegation­s of witness tampering because the incident was “alleged to have happened in Miami-Dade County, not in Broward County’s jurisdicti­on.”

The Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office could not immediatel­y be reached for comment on Friday afternoon.

The Florida Bar is looking at whether Grieco’s role in the supposed payoffs violated any ethical rules.

Because of the arrests, Dunbar and Baker had been placed on the NFL commission­er’s exempt list, which barred them from practicing or playing games.

Seattle began training camp on July 28, despite concerns over the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

Dunbar is in his first year with Seattle. The team acquired him from Washington for a fifth-round pick, and he was expected to contend for a starting spot. In Washington, Dunbar had a breakout year in 2019, intercepti­ng four passes and starting 11 games.

David Ovalle: 305-376-3379, @davidovall­e305

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