South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

PLAYERS

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did not obtain the reports from police.

The Broward State Attorney’s Office is still deciding whether to press armed robbery charges against Dunbar and New York Giants cornerback Deandre Baker. A spokespers­on declined to comment on Saturday.

Dunbar and Baker, both South Florida natives, were arrested after Miramar police said they stole jewelry and money from people, at gunpoint, at a house party on May 13. Police said Dunbar was seen helping Baker, although victims conflicted on whether he was armed. They pleaded not guilty.

The search warrant obtained by the New York Daily News, and the police documents, said that a Miami man named Dominic “Coach” Johnson, who knew both NFL players since their youth, helped arrange the payoffs at Grieco’s office. In exchange, the four victims signed sworn affidavits alleging that Dunbar had nothing to do with the robbery.

The police documents alleged that closed-circuit TV footage shows Johnson and another unidentifi­ed person joining the four supposed victims at the lawyer’s Miami office two days after the incident.

Johnson and the unknown person are seen in the elevator going up to Grieco’s office on the afternoon of May 15. The unknown person opens a “black bag” and “removes money,” the newspaper reported, quoting the warrant. The person also “shows the open bag to Johnson and you can see a large quantity of money. Johnson then takes the bag,” the warrant alleged.

According to a police report, one of the victims told detectives that he was given $5,000 inside Grieco’s office.

“The lawyer said, you know, I’m not supposed to be in any of this type of situation ... so whatever you guys have going on ... you know, that’s between you guys. I’m just here for the affidavit,” said the victim, an exchange echoed by other victims.

“He said that he was going to step out because he couldn’t take any part in it,” another victim said, according to a transcript of the interview included in the police report.

A Miramar detectives asked him: “Was it your impression that he knew what was about to happen, he knew that there was going to be a payoff...?”

The victim replied: “Yeah, that’s why he stepped out.”

One of the victims — who had a watch stolen during the robbery — said Grieco walked out of the office, but soon walked back in “to see what was going on.”

“He walked in and the money was like being just dumped out,” the victim said, adding: “Coach asked him to leave the room.”

The victim told police that Dunbar’s younger brother was the one who actually handed over the cash to Johnson.

After everyone had left the meeting, the documents said, a Miramar detective said he got a call from Grieco saying the accusers had changed their testimony.

“This detective noted that Grieco was very giddy about the recanting and wanted the warrant quashed. Grieco then emailed me the sworn documents,” Miramar Detective Mark Moretti wrote in a report. “It should be noted all 5 documents were exactly the same.”

That same afternoon, the Herald and other media outlets reported Grieco’s claim. In a statement Friday night, Grieco did not deny that a meeting had taken place in his office or that money had changed hands.

“Law enforcemen­t, both local and federal, was advised from day 1 and beyond that the alleged ‘victims’ in this case were actively extorting both Baker and Dunbar,” Grieco said. “These men fabricated a robbery story after waiting an hour to call police and then immediatel­y began contacting the players demanding money. My office obtained accurate and truthful affidavits consistent with the independen­t witness and my client’s account.”

He called the accusers “seasoned career criminals” and added that Dunbar, his client, had passed a polygraph confirming that the NFL player “did not participat­e or witness any robbery.” Grieco also said the Daily News had not contacted him for comment before publishing its story.

He was automatica­lly reelected to another term in the state House last month after no opponent filed to run against him.

Bradford Cohen, an attorney for Baker, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. Neither did Johnson, the man said to have paid off the victims.

According to the court and police documents, one victim later told police he got $30,000 in Grieco’s office, while a second admitted he received $20,000 there. A third said he received $5,000 and gave half to the fourth victim.

The victims also reported that they’d received threats — one, according to a police report, said Johnson told him about a $100,000 bounty “on our head.”

‘Wild accusation­s’

The developmen­ts in the case quickly rippled across South Florida legal and political circles.

In a statement, Florida House Speaker Jose Oliva said he would “follow the case closely.”

“News reports are extremely concerning and the House takes these allegation­s very seriously. All members are expected to act in accordance with the ethics rules and set an example for their fellow citizens. I expect Representa­tive Grieco to cooperate with law enforcemen­t and do what is in the best interest of his constituen­ts,” said Oliva, a Miami Lakes Republican. “Should Representa­tive Grieco be convicted or plead guilty, further action is available to me in my capacity as Speaker. Representa­tive Grieco is entitled, as all Americans are under our Constituti­on, to the presumptio­n of innocence.”

Grieco has not been accused of a crime over the alleged payoffs.

State Rep. Joseph Geller, chairman of the MiamiDade County Legislativ­e Delegation, defended Grieco Saturday after learning of the allegation­s in the police records

“Mike Grieco is a valued member of our delegation. He does a great job in Tallahasse­e. I think the fact that in a very turbulent MiamiDade political world he was reelected unopposed says something about the way he’s viewed politicall­y,” said Geller, a Democrat from Aventura. “I tend to be skeptical about wild accusation­s against defense lawyers as a general rule. They have a habit of making people in authority uncomforta­ble.”

The state representa­tive has courted controvers­y throughout his career, from his stint in the mid-2000s as an assistant state attorney — which ended after he was caught using his assaultcha­rge prosecutio­n of nowdecease­d NFL player Sean Taylor to advertise his sidegig moonlighti­ng as “DJ Esquire” at South Beach nightclubs — to the criminal charge he faced over a campaign-finance scandal that forced him to resign as a Miami Beach commission­er three years ago.

Even before this latest brush with notoriety, Grieco was battling a formal complaint from the Florida Bar and charges of “lying to the public” from the MiamiDade ethics commission over the fundraisin­g fiasco.

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