Miami Herald

Grave of Black rookie cop killed 40 years ago finally found

- BY CHARLES RABIN crabin@miamiheral­d.com

Police say they’ve found the unmarked tomb of a Black officer who was killed on duty decades ago. They think that the grave of another Black cop, Officer Johnnie Young, is nearby.

In the morning hours of Sept. 2, 1981, a rookie cop by the name of Nathaniel Broom stopped a Volkswagen Beetle on a Miami street corner with three men inside suspected of taking part in a robbery. The men ran and Broom, 23 and only nine months on the job, gave chase.

As the officer raced up Northwest Second Avenue and then turned the corner onto 11 Street in what the Miami Herald described at the time as a “rundown section of Miami called Overtown,” Robert Patton, 24, was kneeling on the ground, waiting. Holding his gun with both hands, Patton fired at Broom as he came into sight. The bullet struck his heart. He was killed almost immediatel­y.

Broom was buried — and then, somehow, the location of his remains became a mystery to Miami police. Now, 40 years later, a

retired detective and her old boss believe Broom’s grave has finally been found.

“It’s him. We know it’s him,” said Jerry Lynn Dellamico, a retired Miami robbery detective who has spent years searching for the lost graves of officers killed in the line of duty. “I saw the spot and knew immediatel­y in my heart it was him.”

The apparent discovery of Broom’s grave was both timely and unexpected.

It happened Tuesday, just two days before an annual celebratio­n of fallen South Florida police officers at Tropical Park, in an out-of-the way and unkempt cemetery in Allapattah where many of Miami’s most well-known Black pioneers like Athalie Range, Gwen Cherry and Overtown developer D.A. Dorsey have been laid to rest.

HERO COPS

Police say the identifica­tion of Broom’s grave coincided with the annual launch of a Miami police program called HERO, which stands for “Honoring Every Resting Officer” and seeks to memorializ­e all 40 Miami officers killed in the line of duty since 1895.

Dellamico coordinate­s the program. Any Miami officer who wishes can be assigned a name or two and is then responsibl­e for adorning the grave with a small flag and a badge. Miami Police Cmdr. Dan Kerr said the laying of memorials is

usually accompanie­d by a testimonia­l from the assigned officer about what led to the untimely death.

“I usually tell the story of how they died to whoever is there,” said Kerr. “If no one is there, I still tell the story.”

Until about a year ago, the tombs at Lincoln Memorial Park Cemetery were stacked on top of each other above ground with overgrown shrubbery and ficus, banyon and oak trees rooting into the concrete tombs. The only way to find a grave site was to climb over and around them. Very few of the concrete caskets were identifiab­le. That changed when a South Carolina man named Jessie Wooden — who learned the mother he never knew was buried there — obtained an interest in the property.

“I bought it just to clean it up because I was upset my mom was here,” he said.

It turns out Broom’s grave was discovered without the aid of modern technology. Good oldfashion­ed, leather-shoe investigat­ing led to the find. After years of getting nowhere, the cemetery’s new owner gave Dellamico a hand-written notebook. Inside it was the name Nate Broom. Next to the name was a marking that led the detective to a plot identified as A1 in Row 5.

Though the aisles of the cemetery aren’t clearly marked, just this week Dellamico was able to match the listing in Wooden’s notebook with a decade-old photo of two Miami cops, retired Detective John Buhrmaster and current Assistant

Police Chief Armando Aguilar Jr., standing next to where they believed Broom was laid to rest. That, however, was never confirmed. Then, combining the picture with the hand-written notes and Google Maps, Dellamico said she found the site, grew silent and choked up.

“I was crying,” she said.

Dellamico, who said she’d been searching for Broom’s grave for years, said investigat­ors met with some family members about a decade ago. The meeting, however, didn’t lead to any breakthrou­ghs. And, until a few days ago, Broom’s crypt was sun-washed and unadorned.

Now, it stands out from those around it with a fresh coat of white paint and a newly-painted gold cross on it. Its wooden handles have also been repainted gold. And each corner of the concrete casket has a small bouquet of roses and a small American flag on it.

OFFICER JOHNNIE YOUNG, STILL MISSING

The discovery of Broom’s final resting place means there is only one other Miami police officer killed in the line of duty and buried in Miami, yet to be accounted for.

Johnnie Young was 33 and one of Miami’s first Black sworn police officers when he was killed in the line of duty on May 7, 1947. At the time, Black officers were only permitted to wear their uniforms while at work and only worked the city’s “negro districts.” Black officers could only arrest Black suspects. Taking whites

into custody was prohibited.

Young was killed by a bullet to his back from the gun of his supervisor, R.A. McFarland. According to the book “Forgotten Heroes,” a collection of End of Watch stories about Miami officers written by Florida Internatio­nal University professor William Wilbanks, Young and McFarland were chasing two juvenile suspects along the Miami River near what is now Garcia’s Seafood Marketplac­e when McFarland fired at them but struck Young.

Wilbanks cites newspaper accounts of the incident saying there was no mention of the coroner’s inquest or of the dispositio­n of the two youths the officers were allegedly chasing at the time. Wilbanks said officers who knew McFarland claimed he was “devastated” and that he tried to commit suicide before he retired.

Kerr and Dellamico believe Young is buried two blocks from Lincoln Memorial at another, similar Allapattah cemetery called Evergreen Memorial Park that serves as the final resting place for veterans and some other South Florida cops. But finding Young is likely to be a daunting task, as the property is filled with hundreds, perhaps thousands of above-ground stones, many of them without identifica­tion.

The plan to identify Young leads back to Brooms, Kerr said. The commander hopes to confirm Broom’s identity using a high-tech sonar scanning device with the

‘‘

I USUALLY TELL THE STORY OF HOW THEY DIED TO WHOEVER IS THERE. IF NO ONE IS THERE, I STILL TELL THE STORY.

Miami Police Cmdr. Dan Kerr

ability to see clearly through concrete, rebar and metal, that he believes he can get from either the FBI or a local constructi­on firm.

Kerr believes if the device can identify Brooms, who was buried in uniform, with an identifiab­le badge on his jacket and another on the hat he would likely be holding in his folded right arm, it could also help find Young in one of the unmarked graves at the Evergreen cemetery a few blocks away.

Now, a small badge and flag in remembranc­e of Young’s sit in a rare, barren spot at Evergreen. Next to it is a small sign with the fallen officer’s name.

“That’s Johnnie

Young’s plaque,” says Kerr, pointing at it while standing under a nearby oak to avoid the blistering May sun. “We just don’t know where he is right now.”

 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? Miami Police Cmdr. Dan Kerr, left and retired Miami Det. Jerry Lynn Dellamico stand over what they believe to be Nathaniel Broom’s grave at Lincoln Memorial Park in Allapatah on Friday. Kerr is looking into scanning the grave to confirm the identity of the remains inside. Broom was killed in the line of duty in 1981.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com Miami Police Cmdr. Dan Kerr, left and retired Miami Det. Jerry Lynn Dellamico stand over what they believe to be Nathaniel Broom’s grave at Lincoln Memorial Park in Allapatah on Friday. Kerr is looking into scanning the grave to confirm the identity of the remains inside. Broom was killed in the line of duty in 1981.
 ??  ?? Broom
Broom
 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? Retired Miami Detective Jerry Lynn Dellamico stands over makeshift memorials for City of Miami Officer Johnnie Young, right, and Metro Dade Officer Simmons Arrington at Evergreen Memorial Park in Allapatah.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com Retired Miami Detective Jerry Lynn Dellamico stands over makeshift memorials for City of Miami Officer Johnnie Young, right, and Metro Dade Officer Simmons Arrington at Evergreen Memorial Park in Allapatah.
 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? The sun shines on the grave that is believed to be that of slain Miami Police Officer Nathaniel Broom, bottom right, at Lincoln Memorial Park in Allapatah.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com The sun shines on the grave that is believed to be that of slain Miami Police Officer Nathaniel Broom, bottom right, at Lincoln Memorial Park in Allapatah.
 ?? Herald file ?? Officer Johnnie Young was 33 and one of Miami’s first Black sworn police officers when he was killed in the line of duty on May 7, 1947.
Herald file Officer Johnnie Young was 33 and one of Miami’s first Black sworn police officers when he was killed in the line of duty on May 7, 1947.
 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? The entrance to Lincoln Memorial Cemetery, 3001 NW 46th St., in Miami.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com The entrance to Lincoln Memorial Cemetery, 3001 NW 46th St., in Miami.

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