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Special agent Edmundo Mireles was lying flat on his back, stalked by killers in the FBI`s most deadly shootout: ”What scared the hell out of me was this: I`m cocking my head to look under the ...
In his book, FBI Miami Firefight: Five Minutes That Changed The Bureau, former FBI Special Agent Edmundo Mireles—the man who, despite being grievously wounded, definitively ended that violent ...
MIAMI — The tunnel. FBI Agent Edmundo Mireles remembers the tunnel. And the fury. As he lies bleeding on Southwest 82nd Avenue, the fury possesses him. The wail of approaching sirens falls silent.
Special Agent Edmundo Mireles is released from South Miami Hospital thirteen days after the shootout. The stocky, former Marine is pushed out of the hospital in a wheelchair by a nurse, his left ...
Mireles was seriously injured during the shootout, as was fellow agent John Hanlon. Grogan was 53 when he died. He was a two-decade veteran nicknamed 'The Doctor' and was one year shy of retirement.
In addition to Hanlon, Agents Edmundo Mireles Jr., 33, and Gordon McNeil, 43, were seriously wounded and are recovering. Hanlontold reporters Friday he has not regained full use of his right hand ...
Special Agent Edmundo Mireles, one of three agents who suffered serious wounds during the gunfight, shot and killed both suspects with his shotgun and a revolver as they tried to flee in Grogan ...
Some 130-140 rounds were exchanged in five minutes, with five agents also wounded before seriously injured agent Edmundo Mireles emptied his service revolver into a car the two men with superior ...
But one-time U.S. Marine Edmundo Mireles Jr. charged the gunmen and, with one arm, fired a shotgun and killed them. “I am the lucky one,” said Mireles, a consultant for a Washington, ...