Three people, including two former Florida police officers, are facing felony charges in connection with the alleged beating of a homeless man and attempt to cover it up, officials said Thursday.

Lorenzo Orfila, 27, and Rafael Otano, 22, were charged with kidnapping and battery and Orfila was charged with official misconduct over the incident, Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle told reporters. A civilian, Ali Amin Saleh, was charged with witness tampering for allegedly paying Jose Ortega Gutierrez to recant his statement about the beating.

“We will not allow rogue police officers to abuse their powers and to betray the public that they serve,” Fernandez Rundle said.

Ex-officers beat homeless man, state attorney says

  • The former Hialeah police officers were called to a shopping center Dec. 17, where they encountered Ortega Gutierrez, 50, who is known to frequent the area, Fernandez Rundle said.
  • Orfila handcuffed Ortega Gutierrez and put him into a police vehicle, she said. A review of surveillance footage from the area found no violations that would have justified taking him into custody, Fernandez Rundle said.
  • Instead of taking Ortega Gutierrez to jail, Fernandez Rundle said the officers took him “to an isolated and dark location against his will.” She said officers beat him and Ortega Gutierrez lost consciousness.
  • After he woke up bleeding and unhandcuffed, Ortega Gutierrez was spotted by an off-duty Hialeah police officer who called 911, Fernandez Rundle said. She said Ortega Gutierrez was treated for his injuries and told police about the beating.
  • Police launched an internal investigation and found evidence that verified Ortega Gutierrez’s account, according to Fernandez Rundle. 

Civilian charged with witness tampering

Nearly two weeks after the beating, Ortega Gutierrez told detectives during a follow-up interview that a civilian, Saleh, had offered him more than $1,200 to sign an affidavit contradicting his original statement, Fernandez Rundle said.

Ortega Gutierrez told detectives he cannot read, his original statement was true and he took the money “because he’s homeless and he’s unemployed,” she said.

Saleh was charged with witness tampering.

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Hialeah police Chief George Fuente said the officers involved were fired after an internal investigation.

“It’s a sad and disappointing day when any officer betrays a badge,” Funete said. “Let these arrests send a clear message to everyone who wears a badge, that swears to uphold the oath, that we will not accept anything less than an unblemished integrity from those that entrust us to serve and protect.”