Summaries

"Miami Noir: The Arthur E. Teele Story" is an hour long documentary that examines the events that led up to the suicide of Miami City Commissioner Arthur Teele, Jr. in the lobby of the Miami Herald in July 2005.

In the early 1980s, a young, bright, black politician moved to Miami from Washington, D.C. after directing 220 million dollars into Miami's transportation system as head of the Urban Mass Transit Administration under Ronald Reagan's administration. From the late 1980s until 2004, Arthur Teele flourished in Miami as a county and city commissioner where he strived to improve the living conditions for impoverished black communities. The media's scrutiny of misappropriation of government funds and contracts would lead to an under-cover investigation of Teele initiated by the Florida State Attorney. The drama began to unfold when Teele ran an under-cover detective off the road for following his wife. This led to his conviction for threatening a public servant. State and Federal charges of fraud and money laundering would bring additional arrests for Teele. With mounting debt, bad press, allegations of soliciting a transvestite prostitute, and the development of his criminal charges, Arthur Teele would commit suicide in the lobby of the Miami Herald newspaper building on July 27, 2005.—Sam Rega

Details

Keywords
  • investigation
  • greed
  • suicide
  • miami florida
  • underworld
Genres
  • Crime
  • History
  • Biography
  • Documentary
Release date Feb 29, 2008
Motion Picture Rating (MPA) Not Rated
Countries of origin United States
Language English
Filming locations Miami, Florida, USA
Production companies Good Cop Bad Cop Productions

Box office

Budget $20000

Tech specs

Runtime 1h
Color Color
Sound mix Stereo
Aspect ratio

Synopsis

All Filters