Addendum to post #159.
This is a famous case covered to this very day in law enforcement and military security fields. I recall a class in Security Forces school in the USMC covering this incident briefly.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1986_FBI_Miami_shootout
Code:
The 1986 FBI Miami shootout was a gun battle that occurred on April 11, 1986 in an unincorporated region of Miami-Dade County in south Florida between eight FBI agents and two serial bank robbers. During the firefight, FBI Special Agents Jerry L. Dove and Benjamin P. Grogan were killed, while five other agents were wounded. The two robbery suspects, William Russell Matix and Michael Lee Platt, were also killed.
You think that Matix and Platt were
looking to get into it with the Feds? That’s preposterous, you’re quite simply ignorant of the events. I’m from Miami, was living there at the time, and a close friend was literally the fourth house down on 122nd Street (there were bullet holes in some of the trees in her yard).
There had been a robbery and shooting at a rockpit (a popular place to target practice, I’ve been there many times); the victim survived and contacted police. The victim’s car was used in a robbery at the Barnett Bank in Pinecrest a week later, and the Feds were looking for the vehicle. When they saw it, they began to follow.
After the shootout it was discovered that Matix and Platt were responsible for a series of robberies, and a murder that had happened previously at the rockpit.
This is readily available and easily understood information, and you got it wrong. This had
nothing to do with wanting to challenge the police in gun battle, and the fact that you characterize it as such reflects poorly on your grasp of the issues in general.