Miami Beach

Versace’s shocking murder still ‘epitomizes Miami Beach’ for many, even 25 years later

A quarter-century ago the world woke to the news that international fashion icon Gianni Versace had been shot to death on the steps of his opulent Ocean Drive retreat in Miami Beach, just moments after returning from his regular stroll to the nearby News Cafe to eat breakfast and buy Italian-language newspapers.

In this file photo from March 16, 1993, designer Gianni Versace looks out from a second-story window overlooking his patio during renovation of his Casa Casuarina mansion on Ocean Drive. Four years later, on July 15, 1997, Versace would be shot to death on his front steps by serial killer Andrew Cunanan.
In this file photo from March 16, 1993, designer Gianni Versace looks out from a second-story window overlooking his patio during renovation of his Casa Casuarina mansion on Ocean Drive. Four years later, on July 15, 1997, Versace would be shot to death on his front steps by serial killer Andrew Cunanan. Marice Cohn Band Miami Herald file

That beautiful sunny, seaside Tuesday morning at 8:45 on July 15, 1997, the shooting on the coral keystone steps leading into Versace’s Casa Casuarina mansion triggered a massive manhunt for a spree killer that riveted millions around the world and had South Florida on edge.

In this file photo from July 15, 1997, blood, a shoe and sunglasses were at the scene on the steps of fashion designer Gianni Versace’s South Beach mansion where he was killed that morning by an assassin’s bullets.
In this file photo from July 15, 1997, blood, a shoe and sunglasses were at the scene on the steps of fashion designer Gianni Versace’s South Beach mansion where he was killed that morning by an assassin’s bullets. Patrick Farrell Miami Herald file

Who killed Versace?

A handsome 27-year-old narcissist who could have fit the physical description of any number of club-hopping young men of the time that Versace’s fame and presence drew to the neighborhood eluded a cross-country FBI manhunt. Andrew Cunanan, with a bloodthirsty taste for a lavish lifestyle, was suspected of at least four grisly murders that began in Minneapolis on April 27, 1997. By May 12, using an alias, Cunanan rented a room at North Beach’s far less glamorous Normandy Plaza Hotel.

Just over two months later, the serial killer ended Versace’s life. Versace was only 50. Cunanan would be 52 today.

A file photo provided by the FBI from July 16, 1997, shows suspected serial killer Andrew Phillip Cunanan, whose victims included fashion designer Gianni Versace.
A file photo provided by the FBI from July 16, 1997, shows suspected serial killer Andrew Phillip Cunanan, whose victims included fashion designer Gianni Versace. FBI Miami Herald file

FLASHBACK MIAMI: See Miami Herald archival images, front pages, photos and coverage of Versace’s murder

READ MORE: After 20 years, the spectacle of the Versace murder still intrigues and baffles

Cunanan eluded the law long enough to pump two bullets at close range into Versace, one to the back of his head, the other into his left cheek. The designer was about to turn the keys in the lock of his iron front gate 25 years ago this Friday.

Cunanan would remain the subject of a mammoth manhunt for just over another week, until he was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot in a houseboat moored off Collins Avenue on July 23, 1997.

In this file photo from July 23, 1997, a SWAT team officer fires tear gas into the houseboat where murder suspect Andrew Cunanan was later found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Cunanan killed Gianni Versace eight days earlier.
In this file photo from July 23, 1997, a SWAT team officer fires tear gas into the houseboat where murder suspect Andrew Cunanan was later found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Cunanan killed Gianni Versace eight days earlier. Al Diaz Miami Herald file

South Florida’s history of crime

The South Florida community has had its share of horrific crimes and notorious denizens — gangster Al Capone lived on Palm Island, after all. And who can forget the Cocaine Cowboys’ spraying gunfire and killing two drug dealers and injuring four bystanders inside a Dadeland Mall liquor store on another warm July day in 1979, and the Causeway Cannibal on Memorial Day 2012, and the FBI Suniland shootout in April 1986?

Still, the Versace murder and Cunanan manhunt 25 years ago ranks among the most notorious.

“It epitomizes Miami Beach, for many people. It was the confluence of celebrity, a spree killer of dubious origin, some failings by the police. It has something for everyone,” former Miami-Dade chief homicide prosecutor Michael Band, who worked on the case, told the Miami Herald on the 20th anniversary. “And Versace lives on — his brand did very well. People recognize the name.”

They still do.

Versace endures

In this file photo from July 22, 1997, a private armed security guard removes a flag left by an admirer in front of the public makeshift memorial for Gianni Versace, the internationally known fashion designer who was killed on his mansion’s steps a week earlier by Andrew Cunanan.
In this file photo from July 22, 1997, a private armed security guard removes a flag left by an admirer in front of the public makeshift memorial for Gianni Versace, the internationally known fashion designer who was killed on his mansion’s steps a week earlier by Andrew Cunanan. Carl Juste Miami Herald file

Forty-four years after Versace founded his company in Milan in 1978, the Versace brand still designs, manufactures and distributes haute couture, prèt-à-porter, accessories, jewelry, watches, eyewear, fragrances and home furnishings worldwide to over 200 boutiques in major cities — including a Versace Miami in the Design District — and over 1,500 wholesalers worldwide.

In this file photo from Nov. 16, 2005, Versace plates were used in Barton G. Event Design & Production’s catering events. Barton G. Weiss’ company is located in Miami’s Design District.
In this file photo from Nov. 16, 2005, Versace plates were used in Barton G. Event Design & Production’s catering events. Barton G. Weiss’ company is located in Miami’s Design District. Chuck Fadely Miami Herald file
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This story was originally published July 15, 2022 at 6:00 AM.

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Howard Cohen
Miami Herald
Miami Herald consumer trends reporter Howard Cohen, a 2017 Media Excellence Awards winner, has covered pop music, theater, health and fitness, obituaries, municipal government, breaking news and general assignment. He started his career in the Features department at the Miami Herald in 1991. Cohen is an adjunct professor at the University of Miami School of Communication. Support my work with a digital subscription
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