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Second body cam video deleted after George Pino boat crash, FWC says

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The investigation into 2022 boat crash that killed a high school student

On Sept. 4, 2022, a boat operated by real estate broker George Pino crashed in Biscayne Bay, killing 17-year-old Lucy Fernandez.

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The body camera footage of a second officer at the scene of a Biscayne Bay boat crash that killed a teenage girl — asked by his boss to “smell” the boat operator to see if he could detect alcohol — has been deleted, the Miami Herald confirmed Thursday with the state agency that investigated the crash.

This marks the second time within four weeks that the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, responding to the Herald’s questions, admitted that the body cam footage from two officers watching over boat operator George Pino was deleted.

Body camera footage has to be retained in criminal investigations, the FWC’s own policy stipulates.

In this latest deletion, FWC Officer Keith Hernandez, the one asked to smell Pino for alcohol, mislabeled his body camera footage when he uploaded it, causing it to be deleted after 90 days, FWC spokesperson Ashlee Sklute said Thursday. The revelation came after the Herald requested Hernandez’s body camera footage from the night of the crash, Sept. 4, 2022, and was told there was none.

“At this time, we do not have an explanation beyond human error for why the officers mislabeled their recordings in the audio storage system,” Sklute said.

Smell test

Hernandez is one of a handful of FWC officers who had direct access to Pino after the crash. His conservation with his boss, William Thompson, the lead FWC investigator, about smelling Pino was captured on Thompson’s body cam footage.

Thompson spoke to Hernandez as he and Pino were on boat heading to a triage center set up on Elliott Key, where Thompson eventually questioned Pino that night. As the boat pulls away from Thompson’s vessel, Thompson yelled toward Hernandez, “Keith Hernandez!” He then tells him quietly, “Smell,” indicating he wanted Hernandez to smell Pino for alcohol.

Hernandez was escorting Pino to the ranger station, where the injured passengers were taken. While Pino received medical attention from paramedics, Pino “stated that he had 2 beers total for the day” and recounted the events leading up to the crash, according to Hernandez’s supplemental report.

Pino’s attorneys interviewed Hernandez last week, but transcripts of that proceeding were not available as of Thursday.

The other officer whose body camera footage was deleted from that night, Julien Gazzola, gave a sworn statement to prosecutors and Pino’s lawyers in April. He told them Pino appeared intoxicated, noting he had bloodshot eyes when he shined a flashlight on his face, was disoriented and smelled of alcohol.

The FWC also said Gazzola’s footage was deleted because the officer mislabeled it.

Damage to the 29-foot Robalo piloted by George Pino, who crashed his boat into a concrete channel marker in Biscayne Bay on Sept. 4, 2022. The boat crash led to the death of Luciana ‘Lucy’ Fernandez, a 17-year-old student at Our Lady of Lourdes Academy, and severely injured her classmate, Katerina Puig.
Damage to the 29-foot Robalo piloted by George Pino, who crashed his boat into a concrete channel marker in Biscayne Bay on Sept. 4, 2022. The boat crash led to the death of Luciana ‘Lucy’ Fernandez, a 17-year-old student at Our Lady of Lourdes Academy, and severely injured her classmate, Katerina Puig. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission

Pino rammed his 29-foot Robalo into a fixed channel marker in Biscayne Bay that night. He and his wife Cecilia were celebrating their daughter’s 18th birthday and had invited 11 of her teenage girlfriends to join them in the boat outing. They were returning from Elliott Key to the Ocean Reef Club in Key Largo when the boat hit the marker, causing it to capsize and hurtling the passengers into the bay.

Luciana ‘Lucy’ Fernandez, the 17-year-old senior at Our Lady of Lourdes Academy who drowned after George Pino rammed his boat into a channel marker in Biscayne Bay on Sept. 4, 2022.
Luciana ‘Lucy’ Fernandez, the 17-year-old senior at Our Lady of Lourdes Academy who drowned after George Pino rammed his boat into a channel marker in Biscayne Bay on Sept. 4, 2022. The Lucy Fernandez Foundation

Luciana ‘Lucy’ Fernandez, 17, died after being trapped under the boat. Katerina ‘Katy’ Puig, her classmate at Our Lady of Lourdes Academy, had traumatic brain injury and is relearning how to walk after the crash.

READ MORE: Pino smelled of alcohol, had ‘bloodshot eyes’ after deadly boat crash, FWC cop says

Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Officer Keith Hernandez looks toward FWC Investigator William Thompson Sunday, Sept. 4, 2022, as Hernandez rides away from Thompson, whose body camera captured the footage. George Pino is sitting down in front of Hernandez, partially obscured.
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Officer Keith Hernandez looks toward FWC Investigator William Thompson Sunday, Sept. 4, 2022, as Hernandez rides away from Thompson, whose body camera captured the footage. George Pino is sitting down in front of Hernandez, partially obscured. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission

When reached Thursday, the Fernandezes declined to comment on the missing footage.

“Since the criminal case remains pending, we will not be making any comments at this time,” Melissa and Andres Fernandez said in a text to the Herald.

How was footage deleted?

When asked about Gazzola’s footage being deleted, FWC chair Rodney Barreto told the Herald that the officer “mistakenly classified his body-worn camera footage as ‘incidental’ when he uploaded it to the FWC’s body camera system.”

Because the footage wasn’t classified as being part of a criminal investigation, it was automatically deleted by the system after 90 days, Barreto said.

“Our technology team has looked into the issue, but the footage is not available,” Barreto said.

Four days after the crash, the FWC and the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office were already contemplating misdemeanor criminal charges for Pino, according to a text conversation between Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle and FWC Lt. Col. Alfredo Escanio, the deputy director of the south region, which the Herald obtained through a public records request.

Escanio asked Fernandez Rundle for contact information for the chief of the misdemeanor section at the State Attorney’s Office. She provided it and noted the chief would be expecting the FWC’s call.

If the footage is part of a criminal investigation, it must be retained, legal experts say.

In fact, the FWC’s own record-retention policy says body camera footage related to misdemeanor charges must be stored for five years and a felony charge for 13 years, according to FWC records obtained by the Herald through public records requests.

Footage labeled as ‘incidental’ — which is how the FWC says its two officers labeled their footage — includes FWC officers issuing warnings or non-criminal infraction citations, the policy says. It’s stored only for 90 days.

READ MORE: How investigators, prosecutors bungled probe into boat crash that killed teen girl

Pino charge changed to felony

Pino was initially charged with three misdemeanor counts of careless boating in August 2023, although the State Attorney’s Office upgraded those charges to vessel homicide, a felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison, on Oct. 31, 2024, after a Miami Herald investigation into the crash.

Flanked by his daughter, Carolina Pino, left, and wife, Cecilia Pino, right, George Pino acknowledges supporters as they arrive in Courtroom 4-1 for his surrender at the Richard E. Gerstein Justice Building on Thursday, Nov. 21, 2024, in Miami, Florida. Pino is facing a felony charge of vessel homicide after he crashed his boat into a Biscayne Bay channel marker, leading to the death of a 17-year-old girl.
Flanked by his daughter, Carolina Pino, left, and wife, Cecilia Pino, right, George Pino acknowledges supporters as they arrive in Courtroom 4-1 for his surrender at the Richard E. Gerstein Justice Building on Thursday, Nov. 21, 2024, in Miami, Florida. Pino is facing a felony charge of vessel homicide after he crashed his boat into a Biscayne Bay channel marker, leading to the death of a 17-year-old girl. Carl Juste cjuste@miamiherald.com

The Herald’s investigation led to new witnesses coming forward, prompting the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office to reevaluate its case, drop the three misdemeanors and charge Pino with the second-degree felony, which carries a $10,000 fine.

The Herald’s investigation detailed a flawed probe by FWC investigators, including key witnesses who were never contacted and the FWC deciding not to give a Pino a sobriety test at the scene despite him telling investigators he had been drinking that day.

The FWC said it did not have probable cause to get a warrant to force Pino to take the sobriety test. But training manuals from both the FWC and State Attorney’s Office list significant injuries and deaths as probable cause for a blood draw in a sobriety test, the Herald’s investigation found.

The day after the crash, the FWC found more than 60 empty booze containers on the boat. Pino’s defense attorney, Howard Srebnick, said the empty containers stemmed from five boats tied up that day on Elliott Key.

Thompson, the FWC lead investigator, wrote in his report that the reason Pino declined to voluntarily submit blood to test for alcohol consumption was because his lawyer wasn’t present. However, in Thompson’s body camera footage of the conversation, Pino declined because he had “two beers.” That admission was not mentioned in Thompson’s final report.

Pino has pleaded not guilty.

More missing evidence?

The two missing body camera files are actually the third piece of evidence that has disappeared, says the Fernandezes’ attorney.

A few weeks before the FWC filed its final report on the crash investigation in August 2023, the agency briefed the victims’ families on the evidence. Among the evidence investigators told the families existed were photos taken from a camera affixed to a channel marker by the feds to keep an eye on human smuggling via the waterways. That camera took intermittent still shots of Biscayne Bay facing north in the 15 minutes leading up to the crash.

Pino had told the FWC that another boat heading toward his vessel threw a wake and caused him to lose control and crash into the channel marker. But, no witnesses on Pino’s boat nor on any other boat in the channel that day saw that boat, according to the FWC’s report.

Investigators told the families they reviewed the photos from the camera on the channel marker and did not find evidence of another vessel heading toward Pino’s boat, the families told the Herald last summer.

The final report mentions that photographic evidence refutes Pino’s claim of another boat, but it does not mention where the photographs came from. When the Fernandez family’s attorney, Joel Denaro, filed a motion asking for the photographs, he was told they no longer existed.

The family of Katy Puig, the soccer star at Lourdes who was severely injured, was stunned to learn about the latest deleted video:

“The disappearance or destruction of a second officer’s body camera video not only defies belief, but strongly suggests the kind of corruption we feared might be at play from the beginning. At best, this is gross incompetence. At worst, it’s a deliberate effort to obscure the truth.

“It is an insult to our grief and a further injury when, mere days after the crash, a public official casually declared that no officer saw any sign of alcohol use — a statement that now seems absurd given the officers’ depositions and the missing evidence.

“Our family — and our community — deserve real answers and real accountability.”

This story was originally published May 8, 2025 at 3:58 PM.

Grethel Aguila
Miami Herald
Grethel covers courts and the criminal justice system for the Miami Herald. She graduated from the University of Florida (Go Gators!), speaks Spanish and Arabic and loves animals, traveling, basketball and good storytelling. Grethel also attends law school part time.
David Goodhue
Miami Herald
David Goodhue covers the Florida Keys and South Florida for FLKeysNews.com and the Miami Herald. Before joining the Herald, he covered Congress, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Energy in Washington, D.C. He is a graduate of the University of Delaware. 
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The investigation into 2022 boat crash that killed a high school student

On Sept. 4, 2022, a boat operated by real estate broker George Pino crashed in Biscayne Bay, killing 17-year-old Lucy Fernandez.