Dirty Brooklyn Cop Launches Cigar Brand With Drug Dealer Accomplice, Named After His Old Precinct
"The Seven Five" cigars carry the motto "Nobody can touch me. Nobody can touch my crew."


Former Brooklyn police officer Michael Dowd spent the late 80s and early 90s working out of the Seventy Fifth precinct, ripping off drug dealers and reselling their drugs, before being convicted in 1994 and spending 11 years in jail.
Dowd is back in the news in New York City. The New York Post reports:
Now he's teaming with a former drug cohort, gang leader Adam Diaz, to sell cigars from the Dominican Republic under the brand name The Seven Five—after Dowd's old precinct.
Diaz lives in the Dominican Republic after a prison stint in United States.
The cigars' bands feature the men's names along with a photo of Diaz and a silhouette of Dowd in uniform.
Printed on their wooden boxes are the phrases, "Nobody can touch me. Nobody can touch my crew," and "The King of Brooklyn."
At his 1994 sentencing, Dowd said he wanted to "apologize to each and every police officer that has had to work under the guise I left them two years ago." He continued: "It's a very difficult job and I made it much more difficult, and for that I apologize."
Cops are upset about Dowd's latest move.
"It's a disgrace that he's in business with a drug dealer," said a former detective with the 75th precinct who is now a narcotics prosecutor told the New York Post. "But that's probably the only friend that he has. Drug dealers will probably be the ones who buy these cigars."
For now, the cigars are only available at one cigar outlet in Long Island. Its owner said he ordered 75 boxes as a publicity stunt, but negative reactions from his clientele have convinced him not to re-order.
The cigars are not yet available for sale online. Tabacalera Palma decided to make the cigars in part because of a 2014 documentary about Dowd and Diaz called The Seven Five.
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Nice guy.
Wait... do we love him for his private sector entrepreneurism, or hate him for his corruption as a thug of the state.
Love him.
11 years? How many years did the non-police drug dealers get?
New professionalism.
If you get a chance, watch the documentary The Seven Five. It's incredible this guy ever saw daylight again.
So I'm not the only one wondering about that.
Seriously, this isn't someone who simply fucked up and got caught on camera shooting a teen or two. He admitted stealing money and drugs and enforcing for a dealer, tipping off investigations. While awaiting trial he was going to kidnap a woman to ransom for getaway money. As I recall, he didn't give anyone else up to get a reduced sentence, either.
I thought you were kidding. The Seven Five?
As l0b0t says below, it's entertaining. Scorsese couldn't think anything better up.
Scorsese? You mean Abel Ferrara
"Cops are upset about Dowd's latest move."
Nah, they're just jealous because he thought of it first.
I heard on the radio he said a background check would cost him $1500 but the ccw only cost him $50. Basically ensures they same thing.
Business owner requiring all employees to be armed
http://nbc4i.com/2016/02/23/bu.....-be-armed/
That's clever. Some gun clubs do the same thing around here, make people get their permit (only $20, shall issue) rather than doing background checks themselves.
Seriously? A Glock 304 wouldn't have cost much more and would be way more appropriate for a carry piece.
*Glock 30; not sure how the 4 got in there.
A Glock always wants to be more than it is.
In all seriousness, now that I've read the article, a six shot revolver is a good start, especially if as a group, they're new shooters.
Not my choice, but if I'm handing guns out to untrained people (sorry, a CCW doesn't make you trained) and old fashioned wheel gun has much less chance of going off in your pants.
Nothing wrong with the good old .38 wheelie. I'm looking at an S&W 686 .357 MAG myself. Probably be getting in next few weeks.
Sure; anything but a fucking Judge. The thing is a gimmick.
So after ripping off drug dealers, he survived 11 years in prison. I guess he didn't piss off the wrong people.
Low level street dealers, probably. I don't think they were selling on spec in the early 90s. Big dealers already got paid.
related
Ed, do you generally agree or disagree with Dowd's positions, whether or not you support this action?
It's a trap!
Damnit...
The Akbar is strong with me.
Allahu or Admiral?
If any of y'all have not seen the documentary yet, please watch it ASAP. It's highly entertaining and very eye-opening for any statist, law & order types you may know. The Adam Diaz mentioned in the article was moving 300 kilos of cocaine weekly (at $30,000.00 each) from his collection of bodegas around the neighborhood. Dowd was being given, IIRC, $8000 per week to be an informant/enforcer/convoy guard. The Seven Five (trailer).
Apologists of state force won't open their eyes. They will decry him as a singular bad apple.
I watched on this recommendation last night. I also highly recommend it. Amazing look into police corruption. The story is told in a remarkably honest and straightforward way by the actual corrupt cops and drug traffickers involved.
He's keeping a pretty high profile for someone who is certain to have a lot of enemies. It sure would be terrible if something happened to the guy because of this.
If they couldn't get him in prison, I'm guessing he's actually safer on the outside.
His butthole is definitely much safer.
To be honest, I'm rooting for this scrunt to get plugged-there are few things that are lower than a crooked cop. You just might be right though.
Stupid question: What about his pension?
I'm guessing they reluctantly had to revoke it but these days...you never know.
And you're supposed to insert in your response 'there are no stupid questions'.
There are no stupid questions; only stupid people asking questions.
OH SHIT
AND I WAS GOING TO SAY THAT BUT FIGURED...
BAH.
/rubs kiwi in eye.
Mike Dowd's website. He can improve your life.
New York Times article from 1994 about the Dowd case, with this gem as the last paragraph:
He's an ethics consultant? Why not.
So, he's like Eliot Spitzer then.
Bet he never paid for it (with cash. Drugs are another story.)
They only caught this guy because he actually stopped coming into work to collect his paychecks. He was making so much side money and so coked up that he just forgot to come in to his actual job.
Makes sense. If it was the 70s would he have even gone to jail at all?
I actually don't really have a problem with this.