Bum Farto | |
---|---|
Born | Joseph Farto July 3, 1919 |
Disappeared | February 16, 1976 (aged 56) Miami, Florida, U.S. |
Status | Declared dead in absentia in 1986 |
Occupation | Fire chief |
Spouse | Esther Beiro (m. 1955) |
Conviction(s) |
|
Joseph "Bum" Farto (born July 3, 1919) was a fire chief and convicted drug dealer in Key West, Florida who disappeared in 1976.
Farto's father was a restaurant owner who came to Key West from Spain via Cuba in 1902. Farto was the youngest of three children and his mother died when he was young. As a child, he often hung out at Key West's Fire Station No. 1, which was behind his house. [1] [2] He was nicknamed Bum because he fetched the firefighters' coffee and shined their shoes, and at 10 he first snuck onto a fire truck that was answering a call. [2] [3] He quit school when his father died. [2] Farto worked for the WPA's National Youth Administration and became a fireman in 1942. [2] He married his wife Esther Beiro in 1955. [4]
Farto worked his way up at the fire station from lieutenant to captain and finally to fire chief in 1964. [2] [5] In a Miami Herald profile, Farto was described as an excessively alert "man of motion" who did not plausibly sit behind desks and for whom being still "just doesn't look natural". [2]
Fire Chief Farto, who also managed a little league team, [6] was well known for his flamboyant style and ostentatious behavior. He was frequently seen smoking large cigars and wearing gold jewelry and rose-tinted glasses. [3] He wore red outfits, typically red suits, to ward off evil spirits, and his home featured red walls and red living room carpet. This preference was attributed to a belief in voodoo, [7] but Farto's friend Charles Felton said Farto was dedicated to Saint Barbara. [3] Bum Farto drove a lime green Ford Galaxie 500 with mirrored tint, chrome hubcaps, an "El Jefe" license plate, [6] and "El Jefe" written on its side. [5] He wore a gold double-headed fire axe pinned to his tie. [3] [8]
In 1968, the Civil Service Board issued him a 30 day suspension from his fire chief role on eight charges, including forging another fireman's signature to cash a $90.73 check. [9] [6] The Civil Service Board, which was headed by Fire Chief Farto's nephew, attracted controversy when it ultimately did not uphold the suspension. [9] [10] In January 1971, Farto drove into a motorcycle patrolman and was charged for failing to yield to an emergency vehicle. [11] Later that month, he fell into an irrigation canal while on a fire call. Several nearby emergency responders had to rescue him since he could not swim. [11]
Farto was arrested and charged with selling cocaine and marijuana to an undercover officer in a sting operation called Operation Conch, a six-month investigation undertaken by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, the Florida Department of Criminal Law Enforcement and the Dade County Organized Crime Bureau. [10] He was the first of twenty-eight drug dealers arrested. He was brought to county jail with fellow narcotics criminal Manny James, the city attorney and son of the police chief. [4] [12] A crowd of 200 gathered to watch, including a wanted heroin dealer whom agents recognized and arrested from the crowd. [13] Farto was convicted in 30 minutes in early February 1976. [12]
After being convicted of drug trafficking Farto faced a prison sentence of up to 31 years, but he disappeared before he could be sentenced. [12] On February 16, 1976, he jumped his $25,000 bail and drove a rental car north out of Key West, at which point he disappeared. [14] [15] Bum Farto was so well-known that when his wanted poster in the police station was torn up by an unknown vandal, the police chief did not replace it because "[e]verybody here knows what he looks like anyway". [14] A Key West shop sold t-shirts with slogans such as "Where is Bum Farto?", "The Answer is Bum's Away", and "What ever happened to El Jefe?" [16] [17] The shopkeeper said the t-shirts were purchased in large numbers, and he reported that his buyers were "probably kids who like to do a lot of coke", as well as Charles Addams. [18] [14] In 1986, Bum Farto was declared legally dead so that his wife could collect his pension and insurance policies, worth about $5,000 and $2,000 respectively. [15]
Farto's life story was the subject of a seven-episode podcast titled The Bum Farto Story in 2020 and a musical by Pamela Stephenson called Bum Farto – The Musical in 2021. [1] [19] [20]
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