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- <text id=93TT1049>
- <title>
- Mar. 01, 1993: Roofers from Hell
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 01, 1993 You Say You Want a Revolution...
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FLORIDA, Page 45
- Roofers from HELL
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Migrant construction workers following in the wake of Hurricane
- Andrew bring with them a violent crime wave
- </p>
- <p>By CATHY BOOTH/KEY LARGO
- </p>
- <p> By day they rebuild homes wrecked by Hurricane Andrew. By night
- they drink, fight, smoke crack and sometimes kill. In the squalid
- roadside camps they call home, shotguns and 9-mm pistols abound,
- as do the tools of their trade: roofing knives. In one case
- a roofer's throat was cut so deeply he was nearly decapitated.
- In another a roofer shot and stabbed a drifter 100 times. Soldiers
- who patrolled the area say they saw a roofer bite off another
- man's ear, then spit it out.
- </p>
- <p> The cops call them "the roofers from hell." Lured by the promise
- of quick money in the wake of Hurricane Andrew, thousands have
- traveled from South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, even as far
- away as New Jersey and Michigan. Most seek honest work, but
- with them came a crime wave of burglaries, robberies, stabbings
- and drunk-driving fatalities. Even in once quiet tourist spots
- like Key Largo, violent crimes are up. "The entire environment
- has changed because of them," says Captain Joe Leiter of the
- Key Largo sheriff's office. "Six armed robberies in one month
- is totally unheard of in our little paradise."
- </p>
- <p> The most dangerous places are the squalid camps where roofers
- and construction workers live. With 270 sq. mi. of destruction
- and few hotels in the disaster zone, 5,000 to 10,000 itinerant
- workers and locals now live in these makeshift tent cities,
- according to estimates by Dade County officials. Mike Anelli,
- a 28-year-old carpenter from New Jersey who has set up camp
- near the destroyed Homestead Air Force Base, says he wakes nightly
- to the sound of gunfire. "It's like a Mad Max movie after a
- nuclear war, what with the fires at night, the rusted heaps
- of cars and all the fighting here," he says.
- </p>
- <p> Camp Hell is the most notorious encampment. About 150 people
- live there, sleeping in battered trucks, under leaky plastic
- tarps, in tents pitched by piles of gelatinous garbage and broken
- beer bottles. The men wash in a contaminated canal nearby, some
- lathering up naked by the roadside. Police found a roofer shot
- in the face and left to die within yards of the camp; a dead
- body was found floating in a canal not far away. "The price
- of life around here is less than a 12-pack of beer," says Estes,
- a 34-year-old woman from Indiana who lives in the camp with
- her roofer husband.
- </p>
- <p> Drug dealers fuel the violence. Even when food and water were
- hard to come by in the weeks after Hurricane Andrew, crack and
- pot were readily available. One Florida City dealer, flush with
- a supply of 5,000 nickel bags, was selling marijuana "like a
- McDonald's drive-through, even taking tools in trade for drugs,"
- says local police sergeant Gail Bowen.
- </p>
- <p> The sheer size of South Florida's devastation makes the area
- an ideal place to hide from the law. Last month police picked
- up an escaped child rapist working as a roofer. Many workers
- admit they don't want to give their names to reporters for fear
- of tipping off police back home. One Atlanta roofer confided
- that he came to hide from courts seeking 12 years' worth of
- child support. "It's a good place," he said, "to make money
- without anybody asking a lot of questions."
- </p>
- <p> With electricity still out, most homes empty and phones out
- of order in many neighborhoods, the locals have been arming
- themselves against the influx of thieves. Cynthia Hitt's husband
- bought her a .22-cal. pistol for Christmas; she bought him a .30-30 rifle. "What if something happens? You can't scream for
- a neighbor, and until recently there weren't any phones to call
- the cops," she says.
- </p>
- <p> The roofers claim they are getting a raw deal from the locals.
- "There are plenty of good guys down here working," says Michigan
- roofer Chester Steele, a Vietnam veteran who serves as unofficial
- mayor and peace enforcer in Camp Hell. He contends that workers
- get ripped off by trailer parks (typical charge: $800 a month
- for a 1950s-era trailer) and hotels ($55 a day for a room without
- TV or hot water). Contractors regularly skip out on them, leaving
- them without pay.
- </p>
- <p> Without savings to go home, the workers are stuck living in
- conditions reminiscent of The Grapes of Wrath. Douglas Davis,
- a 35-year-old carpenter from Pennsylvania, is living in his
- aging Scout van at Camp Mad Max because he can't afford a hotel.
- Thieves have taken his car battery, his radio, his tools, even
- his Penn State floor mats. His body is covered with infected
- mosquito bites. On his back, an antibiotic cream covers a patch
- of ringworm. Asked if he has seen a doctor, he says he cured
- himself by "sanding" down the skin and washing it with Clorox.
- </p>
- <p> Police have increased patrols and pay special attention to convenience
- stores and gas stations, but recent court rulings prevent Metro-Dade
- police from rousting the homeless from their makeshift camps.
- Until construction workers finish rebuilding South Dade, a process
- that could take years, police are resigned to battling wave
- after wave of troublemakers. "We're just waiting now for the
- plasterers from hell and the electricians from hell," says Cory
- Bryan, a detective in the Keys. "With our nice climate, they
- may never leave."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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