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Controversy Over Police Protection at Wynwood Art Gallery

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A Wynwood art gallery is getting a free Miami police officer to protect its $500 million exhibit, and not everyone's thrilled.

The officer has been guarding Gary Nader Fine Art Gallery since early December, when the gallery received the collection of 110 pieces including works from Pablo Picasso, Andy Warhol and Salvador Dali, according to the Miami Herald.

The police protection was approved by Miami Police Chief Manuel Orosa and Mayor Tomas Regalado who say they agreed to provide the service, which would normally cost about $20,000 per month for 24-hour protection, because the gallery is free and open to the public.

"If something happens to that art collection, it’s going to be, ‘Where were the police?'" Orosa said during last week’s City Commission meeting, according to the Herald. "It’s a [$500] million art collection, never before seen in the Western Hemisphere, and I provided security, one person, off and on, to that particular art gallery, as part of a free exhibit of a museum-quality art collection."

But not everyone is pleased with the use of police resources, including William Braemer, owner of nearby Art Fusion Galleries.

"I’d like to have the same connections that Nader has with the city," said Braemer. "I also open my doors to groups of students."

Nearby residents are also questioning using a beat officer in the gallery while violent crime occurs nearby. Catherine Beaton, whose 15-year-old son was paralyzed after he was shot while riding his bicycle three blocks from the gallery on Dec. 19, said she'd rather see that cop on the beat.

"What about my son?" Beaton told the Herald. "His life and his future are more valuable than these paintings."

Orosa said there are at least five other officers in Wynwood at all times, and defended the move.

“Mr. Nader’s gallery met the same threshold in that it was an exhibit open to the public at no charge," Orosa wrote in an email to El Nuevo Herald. "I ask that anyone who would criticize my position think about the long-lasting effects of a theft of or vandalism to a $500 million exhibit in our burgeoning art district."

Regalado likewise defended the expenditure, saying the cost outweighs the threat of a potential theft.

"And that collection would be so tempting for criminals," Regalado told the Herald Tuesday. "I’ve been worried since Day One that something would happen, which would be catastrophic for the city’s image."

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Photo Credit: Getty Images

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