
Key Biscayne gymnastics coach Olea reaches plea deal on child sex charges
The agreement was revealed Thursday in a Miami-Dade courtroom days before Oscar Olea, 40, was set to go to trial.
He has been incarcerated since his Feb. 28 arrest last year, after Miami-Dade Circuit Judge, Alberto Milian judge called him a 'likely pedophile' and ordered that he remain in jail until his trial.
Olea is scheduled enter his guilty plea and be sentenced next week, at a hearing where victims will testify about the impact of his abuse. Under the terms of his deal, Olea would be sentenced to 12 years in prison and 10 years of probation as a sex offender following his release. The deal needs to be ratified by Milian.
Milian told Olea, who was present at the Thursday hearing, that he has until next week to change his mind about the plea and go to trial.
Olea's arrest last year came weeks after the Miami Herald published its Key Biscayne's Dark Secret investigation, which told for the first time the story of five of the coach's alleged victims: Four former students who were minors at the time of their alleged abuse and Olea's colleague at the community center where he worked, who told the Herald he began abusing her when she was a minor.
This is a developing story that will be updated when more information becomes available.

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Miami Herald
14 hours ago
- Miami Herald
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Cuba does not always readily accept citizens deported by the United States, especially those with criminal records. It leaves open the possibility that Lorenzo Concepción — who has prior convictions for marijuana trafficking and credit card fraud — and others like him may be indefinitely detained or transferred to 'third' countries like the two Cubans recently moved to war-torn South Sudan. 'There's tremendous uncertainty,' Hernández said in an interview. Cuban migrants held in detention centers across the country are unclear about what their future holds. Turbocharged enforcement of immigration laws and ramped up deportation efforts since President Trump returned to the White House has meant Cuban immigrants — who for decades enjoyed a quicker and easier path to American residency and citizenship compared to other immigrant communities — are increasingly finding themselves in the crosshairs of immigration officials. 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Records analyzed by the Herald/Times showed that roughly 200 Cubans were detained at the Everglades facility at the end of July. The numbers fluctuate, with detainees being transferred in and out of the site, and the Department of Homeland Security said that only 50 Cubans remained on Wednesday. Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary for public affairs for the Department of Homeland Security, said that ICE is targeting 'the worst of the worst,' including 'terrorists' and 'pedophiles.' 'If Cuba does not want to accept deportees, it is because they are barbaric criminals,' she said. From Mariel to Alligator Alcatraz U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has just about doubled the number of detainers issued against Cuban migrants each month since he took office, according to a Herald analysis of data from ICE obtained by the University of California, Berkeley-based Deportation Data Project. 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The 1967 Cuban Adjustment Act expedited a pathway to American residency for the recently-arrived exiles. The influx of Cuban immigrants spiked in 1980 with the Mariel Boatlift — a pivotal moment for U.S. immigration policy and the Cuban diaspora — when around 120,000 Cubans arrived in South Florida. Faced with this massive exodus, the Carter administration announced the Cuban-Haitian Entrant Program that same year, granting special status to those who came during this exodus. The status makes them eligible for the same benefits — like SNAP and supplemental Social Security income — as refugees, unlike most other immigrant groups. Immigration policies for Cubans have been increasingly tightened over the last decade. President Barack Obama repealed 'wet foot, dry foot' — a decades-old policy that generally allowed Cubans who reached American soil to stay. 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Attorneys and families of detainees have described the detention camp as a place where migrants are held in limbo in harsh and unsanitary conditions, with little access to legal resources. Among them was Lorenzo Concepción, who fled Cuba nearly two decades ago and is now a father to three U.S.-born children, two of them his biological sons, his partner said. He was detained by ICE in early July during a routine check-in at the agency's Miramar office. After repeated attempts to get some answers regarding his future went in vain, he stopped eating for a week in protest, his partner told the Herald. McLaughlin, the DHS spokesperson, dismissed Lorenzo Concepción's story of a hunger strike as lies concocted by a criminal. She added that when there is a hunger strike, the well-being of those in its custody is a top priority: 'ICE continues to provide three meals a day, delivered to the detained alien's room, and an adequate supply of drinking water or other beverages.' The office of Gov. 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'I don't think this [U.S.] government has any worries about that,' Allen said. 'Once a third country accepts them, the United States could care less.'


Los Angeles Times
14 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
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Miami Herald
2 days ago
- Miami Herald
Key Biscayne gymnastics coach Olea reaches plea deal on child sex charges
More than a decade after he allegedly sexually abused at least three minors, a former gymnastics coach in Key Biscayne has reached a deal with state prosecutors to plead guilty to four felony sex charges, including two related to the sexual abuse of a minor. The agreement was revealed Thursday in a Miami-Dade courtroom days before Oscar Olea, 40, was set to go to trial. He has been incarcerated since his Feb. 28 arrest last year, after Miami-Dade Circuit Judge, Alberto Milian judge called him a 'likely pedophile' and ordered that he remain in jail until his trial. Olea is scheduled enter his guilty plea and be sentenced next week, at a hearing where victims will testify about the impact of his abuse. Under the terms of his deal, Olea would be sentenced to 12 years in prison and 10 years of probation as a sex offender following his release. The deal needs to be ratified by Milian. Milian told Olea, who was present at the Thursday hearing, that he has until next week to change his mind about the plea and go to trial. Olea's arrest last year came weeks after the Miami Herald published its Key Biscayne's Dark Secret investigation, which told for the first time the story of five of the coach's alleged victims: Four former students who were minors at the time of their alleged abuse and Olea's colleague at the community center where he worked, who told the Herald he began abusing her when she was a minor. This is a developing story that will be updated when more information becomes available.