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Carmel Cafiero, veteran South Florida investigative reporter, dies at 76
South Florida Sun Sentinel · Carline Jean/South Florida Sun-Sentinel/TNS

Carmel Cafiero, a veteran South Florida investigative reporter, mentor, and pioneer for women in journalism, died Friday, her daughter said. She was 76.

The former Plantation resident joined WSVN-Channel 7 in 1973, the first female reporter at the station, and worked there for 43 years before retiring in 2016.

Cafiero was known for her fearless pursuit of the truth, to which footage of her chasing down politicians and business owners can attest, as well as her compassion, the kind that existed both on and off camera.

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“She was probably the most talented, honest, and trustworthy reporter I ever worked with in nearly 20 years in the business,” Eric Eglin, a former producer at Channel 7, said in a text. “Everyone could trust Carmel to tell the truth, get to the heart of the story, and cut through the B.S. There will never be another Carmel. She broke the mold.”

Cafiero grew up in New Orleans, working at a small TV station in Baton Rouge, where she was the first woman to anchor an evening newscast before she joined Channel 7 as a general assignment reporter, according to the TV station.

She was also a single mother at the time, leaving Louisiana in her 20s with her young daughter in tow.

“She had never been out of the state before,” her daughter, Courtney Howell, told the South Florida Sun Sentinel on Saturday. “She left with just me into the great unknown, into Miami, to work at a station where it was all men.”

Despite having to juggle work and single motherhood, Cafiero quickly set herself apart as a journalist, using inventive reporting methods to illuminate wrongdoings in the community.

In 1975, only two years after she started, she won a George Foster Peabody award for a series called “Apathy or Fear” where she would be tied up on the side of the street or in parks throughout South Florida to see if people would help while hidden cameras captured their reactions.

A year later, she won another Peabody for her coverage of abortion clinics that performed fake procedures on women who weren’t actually pregnant but thought they were. Cafiero brought in her photographer’s urine “so there was no doubt that he wasn’t pregnant,” she told the Sun Sentinel back in 2016.

Perhaps her most notable work, Cafiero’s “Pill Mills” series exposed the opioid crisis unfolding outside of pain clinics in South Florida, winning her the prestigious Alfred I. duPont-Columbia Award in 2010.