Juliana Aidén Martinez stars as June Hawkins in Griselda.

By Abby Robinson

Published: Thursday, 25 January 2024 at 08:00 AM


Netflix drama Griselda charts the extraordinary and explosive story of Griselda Blanco, one of the most notorious and wealthy drug barons in history.

Also known as the “Cocaine Godmother” and “Black Widow”, the series explores her route to the top of the Miami drug trade in the 1970s and ’80s after arriving from Medellín, Colombia – including how she evaded law enforcement for some time as they refused to believe that a woman was behind such an extensive and violent criminal enterprise.

But in the drama, one individual cottons on to Blanco sooner than any other and is a key player in the hunt to bring her down: June Hawkins.

Is June Hawkins based on a real person?

Yes. Hawkins, played by Juliana Aidén Martinez, is an intelligence analyst-cum-translator who became part of anti-drug task force CENTAC – Central Tactical Unit.

Hawkins was a real-life Miami police sergeant.

What happened to June Hawkins?

Hawkins, who was born in Miami to a Cuban mother, studied criminal justice at Florida State University before becoming a police officer in 1975 and serving for 30 years. She retired in 2004, although she was on the books for a little longer.

Hawkins is now retired and lives in Tennessee.

During an appearance on the Law Enforcement Talk podcast in 2017, Hawkins spoke about the sexism she faced from some of her male colleagues during her time in the force.

“In the beginning I was probably the only female on most of the platoons and… squads that I was on for a good while, probably the first five years,” she said.

“They teased me… and the guys in the beginning especially, you could tell they were testing you, they needled you a little. Maybe they’d use really crude language to see if you got offended. But to me, it just wasn’t a big deal. Sure, I had some guys that a little bit sexually harassed me… but I just kept on trucking.

“I was too busy making a living, doing my job, trying to be Eric’s mum (her only child also became a police officer and serves in Boynton Beach, Florida). I didn’t have time to play around or be the flirtatious little chickadee that maybe some of them expected from females.”

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But eventually, there was a shift in their attitude towards Hawkins.

“It was a two-sided coin because on the one hand, there was a lot of suspicion and apprehension on the part of my male colleagues about what are these women doing in here now,” she explained.

“But on the other hand… once they realised that I was really sincere, that I was a single mother, that I had to earn a living to support my son and this wasn’t just a lark for me, then they became my big brothers.

“And I was serious. I’d say I was pretty dedicated and I think I was a pretty good cop. And I was very determined. I would have walked over hot coals to keep my job and do a good job.”

June Hawkins standing in the middle of an office at the Miami police station with her hand on her hip
Juliana Aidén Martinez as June in Griselda.
Elizabeth Morris/Netflix © 2023

Hawkins went on to discuss what she’s most proud of from her time in the police.

“Working in homicide during ’79, ’80, ’81 is probably not only the thing I’m most proud of, but the thing I most enjoyed because I really did impact… it was exciting, it was purposeful, I had a fire in the belly and lightning in my veins, and I was going to get those bad guys.”

She added: “Because I speak Spanish and in those days, there weren’t that many Spanish speakers on the department and they used me as kind of like an intelligence analyst to filter through all the names of all the people and make out who they were. And then I’d talk to informants and I’d write all these memos. I prepared a big report that wound up going to Washington with about 40 cases connected to it.”

But despite being labelled a “trailblazer” and a “pioneer”, Hawkins didn’t regard herself as such at the time.

“I do believe that when you’re in something, when you’re so right up there next to it, that until you step away from it and time and years pass, that is when you see the perspective that perhaps others did,” she said. “Then you can appreciate what you did.”