In an age of rampant corruption and violence, Richard Bo Dietl was the strongest cop on New York\'s meanest streets -- and he did things his way, no holds barred.
Visit the BDA Website at www.beaudietl.com..
Also in partnership with Steven Witkoff, Bo has an ownership interest in several major buildings located in metropolitan areas around the United States.
Bo, being an entrepreneur at heart, has now expanded into the real estate industry.
This software allows parents to monitor their children\'s activities on the Internet. of Bohemia, N.
Y.
Accordingly, Bo has been the driving force behind the computer software product, One Tough Computer Cop, developed in conjunction with Computer Concepts, Corp.
As a father, Bo has always been deeply concerned about children\'s issues.
The Production Company is currently working on several projects.
Soon after, he started his own production company, How Good Is This Production Company, with his partner Steven Witkoff, the megadeveloper of The Witkoff Group.
While serving as an Executive Producer for his major motion picture One Tough Cop, Bo developed a love for the movie business. 42nd Street in New York City.
Specializing in corporate investigations for major international companies, BDA has grown to become one of the largest international agencies with its worldwide headquarters located in the historical News Building at 220 E.
About author(s): Never content to just take it easy, Bo retired from the NYPD in 1985, to start an investigation and security firm, Beau Dietl Associates (BDA).
Now Bo Dietl tells what it\'s really like inside the raw and deadly world of a big-city cop -- and how one man became a legend from the station house to the streets.
The Bo Dietl Story From his rookie days to the dangerous work on the police decoy unit to his moonlighting as a bodyguard for Arab sheiks, this is the true Story of the maverick cop who made the busts, the headlines and the controversies.
He knew his time was coming to an end.
But after 75 medals and awards, and countless brushes with death, he broke the city\'s most notorious case -- the Harlem convent rape -- and faced a blue wall of police department resentments and politics.
In fifteen years he made over 1,400 felony arrests compared to the average cop\'s career total of 180.
In an age of rampant corruption and violence, Richard Bo Dietl was the strongest cop on New York\'s meanest streets -- and he did things his way, no holds barred