When “Inspired by True Events” Starts Looking Too Real
The Po-Po will nab you for anything these days, and that is no joke. But seriously, one minute you’re making a gritty Netflix crime thriller with your best friend, and the next minute you’re being dragged by actual cops into court because they think your movie made them look crooked. Somewhere between “inspired by true events” and “lawyer up,” things clearly went sideways for Matt Damon and Ben Affleck.
According to reports from Entertainment Weekly, Miami-Dade officers Jason Smith and Jonathan Santana have filed a defamation lawsuit against Damon and Affleck’s production company, Artists Equity, over their Netflix crime drama, The Rip. The movie follows two Miami-Dade narcotics detectives, Lieutenant Dane Dumars (Damon) and Sergeant J.D. Byrne (Affleck), who uncover millions of dollars in cartel money hidden inside a stash house. Ordered to remain on-site and account for the money, the officers quickly unravel as the tension among them gets out of control. Paranoia and corruption start infecting the entire operation. The movie leans heavily into dirty-cop territory. There’s betrayal, stolen money, cover-ups, moral decay. The film received overall great reviews after its release but the cops didn’t think it made the cut.
The Real Miami Raid Behind The Rip
The lawsuit claims the film borrowed very specific details from a real 2016 Miami-Dade narcotics raid involving Smith and Santana, while allegedly attaching fictional corruption and criminal behaviour to characters audiences could easily connect back to the real officers. And that’s where the issue has come in. The officers say the film may not use their names directly, but according to the complaint, the similarities are apparently close enough that people have started giving them the side eye in real life. Family members, colleagues, and members of the public allegedly began assuming the officers pocketed seized cash or engaged in misconduct simply because of how the movie framed its story.
“We Never Stole a Dollar”
One of the deputies, Jonathan Santana, reportedly pushed back hard against the implication, saying: “We never stole a dollar.” What makes this whole thing even more chaotic is that The Rip openly marketed itself as being “inspired by true events.” And that phrase always feels harmless until somebody decides it sounds a little too true. Hollywood loves sprinkling that line onto posters because it adds tension and realism. But legally? That phrase can turn into a lit stick of dynamite if real people believe audiences can identify them in the story.
Crime Dramas and the Risks of Real-Life Inspiration
According to Entertainment Weekly, the officers’ legal team claims they even sent a cease-and-desist letter before the movie’s release, warning the filmmakers about the alleged similarities and asked them not to release the film in its current form. But lo and behold, the movie still dropped on Netflix in January 2026. Now the officers are seeking damages, legal fees, and reportedly want a public correction and disclaimer attached to the film. However, the lawsuit does not name Netflix as a defendant.. So here we are, with a situation that sits in an uncomfortable space where art, “inspiration,” and reality start bleeding into each other. Crime dramas have been mining real-world cases forever. But when audiences allegedly connect fictional corruption to real people, the courtroom crashes the press tour.
I wouldn’t be surprised if somewhere in Hollywood, the writers are nervously deleting the phrase “based on a true story” from their scripts like it’s cursed treasure.
