Camp Gagnon - CONFESSIONS Of An Undercover Agent
Episode Date: August 19, 2025Charlie Spillers, former Marine, federal prosecutor, deep-cover FBI agent, and author of the book "Confessions of an Undercover Agent: Adventures, Close Calls, and the Toll of a Double Life", joins us... to talk about his legendary career. Charlie tells us about returning from Vietnam to go undercover, what agent training is like, the Dixie Mafia and the Marcello Family, the time a hitman put out a contract to kill him, investigating a 3,000-lb drug smuggling operation, the time he was forced to blow his cover, and other interesting topics… WELCOME TO CAMP! 🏕️📖 Read Confessions of an Undercover Agent Here: https://linktw.in/wmqCbxShoutout to our sponsors: Odoo, Morgan & Morgan, and BlueChewTry Odoo with a 14-day free trial at: http://Odoo.com/CAMP👕🧢 GET YOUR CAMP DRIP HERE: http://camp-rd.com🏕️ Get Today In History Email Here (Free): https://camp.beehiiv.com/🎟️ 🎫 Comedy Tour Tickets Here: https://markgagnonlive.comTimestamps:0:00 Meet Charlie Spillers2:57 Learning Body Language4:37 Returning From Vietnam To Go Undercover7:25 Being Held At Gunpoint at Bar18:37 Training Agents + The Dixie Mafia 27:54 Having To Stay Hidden While Undercover31:24 Hitman Puts a Contract Out To Kill Charlie32:31 Wrecking Van Headed to Steal Safe + Forced to Blow Cover42:08 Investigating a 3,000 Ibs Drug Smuggling Operation59:07 Busting The Pilot of a Drug Smuggling Operation1:05:59 The Marcello Family1:10:28 Billy Wayne Mhaffey 1:15:05 Building Relationships With Criminals
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This is Charlie Spillers, a former Marine, federal prosecutor, and one of the most legendary deep undercover FBI agents to ever live.
He has infiltrated the most dangerous crime organizations in U.S. history, and today he tells us all the details.
He went deep undercover working with the Marcello crime family to arresting pilots of private aircraft carrying thousands of pounds of drugs across international waters.
And he even explains the emotional toll of forming relationships undercover and staying in time.
touch with mafia guys even after they get busted. This episode is absolutely amazing and Charlie is truly
a fantastic storyteller. He goes through every detail and even explains how you can apply undercover
techniques to your own personal life, whether it's in jobs, talking to women, everything you need to know
is in this episode. So ladies and gentlemen, without further ado, sit back, relax and welcome to
Gary Spillers. How are you, sir? Hey, great, Mark. Thanks for having me on your program. Of course,
of course, I'm very excited to chat with you. You have a fascinating life story. Uh, even more
fascinating that I originally thought. When we sat down, I thought I was just speaking to an undercover
agent, a justice attaché to Iraq, and, you know, a federal prosecutor. But you have a deep history
that's, that's, that's, goes all over the place. So, well, let me interrupt there. As oftentimes
still people in your audience, a slower expectations a little bit, okay? No, no, no, no, no.
To that great intro.
No, no, no, not at all.
I mean, like I just said, it's not every day that we get to talk to a, you know,
a smooth talking Southern lawyer, you know?
Yeah, I bet.
Now, I tell people that many times when I get introduced, people will refer to, you know,
certain things that I've done in the past.
And oftentimes, they'll bring up that, you know, with my work in Iraq,
when I worked in Iraq for the Department of Justice,
my work in Iraq was commended by the FBI director, by the Deputy Attorney General, by the British Ambassador,
and by Britain's Minister of State for the Armed Forces.
They all commended my work in Iraq.
And I used to think, and having been in law enforcement too, I really thought this, I used to think that commendations like that meant something.
But then one day, you know, I came home from work, and this is in Oxford, Mississippi, when I was a federal prosecutor, I came home from work, and I picked up groceries at the grocery store, Kroger, for my wife, and I put them on the island in the kitchen and turned away, and she was going through them, and she said, the milk.
I said, what?
She said, the milk.
Where's the milk?
And I said, well, you know, it should be in one of the bag.
I don't see the milk.
I said, well, he's got to be in a bag.
Well, I don't think you got the milk.
I said, but, but isn't it a bag?
No, you didn't get the milk.
I said, but, bud, you didn't get the milk.
I said, but, but I've been commended by the British ambassador.
I said, I don't care.
You forgot the milk.
So the lesson I learned from that is, it doesn't matter how many accommodations you've received.
It doesn't matter how many thousands of books or books if so.
you still have to remember what to pick up at the grocery store.
And you still have to remember to put out the trash can on trash can on pickup day.
And you still have to pay full price, or in my case, senior price,
but a cup of coffee when you go out.
So, you know, all that doesn't mean a whole lot, especially when you're at home.
Yeah, I mean, that's a good lesson, right?
It doesn't matter how many men you help.
There's always a woman you're going to let them.
That's going to keep you straight.
That's right.
Exactly right.
So let's start at the beginning.
All right.
So there's a few things, and I don't want to deviate too far, but I do think it might contextualize some of our conversation.
Right.
So remind me, where did you grow up?
I grew up in Mississippi and Louisiana.
And my father worked in the oil field.
And for those that are familiar with the oil field, that means you move about every three years, whether you want to or not.
So we moved from town to town and state to state.
And as I was growing up, I was always the new kid in the middle of the school year in a new town walking into a classroom of complete strangers.
So that was my life growing up.
So you were used to being undercover.
Well, in a way, I tell you, I tell you, though, one thing I learned, I think, that was real helpful.
And that was body language.
And I learned that from my grandparents.
My grandfather was a trapper and a fisherman in Louisiana.
He was a renowned hunter too.
And they spoke Cajun French.
But they also spoke English.
But when people would come over to visit, their friends would come over to visit,
they would start speaking French.
And when I would stay there in summers as a kid,
I didn't know what they were saying,
but I'd be looking at their body language.
And, of course, they're talking with their hands and bodies and all that.
And I kind of get an idea of maybe how the conversation was going.
So as a kid, I was picking up some tips on body language.
Yeah.
You were learning all about Buku's Fish.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
I can imagine.
Yeah.
So you're moving around from different high schools, and you kind of got to be the new kid,
and you've got to fit in.
You've got to learn how to blend in on a bunch of different environments.
Right.
You graduate, join the Marines, and then immediately you go to Vietnam.
Right.
And then when you return from Vietnam, which I know this is a big deviation here,
But I want to focus on some of the undercover work.
But you do have a book on Vietnam coming out at some point, maybe the next year to do.
Right. Working on that now.
Which I think people should be acutely aware of.
You were actually injured in Vietnam, which is, I mean, just a pretty remarkable and, I mean, tragic sort of delineation in American history.
And the fact that you lived it is fascinating.
But you return home and then immediately get involved in law enforcement.
Right.
And what is that first introduction of law enforcement?
Well, after I got back, I went to work for Southern Bale telephone company for a year,
but I got to missing the excitement and the feeling that I was doing something that, you know,
had an influence and important.
So I left that job to go into law enforcement, took a cut in pay, and went into law enforcement.
I joined the Baton Rouge Police Department.
I was in uniform patrol for two months, and I used to think, gosh, on Friday.
and Saturday night, the radio's popping.
You don't have time to stop and eat or get coffee.
And at the end of the shift, you're still writing your reports.
You know, the adrenaline's flowing.
I used to think, gosh, this is so good, so good.
In fact, I thought that was the best thing to do
until the captain in charge of intelligence
asked if he could come visit me and my wife at our apartment.
So he came over and we had coffee,
And he explained that they had a new intelligence unit,
and he asked if I would volunteer to go undercover in intelligence.
And I had no idea what that meant.
I had no idea at all, except it sounded exciting.
I said, yeah, sign me up, coach.
So basically he said, this was Captain Watson.
He said, all right, don't report for your next shift.
Stay away from the police department.
Don't come around the police department at all.
And later on, whenever I write intelligence reports,
I wouldn't put my name on the intelligence reports.
Instead, I would put a number.
I think my number was seven.
I'd put a number so that no one would know that I was undercover officer.
And if any of that information was shared with detectives for follow-up,
they would never know it came from an undercover officer.
would sanitize it.
And so anyway,
so I started out deep cover and intelligence.
And one of the first things I was involved in
was infiltrating rings of burglars
and safecrackers, career criminals.
It turned out, of course,
I'm learning all this on the job.
I mean, there wasn't any training.
And basically, I was Baton Rouge's first
undercover officer like that.
So I found out that
They have a couple, two or three bars that the career criminals hang out at.
It's almost like their headquarters.
And by career criminals, I mean people who 24-7 prey on the public.
They're committing burglaries, they're hitting businesses, they're peeling the safes,
robbing people.
That's all they do.
That's how they make their living.
So anyway, infiltrated those groups, a couple of those groups.
and I got in real good with a safecracker named Randy
who was famous in that underworld part.
And in fact, I think in the book, Confessions of an Undercover agent,
I tell about being in a bar with Randy and a sidekick Candyman.
It's the middle of the afternoon, and we're sitting on bar stews at the bar,
and while we're there, Randy says, hey, let me show you, let me show you something.
reaches under his shirt and he pulls out of 38, blue steel 38.
He passes it under the counter to Candyman between us.
Candyman looks it over.
He passes it to me and I look it over.
And of course, as I'm looking it over in the bar, you know what I'm thinking.
You know, I'm thinking for my intelligence report,
I need to see what the serial number is.
And remember the serial number so that when I write my intelligence report tonight,
I'll put that serial number in it.
Later on, it can be traced and then, you know, whatever for whatever good.
But the problem was, even though his afternoon is dim in the bar,
blue steel revolver, and I couldn't make out the serial number.
So I said, hey, Randy, I can use this.
I said, I'll give it back to you tomorrow.
And I go and I'm slipping in my pocket.
And when I did that, wow, you would think it was a horniness that somebody had poked him.
Man, he got upset.
Mike, Mike.
I was using the name Mike, Mike.
Give it, give it back, give it back.
And Candyman turned him, give it back, give it back,
and I said, hey, man, I give it back tomorrow,
and I go take a sip of my beer and play in the tough guy and give it back, give it back,
and all of a sudden I feel something in my side.
And Candyman's got his 38 pressed in my side in the bar,
and his finger's on the trigger.
He said, give it back, give it back, Mike.
And I'm thinking, of course, I'm not.
not thinking slow. I'm thinking
fast. I'm thinking real fast
that, well, it's their headquarters
but he won't shoot me
in here. You know, so
there's no big deal.
I'll just play
tough guy. You know, that goes
like that. And I say, hey, man, I'll get back
tomorrow and I go to take a drink.
And I hear, click.
Yeah, that's right. Click. And I look down
and he's pulled the hammer
of the 38 all the way back
and his fingers on the trigger.
stuck in my side and he said give it back now look at him his eyes i can see this and like his
eyes are glazing over like dead fish and i said okay okay man okay okay okay i give it back uh of course
you know a cock gun can go off so easy you know a revolver for those who know all it takes is a little
pressure bam that hammer slams home and bow so i said okay okay but i need it to be delivered about it
Because if I all of a sudden reach from my pocket, you know, he might jerk the trigger.
So I say, okay, okay.
So, but I've got to go fast enough so he knows I'm compliant.
So I reached down, pull out the gun, and I hand it back past him to Randy.
Candyman still has the gun in my side.
Well, now here comes the real dangerous part.
Candyman uncocks the gun in my side.
For those of you know guns, how do you uncock a roll?
revolver. You put your thumb on the hammer and you pull the trigger and you try to lower the hammer down
slowly. But the problem with that is this. The hammer can slip. And if the hammer slips,
it goes down and bam, boy, and my guts are blown out. And you try to lower it slowly. And I say,
try it because those springs are real strong. And if it goes down too fast, bam, it blows my guts out.
So he does that.
He pulls the trigger.
He starts lowering the hammer, and he starts lowering it down.
And you know, that took him, and I've told this story many times,
because it's so vivid and so real to me, that probably took three seconds for him to lower that hammer all the way until it was safe, maybe three seconds.
Now, think about this, relatively.
If you're sitting on a park bench, you see a pretty woman pass by, well, three seconds can go pretty quickly.
If you're in a dentist chair and has a drill on your sore tooth, how long is three seconds then?
That's a lifetime.
That's what I'm saying.
That three seconds was like a lifetime.
And you know that, as I tell people, that three seconds, for me, that three seconds, the world was frozen.
was in part, Mark, I wasn't part of the world you're in. I wasn't part of this walking, talking,
breathing world that your audience is in. That three seconds has gone forever. That lifetime of
three seconds was gone forever, forever. Well, he finally lowered the hammer. And as I tell
people, I learned an important lesson from that that was early in my undercover career. And the lesson
I learned from that that helped me throughout my career is that I learned that criminals,
don't practice firearms safety.
And unfortunately, I don't know, thank goodness we can laugh about it now,
but I'm covering my book some other times when they did not practice firearm safety.
Maybe we need to give some kind of safety course for career criminals where they come wear a ski mask and they take the course.
Not a bad idea.
Yeah, proper handling of firearms.
So you don't endanger people.
The trigger discipline?
Yeah.
Exactly.
Hold it straight up.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Exactly.
Oh, my goodness.
I mean, that is such a stressful moment.
But, you know, that brings up something else, too, about an undercover.
And I know you've interviewed FBI agents who have worked undercover.
I had looked at some of those interviews because when we talked about doing an interview,
well, I wanted to see, you know, how you did your job.
And I don't have to tell your audience this.
I came away very impressed by how you do your interviews.
Well, I appreciate that.
I mean, it was very impressive in depth.
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The thing is, when people think about an undercover,
they sometimes think, oh, FBI undercover, man,
they can put on fake companies, fake bank accounts,
they can do this, you know, for a cover.
But when I worked undercover, most of the time,
I didn't even have surveillance.
It was just me by myself.
And then later on, you know, I had surveillance later on.
But when I was in intelligence, it was just me.
Yeah, especially.
Nobody was around.
Baton Rouge at that time.
You were the first guy.
Yeah, no one was around.
And yeah, and I'd get up and no one tells you, hey, you need to do this or do that or go here or go there or try this or that.
You've got to think about it.
So I didn't have this army or not army, but I didn't have all these resources backing me up.
And when you're out there and you're by yourself,
and you don't have surveillance.
And if all of a sudden something goes wrong,
it can go wrong in a bad way
because, you know, somebody can say,
as I trained agents later on in undercover,
as I told them, look, if somebody becomes suspicious of you,
think about this, you can even have surveillance.
You can be in a motel room with a bad guy.
You can have surveillance in the next room,
listening to everything that's heard.
And a bad guy might turn to you and say,
hey, I think you're the heat, bam, and you're gone.
So as I tell agents when I train them,
I'm going to teach you how to keep the guy from ever having a suspicion in the first place.
That's the key thing right there and the safest way of doing it.
But the thing about it is, you know, the times that I worked undercover,
it was like being on that high wire, you know, without a net, without a net,
and being out there all alone.
And I don't say that in a way that I was a victim doing it.
I just say that it's hard for people to understand how all of a sudden you're just by yourself.
And if something goes wrong, if you say the wrong thing, if you say something with the wrong emphasis,
if you look the wrong way, if you use the wrong kind of body language, all of a sudden, people start looking at you crazy and things can go bad.
So one of the reasons I loved undercover was not only because it was exciting,
it was because you had to use every single ounce of your mental ability and your creativity
to try to keep people from being suspicious.
And at the same time, you had to do your job under legal constraints,
under departmental policies and under moral constraints.
So you had these constraints,
and you had to do your job under all those.
And you had to always...
And here's another thing, too.
I was thinking about this the other day.
One reason I think I was so successful undercover
is I could always make myself think like the criminals.
so that if I'm with you, Mark, and you're a career criminal and you're a safe cracker or you're a major drug dealer,
I'm thinking the same way you are.
And so whenever you and I are talking, I don't have to think what I need to say.
I just say it because my mindset is the same as yours.
But underlying all that is the fact that you're a law enforcement officer,
and you never have a question about what you can and can't do.
Right.
If someone hands you a gun and says, hey, take care of this eye.
Right, right, right.
You all of a sudden have to get a little creative and find a way to get out of it.
So you have to use techniques like, you know, when I was infiltrating the Dixie Mafia auto theft rings.
Well.
And what is that for anyone that does that?
Dixie Mafia is a loose network of career criminals, many of violent career criminals, many of violent career criminals,
mostly across the southern states, and they would come together to pull jobs.
They would sometimes go in and arm-rob a high-stakes poker game that other criminals were involved in,
you know, wearing ski masks.
Or they'd go in and where they found out somebody had a safe, go in and rob him,
or they'd go commit contract murders.
They're a bad bunch.
But they're also involved in stolen car ranks and in shop shops,
especially in northeast Mississippi, which was notorious for that.
And these cars would be stolen and chopped up for parts
or stolen and sent to all over different parts of the U.S.
Anyway, to infiltrate them, you know, I'm the new guy showing up.
I can't just show up and say, hey, man, I'm one of y'all too.
Yeah, yeah.
Where'd I sign up?
So instead, I have to find out, well, you know, who's part of this?
who do they trust?
So I find out there's a Bell Bondsman
that they trust who also has a pawn shop.
So I show up his pawn shop,
get introduced to him,
and then I tell him, look, man,
uh,
uh,
we took off a truckload of TVs,
a whole truckload.
And don't worry, it wasn't around here.
It's like over in Alabama.
So there's no heat on around here.
We've already gotten rid of it.
TVs, but we've got some left. Would you be interested in a brand new TV still in the box for
like $30 or whatever? You know, that's back when they cost a lot more. And he goes to, yeah,
well, yeah, I guess so. Well, all right, when you want me to bring it by? Well, I'll close it,
you know, such and such time or more, bring it right after that. And so then I go to another town to
Walmart and I buy a TV and I take the markings off to where it can be traced and I go delivered
to him and get the $30,
and then he starts vouching for me,
you know, to the career criminals.
Well, yeah, yeah, he's involved in this.
Or I show up and open the trunk and show him a dozen AR-15 rifles.
So, yeah, we got these out of an armory.
I'm taking them up to a guy to unload them right now.
But if you ever want something, I can get you something.
Oh, man.
So that's kind of thing makes them vouch for you.
But here's the thing about it.
When I did those, and I tell this to agents when I'm training them,
no one came around and said, Charlie, hey, why don't you try this?
Or why don't you try that?
You've got to think of it.
And as I tell law enforcement and officer and agent, you've got to think of it.
You've got to use your head and you've got to think of it because your most powerful tool.
In fighting crime is your mind.
It's your brain.
That's your most powerful tool.
And so when you join the force, you're the only real one doing undercover, doing this type of intelligence work.
So where do you learn this?
Is this something you pick up from your childhood?
How do you understand how trust and influence comes?
It's just OJT, on the job.
I mean, there's no one to show me, and I had not been to, you know, any type of training school for it.
Can you think of a moment when you were younger that you say, like, oh, you need to establish trust.
But in order to get trust, you have to find a sort of, you know, an intermediary or a condo.
it to getting trust? No, I never thought about it like that. But of course, oftentimes we would
have somebody that perhaps somebody had turned and become an informant would make an introduction
and then drop out. If I could get an introduction, then I'd cut the informant completely out,
and I'd take it from there. And so that would help right there. The key thing, though, about
trust, I think sincerity goes a long way. So if you and I are talking, and you're a career of
are involved in certain types of crime, and my mindset is the same thing.
When we're talking, I'm sincere because I'm talking to you as the same kind of career
criminal you are.
Right.
You're not Charlie.
I don't have to think about what to say.
I'm instinctively saying the same thing you are, or responding to it the correct way.
And that sincerity comes across.
And oftentimes, too, my personality undercover.
would often be,
uh,
it would be more dynamic.
No,
you know,
in real life,
I'm pretty much of a wimp.
You know,
if I,
if I go out to buy a car and,
and a salesman says,
well,
this car is X amount of money.
I might say,
well, will you take less?
No, okay,
all right.
I'll pay you that.
You know,
but,
but if I go out,
you know,
and I'm,
I'm undercover and I'm on drugs
or stolen cars or whatever,
and the guy says,
Yeah, this would be $2,000 or $10,000, whatever.
I'm saying, hey, man, I can't do that.
Look, I can do this.
I know, we argue back and forth.
And I said, look, I like to do that, but I've got people backing me.
And, you know, I mean, I'm playing hardball like that.
Go ahead.
I'm sorry.
I'm curious, I want to circle back to the Randy store before we go to the Dixie Market.
Yeah, yeah.
Because Randy is an interesting character.
Oh, yeah.
So he is a part of this sort of career circle of burglars.
And they make their whole living just breaking into stories.
and homes taking all their stuff.
Right.
When you're assigned to this, I imagine that the case file you get, it's not very robust.
You're basically told like, hey, there's a couple.
No, no, no, no.
Like, how does it even come across your desk?
No, no, no.
You're thinking of present-day undercover.
Of course.
Undercover then was I'm working undercover, deep cover, and I write intelligence reports.
and I write the intelligence reports at my home at night, late at night,
and then later on I'll slip into an office no one knows about and type them.
And those intelligence reports are just intelligence reports.
I wasn't supposed to be making cases.
I was supposed to be gathering criminal intelligence on who's doing what and how they're doing it.
And sometimes they would take that information
and if they could sanitize it,
they would pass it on to the detectives
to follow up and see if they could make a case,
but do it without burning me.
The way an undercover agent gets burned, at least,
is when other people that you trust and he trust
knows you're an agent.
Especially, you know, we're talking about
back in Baton Rouge and in Mississippi,
if somebody you trust it
with the local police department or the sheriff's office or even the highway patrol knew that you were a mbn agent, Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics agent, and you were working undercover, and they were trustworthy, and they knew you were working undercover in a certain area.
You'd wind up being burned, and you'd wind up being burned because of the fact that they'll tell a friend, who tells a friend, who tells a friend, the next thing you know, sat on the street that there's undercover agent working in the area.
And hey, who's the new guy?
Yep.
Yeah, who's the new guy?
Especially when there's so few, you know, like you're the only one.
Yeah, so in Baton Rouge, in Baton Rouge, when I was undercover, gosh, I was undercover
for six years in the same city.
But after I was in intelligence for a while, it evolved into narcotics.
And then so I was making, infiltrating drug rings and making undercover buys.
And every now and then there'd be a roundup, a drug deal.
Well, the problem is
It's a round up a drug dealers
Man, who busted you?
Well, it says here on the warrant
Officer Charlie Spillers
was the one who did.
Charlie Spillers, oh, is that Rick?
Is that Rick? That Rick driving that
that green car? Yeah, that's who is.
They spread the word. Hey, look out for Rick
driving that green car. Well, that's why
sometimes I was working on different groups at the same time
using different names and different cars
so that if I'm working on a group and say,
hey, look out for Rick driving a green car,
you know, I'm John driving a different car
or somebody's telling me to watch out for me
or sometimes I'm telling others, yeah, watch out for me.
Wow.
That reminds me.
I like this.
This didn't come about, but it would have been neat if it had.
There was a roundup.
After Roundup, two of the guys got busted, wanted to put out a contract on me, to kill me.
And so they got up with two other guys to do it.
And these two friends of theirs was going to put out the contract,
hire a hitman to kill me.
Well, I found out about it through an informant that they had told about it.
So I told the informant, well, go to the two guys.
They don't know me and tell them, you know a hitman,
and then you introduce me to them as the hitman to kill me.
How's that sound?
Well, anyway, that was the plan.
It only got so far, and then the bad guys decided not to pursue it anymore,
which I think was good for everybody involved.
Oh, boy, story.
I mean, how are you going to hit yourself?
Commit, that?
And then you go back to the guys, you're like, hey, I got him good.
Yeah, I got him good.
You're not going to see him around anymore.
Yeah, I would have been saying, Charlie Spillard.
Yeah, I know who you're talking about.
Yeah, he's tall and handsome.
Yeah, that tall.
Handsome, smart guy.
Yeah.
Oh, that is wild.
So how do you come across Randy?
Oh, I was introduced.
Let me think.
I was introduced to some strippers.
And the strippers ran with the career criminals.
So they had the bars and the strippers and go-go joints and go-go girls.
And they all ran together in a big group.
So when you go into the bar, what's that movie?
Good fellows.
You go in a bar, it wouldn't be, you know, on the same level as Goodfellas,
but you go into their bar, and like in Goodfellas,
there'd be one table or two tables over there,
and everybody's around, maybe a dozen, at that table.
And it's the guys and some of the dancers when they come from their breaks,
and it's the career criminals and the girls.
So that's how I got into them, and, you know, just,
that's how it developed.
But anyway, that's all.
But how does Rick or Mike, how does Mike just walk up to, you know, a bunch of tough guys
that are career criminals with a bunch of dancers?
Like, what is your, what is your cover?
Yeah, well, that's my cover.
I'm trying to remember what I was, my cover was back then.
It seemed like I was pretending that I was involved in some, some, uh, burglaries, minor things,
you know, things that they wouldn't have known.
known wasn't true, and because the girls, you know, accepted me, they started accepting
me. And then, in fact, the way my career with Randy came to halt is Randy got up with me
and an informant, and he was going to pull a safe job. And he wanted us to go. And I think I was
going to go in with him to pull a safe job. It was in a safe job. It was in a,
gas station.
And it was supposed to have a lot of cash in it.
And the gas station was closed at night, and it's isolated and outside the skirts of this
small town.
We'd go hit it and then form it would be the lookout.
And so we had gloves.
We'd gotten, we had the car.
We had everything ready.
Randy was going to, you know, blow the safe or peel the safe.
And then on the way to do the job, I was driving the car nighttime, you know, town
I wasn't familiar with.
And I didn't see the stop sign.
Oh, no.
There were tree limbs over a stop sign.
And as I went through this intersection, no cars around except this van that teaboned us.
No.
And so that ended that.
Yeah, that totaled the car.
Oh, wow.
The only one who was all right was Randy.
And the front was had a stiff neck.
You got banged up a little?
Oh, just a little, not much.
So then what happens with Randy?
he, well, I had to drop out after that
because words started circulating on me.
The police investigating that,
you know, were investigating the accident,
they found some tools and things in the car,
you know, and they started becoming suspicious of everything.
So finally, when they had all three of us,
including the banged-up informant down to the police station
late that night, and they were checking things,
out and making some calls.
When I was along with the police captain, I said, look, I need you to call somebody.
You know, my name's not really Mike Tibado or whatever it is, and this car's not really
such and such, and I need you to call Captain Watson with Baton Rouge PD Intelligence.
And so he calls and said, yes, sir, I got, yeah, yes, sir, he's right here.
Yes, sir, here he is.
You want to talk to him?
So anyway, that kept us from all going to jail.
But at the same time, just doing that around other people,
they might not see what's going on,
but they pick up the, hey, something suspicious is going on.
So the next time or two I went in a bar where we all hung out,
I picked up those vibes real fast.
You know, that hostility, that something was cold
and something was going on.
So I left early.
I go out to my undercut.
cover car and the back windshields busted out of my undercover car.
So that took care of me and me and Randy.
I didn't go back after that.
Wow.
In fact, I wrote in the book about that.
I remember not really wanting to do that.
I didn't really want to test the waters.
But I remember at home, I got my 38,
little Smith and Weston 38 five shot,
pulled out the cylinder, made sure the shells were in.
in it and I held it and held it in my hand.
And as I wrote in the book, that it was just a comforting feeling knowing I had it.
I was just comforting, calming myself down.
And then I put it in the back of my belt.
Then I went to the joint.
And then all of a sudden, I saw all this coldness.
And before long, I made a excuse and got out.
And in fact, one of the women said, Mike, maybe you better go.
Wow.
So anyway, so that ended the thing with the, you know.
know what happened to Randy in the long run? Was there ever a case built around them?
None, no. None that I know it from that. Back then, gosh, we could have done so much good
back then had we known about conspiracy law and investigating conspiracies and making conspiracy cases
because I had enough evidence, you know, with Randy from what I've seen, and I could have made
recordings probably too, to accumulate evidence for some criminal conspiracies, conspiracies
you commit, you know, safe jobs and burglaries and things like that. And also, you know,
their admissions to other crimes, too. In fact, I remember at the bar, I remember one time Randy came in,
it was at the bar I was telling you about, and it was early afternoon, and I walked in and Randy was
there. And as I walked, he was sitting at a table, as I walked up to Randy, I could tell something
was wrong and I immediately thought uh-oh am I burned am I you know that's first thing uh-oh am I
burn boy I could tell he was he was something was wrong I sat down at the table and Randy says
damn it damn it son of a bitch can you believe it I said what what what he said believe it man they came to
my house at two in the morning damn it and he's so and so and so and so they had gone to do a safe job
But they couldn't get the safe open.
So finally, they got the safe, they pried it out, they put it in the trunk or car,
they brought it over to Randy's house.
At two in the morning, they wanted Randy to open it for him.
He said, I could have killed him.
I could, I can't believe it, I could have killed him.
So he said, I finally agreed to open it for half of what was in it,
had them take it off somewhere.
It didn't take me any time to get it out of there.
But he was furious.
I mean, he was absolutely furious that they came to his house at two in the
morning to open a safe, you know, that was just exposing him. I mean, oh, man, and I was relieved,
thank God it's not me. Yeah. Thank goodness is not me. You know, with no surveillance, no cover for you.
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What's up, people?
Quick announcement.
If you are a fan of Camp Gagnon or Religion Camp,
I have great news because we are dropping History Camp.
That's right.
This is the channel where we're going to be exploring
the most interesting, fascinating,
controversial topics from all time throughout all history.
You probably know about Benjamin Franklin,
I don't know, Thomas Jefferson, Nikola Tesla.
Interesting figures from history,
and you probably learned about it in school
and they were pretty boring, but not here.
No.
As you know, I was raised by a conspiracy theory,
so I'm going to be diving deep into all of the interesting
strange occult and secretive societal relationships
that all of these famous influential men
from our shared past have.
So if you're interested, please go ahead and subscribe
to the YouTube channel. It will be pinned in the description
as well as the comments. And if you're on Spotify, this doesn't really
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a high rating because it really helps the show.
What was the longest case that you worked on?
Longest? I don't know what the longest would be.
Like, was there one that you were working on these guys for, you know, eight months a year?
Yeah, that would be the smuggling case where they delivered 3,000 pounds of marijuana to me in Houston, Texas.
So take me to the beginning of that case.
It was air smugglers.
Back in the mid-70s and back in the 80s, the southern United States especially was overwhelmed with air smuggling by,
private airplanes, especially twin-engine airplanes that would fly down to Central America,
South America, to the Caribbean, and they would fly back with a full plane load of drugs.
Well, in Mississippi, nearly every single county in Mississippi had some connection linked to air smuggling.
They were either landing planes there and offloading the drugs, or they were landing planes
and getting refueled to fly further north with the drugs,
those sort of thing.
Every place had a connection,
and it was like that across the south.
There were some highly organized groups doing it,
some very highly organized groups.
In fact, there are some books written about some of them,
one of them called the company.
Anyway, we had an informant go to one of our agents
and say, this was when I was with the Mississippi Bureau,
of the other narcotics that I think so-and-so is interested in selling some plain load of drugs,
sanguineging plane load of drugs.
And so I had that informant introduced me to the pilot.
And when he introduced me, it was at the door of a motel.
And the informant introduced me, and I immediately sent the informant away,
and he got to introduce me, and he was out from then on.
and that investigation lasted probably eight or nine months.
And so as it turned out, that pilot was friends with very close friends with another pilot,
and the other pilot was working for the Marcello organization,
the mafia organization down New Orleans.
And he was one of about a half a dozen or more pilots that were flying drugs from Jamaica,
primarily Jamaica at the time, plain loads of drugs into use.
They would be offloaded in Louisiana or Mississippi, and usually like 15,700 pounds at a time.
Anyway, I got in with him.
And it was being grown in Jamaica.
Yeah, right, right.
I see.
And in fact, when I met the other pilot, he would, you know, he thought I was a wealthy businessman in Memphis.
That was your cover.
Yeah, I was a wealthy business.
I wore a three-piece suit.
I was a wealthy businessman in Memphis,
and that I was backed by some other businessmen
and some lawyers who invest money in big drug loads.
So what he was going to do is he was going to sell one of those plane loads to me.
And he was trying to get the Marcello people to allow them to do that,
but they had all their loads promise that were coming up.
So, you know, I didn't get to buy one of those loads.
But when I meet with embarrassed times, and I usually had a tape recorder going with, you know, a couple hours of real, real tape, he would tell me so much about the fields they were using to land and about the ministers in different countries and government officials in different countries who were helping them, you know, part of the operation.
And what kind of planes they were using.
He was telling me so much that we wound up being able to rip off, I think, two planeloads of drugs,
one in police, and another plane load that landed in Franklinton, Louisiana, an Arrow Commander,
with about 1,700 pounds.
And I kept U.S. Customs and DEA from seasoned that when it landed.
He landed it, and he offloaded it into these vans,
and the vans, they followed the vans,
and vans went to this warehouse
deep in the woods that they had built
where they were storing drugs.
Meanwhile, after he unloaded it,
which only took a few minutes,
he flew that arrow commander to the coast,
an airstrip on the Mississippi Gulf Coast.
And I had him stay away from busting him
and season that plane
because I wanted to maintain my cover with him.
So what happened was later that night, late that night, the agents got search warrants for that warehouse.
They hit the warehouse.
And when they hit the warehouse, there were, I think, 750 pounds left there.
They had already moved the rest of it out.
But what happened was the pilot, then, after he took the plane to the Gulf Coast, they cleaned it out there.
He drove back up to North Mississippi where he had a restaurant.
or he had a restaurant.
And then when he met with me after that,
he was telling me all about it.
And he was saying, yeah, he was telling me about it being seized at the warehouse.
And I said, man, we don't have heat on.
There's no heat on you, is there?
He said, no, no heat on me.
He said, we think what's happened is there was a shrimp boat load full of drugs
about 10 or 20,000 pounds that came in,
and they went to the warehouse.
And what happened is we think that was tracked to the warehouse.
And when they hit that, and it was already gone by the time they hit it.
And so when they hit that, they got what was left of my load.
So we don't think there's any heat on me.
Don't worry, don't worry.
Well, what happened was, think about it.
If you're in the Marcello organization, you've got a pilot,
and he's lost two plain loads of drugs.
They did what I figured they were going to do.
They put him on the back burner for a while.
And that's when he got back up with me
And he said, hey, look, I've got this other group
They're down on the border, Texas-Mexican border
And if you're interested, I can get you 1,500 pounds
I said, what price?
He told me.
And I said, well, look, I can get at such and such price.
I'll take 3,000 pounds.
So we negotiated it, agreed to 3,000 pounds for that amount of money.
But the problem is, I was telling him,
but I need it delivered to North Mississippi.
They wouldn't do that.
All right, well, how about if we meet in Shreveport,
they delivered to Shreveport and they delivered to me,
they wouldn't do that.
You've got to go down to what they call the valley,
down around Mack Allen, Texas and all that.
The problem with that is,
that's kind of like enemy territory.
If you go down to the border area,
that's where they have too much control,
they've got too many eyes.
They know what's going on.
So if you go down there, I mean, you're walking into a trap.
So eventually, we agreed to do the deal in Houston, Texas,
because they have a ranch about 50 miles outside Houston that they use for a transshipment point.
So I agreed to meet them in Houston to do the deal there.
I wrote about that in the book.
That was, gosh, I flew to Houston, and for about two days or two and a half days
and nights non-stop negotiations with them.
Now, do you have to work with the FBI for something like this?
D-EA.
Because this is out of Mississippi.
Yeah, he was D-E-A.
And so anyway, we got up with D-E-A, and of course D-E-A was,
boy, they were very enthusiastic about doing something.
The big deal, of course, nowadays, 3,000 pounds,
not such a big deal.
But back then, this is 1980s, big deal.
So D-E-A was very enthusiastic about doing it.
And so I drive down to Houston, and the bad guys that I'm dealing with,
they're down at the border, and they're flying up to Houston.
We're supposed to meet at the airport, and I'm flying into airport.
They're flying in.
And then their plan is, from the Houston airport, we're going to go to Hobby Airfield
and get a helicopter.
And then they're going to fly me in a helicopter to the ranch.
You know, that's about 50 or 60 miles outside.
Are you with the liaison for the whole deal as well?
Is he going with you?
I'm not sure who was going to be in the helicopter, but he was one of those that I'm dealing with.
And what happened was some others that were the suppliers.
That's right.
He dropped out after we got to, I met him at the airport, and they wanted to go get the helicopter and fly me out there.
and I had one of my men with me, and I said, you know, take him.
And they said, yeah, he can come out there and you can leave him out there with the drugs.
And then we'd come back here and do the money.
And then, you know, then you get the drugs and all that.
Well, the problem is they would have taken him hostage.
Basically, if I'd gone out to the ranch, either me or whoever went out there would be hostage for a deal going down.
and no matter how you try to play it,
somebody would have gotten hurt.
So DEA was all for that.
Oh, go ahead and fly with them, fly with them.
You fly with them.
And I said, no, no, look, it's just, it's too dangerous on their territory.
No, they're pushing and pushing.
And finally, I said, well, look, I'll tell you what,
give me one of your men, and I'll pretend that's one of my men,
and I'll have him fly out there.
Have the DEA guy go.
Yeah, DEA guy go.
He said, okay, we'll do it your way.
And you know what?
From then on, I mean, he couldn't have been better.
Anything I wanted, he did.
But that was the only time we had any kind of disagreement.
And after that, he was great.
He was fantastic.
At the airport, you know, you need to show a flash row.
What's a flash row?
Money, show them that you have the money.
Flash row.
Because they're landing, you're landing, and they need to see cash before they go off-site.
Yeah.
Why do they want to do the cash off-site?
Well, oftentimes you separate the cash from the drugs and do delivery in one place
and exchange the cash and the other place.
And that gives them protection and some separation.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
And the problem is when you have a lot of money involved, even sometimes when they don't plan to rip you off just by that much money being involved,
being involved might make them start thinking about ripping you all.
So at the airport, when I met them at the airport, they came off the airplane.
I told them, look, I'm ready to do the deal, but I don't want to take the helicopter and
sit.
I'm going to go get a motel room here, and I want to do it this way and that way.
Come on down here.
I want to show, I've got some money down here.
I want to show one of you the money.
So I take one of them down.
We go to a van, in the van or some other agents in an undercover row.
I show him a half a million in cash.
It's supposed to be $550,000, but it's half a million,
which in today's money would be about $2 million,
maybe a little more than $2, $2.5 million.
And that's what the whole deal is worth.
Yeah, the whole deal's worth.
So anyway, I'm showing that money, and then I go to the motel,
and then a little bit later, they show up at the motel, the bad guys,
and there's about a half a dozen of them.
And so they get a room, there's a group,
and then I've got my room, and then DEA's got a room,
and meanwhile DEA's amassed their SWAT team.
Houston PD is amassed their SWAT team.
And all together, we have about 40 or 50 agents in a field a couple miles away,
all on standby in case something goes down.
And meanwhile, the bad guys are wanting me or my man to go out to the ranch
when they came to, I know this is just join it.
The reason is I hadn't had much sleep.
lately. But at the motel, what I did was I had an agent go get a U-Haul truck, you know,
and another name. And then when the bad guy showed up, I said, look, I told y'all, here's what I want.
Here's the U-Haul truck. Here's the keys. Go fill it up. I don't even need to go to the ranch.
Y'all go fill it up, bring it back here. I've got the money. We'll do the deal.
They kept insisting, though, that one of us go out to the ranch.
they kept insisting that
so that's where
two days of negotiations
went on
with nonstop
with hardly any sleep at all
when I'd leave them
I'd have to go get up with DEA
and the others and say this just happened
that just happened
oh they want to see the half a million again
okay we'll call him
y'all send one man down
to the lobby have him
come out to lobby and we pick him up
and ride him around we
go to another car
and we show him a half a million again
and then we go back
and I mean this is just nonstop
two days. And then...
And what's the point of the U-Haul?
Well, the U-Haul makes it simple.
See, I tried to simplify it. Look,
y'all just fill up the U-Haul with my 3,000 pounds,
bring it back here, and I'll meet you, you know,
I'll get the U-Haul from you. I've got the money here.
You've already seen it. You've seen it twice. No big deal.
Makes it simple, right?
But they still want somebody to go to the ranch in the U-Ha with them.
That one of their men...
Put the product in the back.
One of their men and one of my men will go to the ranch in the U-Haul.
So I finally arrange for my man to go to a truck stop with their man in the U-Haul near the ranch.
And they drop off my man and they go on to the ranch in the U-Haul.
And my man waits and then they come back with the U-Haul filled with the 3,000 pounds.
And when they did, my man called me a...
at the motel room where I'm with all of the bad guys.
I said, yeah, I've got now.
Everything's okay, Mike, or whatever name I was using.
I said, okay, all right.
It's all cool.
I'll go get your money, be right back up.
I'll come back up to the room.
Instead of coming in with money, we'd come in and arrest them.
Wow.
So anyway, that's how that deal went down.
I made it disjoint it.
No, not at all.
I was trying.
Yeah, well, that's because my mind's disjoint.
I'm not getting much sleep.
Hey, I've got to tell your audience, your man, Mark,
is a slave driver.
He made me get up at 5 in the morning to catch an airplane to fly to New York to do an interview
today.
And just as I thought I could get in bed, he called me and said, where are you?
So he's a slave driver.
But he's a great interview.
I appreciate it.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry to keep you up.
What's up, guys?
I'm on the road.
That's right.
I'm going to Burlington, Vermont, Montreal, Toronto, Detroit, and a bunch of other
dates that I will be adding to my website, mark agnonlive.com. I would love to see you guys there.
Obviously, if you don't know, I'm a stand-up comedian, and stand-up comedy is my passion.
It's the thing I love to do. And seeing you guys all come out to the shows truly makes my life.
I hang out after the show and say what's up to everybody. So if you want to come through,
check out the show, say what's up to me. It would mean the world. You can see me at all these
dates and more on my website, Mark Agnon Live.com. And I'll see you guys on the road.
What's up, guys? We're going to take a break really quick because we got merch. If you don't know,
We got Camp Research and Development merchandise.
You can see it right here.
Also, my buddy Andrew Schultz was actually just out hanging with his fam, having a good old time.
All of a sudden, a dude walks up and he goes, yo, what's up, Shultzie?
And guess what he was wearing?
This shirt right here.
So shout out to that legend, whoever you are.
You're the man.
I appreciate that.
And if you want to copy your very own Camp Threads, go to Camp-R-D.com.
We were dropping all sorts of new gear.
You can see some of the images here of some of the products that we got.
And anytime you buy a t-shirt, you help this show directly operate.
It is a huge, huge lift.
And I'm very grateful for everyone that reps the gear,
especially at the live shows, seeing you guys wearing the t-shirts at the shows,
truly makes my life.
It's the coolest thing ever.
I cannot believe people are actually wearing clothes that me and my friends are designing
and sending iMessage chats like, you know, you think this is cool?
It's the craziest thing in the world.
And I'm so grateful for everyone that does it.
Check it out.
We got the link in the description.
Now, let's get back to the show.
So I'm curious in that case.
Mm-hmm.
Can you explain a little how the criminal organization works, right?
You have these growers in Jamaica that are growing weed, right?
Right.
And then you have, you know, just for example, the Marcello family that's in New Orleans.
Right.
Are they the ones that are organizing to grow and are they the ones with the power that is making the deal all happen?
Are they like contracting the pilots?
Like what is the sort of hierarchy of how these things operate?
Yeah.
Normally, people like the Morcellos weren't getting involved in the natural growing.
You know, you've got the growers down in Jamaica and in other countries who are producing it,
and they're looking to sell their product, and then they have protection from some of the officials
and administrators in government.
And then when you get the Marcellos involved in picking up these big loads, all they're interested in is getting that load
and getting it back to U.S. and getting it distributed.
I can't remember if I covered this in the book or not.
They lost two or three airplanes, one crashed in Jamaica,
at least one more crashed maybe in Florida,
with dope in the plane or the guys on the way to pick up the dope.
So it was pretty risky for the pilots.
And what the Marcellars were doing,
they were paying the pilots a set fee,
as I recall.
I think the pilot I was dealing with
was telling me they were getting $60,000 per load.
Something interesting happened with the Marcellars, though,
is trying to remember when all this came about.
When the pilot I was dealing with,
his name was Billy Wayne Mahaffey from Mississippi,
when he flew up in the Arrow Commander
with about 1,700 pounds,
he dropped it off in Louisiana,
and then he flew over to Diamondhead
and they cleaned out the plane.
Then he drove back up to North Mississippi.
Well, what happened was
the Marcello organization
decided that they needed
to get another plane,
replace that plane.
Wait, wait, wait, I'm getting my facts confused.
I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
This is from not getting much sleep.
After the first plane got busted.
He was in Belize, and it was with this pilot, and it was 1,500 pounds.
The authorities in police arrested the pilot, Mahaffey, and his co-pilot,
and they seized the plane, seized the dope.
So Mahaffey's in jail, in police.
This has just happened.
But what happened after that, and I know this,
because Mahaffy eventually got out, came back, met with me,
and told me all about it,
What happened was, after the bus happened, right after that, a Lear Jet, private Lear Jet, left New Orleans and flew down to police.
And people in that Lear Jet took money to bribe Mahaffey's way out of jail.
I think it was going to be $20,000.
So what happened was, Mahaffey had a hearing, and in that hearing, he and his co-pilot were sentenced to like 90 days in jail or a prison.
and the bribe was paid, and instead of serving time,
the authorities drove them to the Mexican border, turned them loose,
and then they made their way back to the U.S.
And that's when Mahaffey got up with me,
and while the tape recorder's going,
he's telling me all about it, yeah, and they flew down a Learjet.
And here's what happened.
Independently, Customs was watching that Learjet,
and when it landed back in New Orleans
from Belize,
customs identified all eight people on board,
including a couple attorneys who,
a couple of attorneys and a couple other figures
who were linked into this.
And they also found $150,000 in cash in an envelope.
Nobody on the plane would claim it.
So finally, one of the attorneys claimed $150,000.
Then, I think it was about two weeks or three weeks later, that Arrow Commander that
Mahaffee later used, two men went to Oklahoma, and they bought that used Arrow Commander
for $182,000 in cash.
So you see where all this is going.
And the money and the people that were linked to the Arrow Commander included two of the
men who were on that Learjet coming back.
And either
one or two of those men were,
had been previously identified
as a mafia members
down in New Orleans.
So you see what happened.
All of a sudden they send people down,
take care of Mahaffey, get him out.
Then they come back, they've got this money,
they want to get a plane and keep on running.
That's when they get the Arrow Commander.
Mahaffey takes another trip,
but he's telling me too much about
when he's leaving.
So custom goes out with our people
They put a transponder on it
And when he flies back in
They track him on the transponder
And that's how they know he landed
I think it was Franklin
Or Franklinton, Louisiana
And they actually saw the bands
Different bands pick up the drugs
And drive off
And then he flew over the diamond head
So that's how my half he wound up
Losing two different planes
And put on the back burner
Wow
The thing about this
is, and one of the interesting things about it was during that investigation, we had state and
local agents officers in Texas, New Zealand, Alabama, Mississippi, and Florida, and we had federal
agents, too, all cooperating with each other. There wasn't one big task force control room.
It was just, look, we're dealing with a guy, you know, and there's going to be a plane
coming and they're going to refuel down in Florida.
Can you have somebody check and see if that plane's there?
Yeah, well, what about in Louisiana?
They're going to do that too.
Yeah, we'll rush out and do that.
Customs, this is going to happen?
Can you put a transponder on?
Yeah, we'll do that.
So it wasn't, you know, like one big central control is everybody jumping in to get things
done, which I thought was pretty amazing.
Yeah, especially nowadays.
It seems like there's much more organization when it comes to making all these different
agencies.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, now you'd have, yeah, exactly.
Exactly, exactly.
So anyway, that's how that deal was.
And now this Marcello organization, I've never heard of them.
Really?
No, I've never heard of them.
You must be from New York.
You must be from New York.
Are they still operating in New Orleans?
Hey, Mark, I went, I had not eaten since yesterday or slept.
Like I say, he's a slave driver.
So after I finally got to my room today, I went and found a pizza place, and I went in,
I got a slice of pizza, you know, first time eating since yesterday.
And I'm sitting there eating the pizza in these red and white-chequered tablecloths,
and it's this certain atmosphere.
And I'm thinking, hey, is one of the Coralone's going to come here with a gun
and make a hit on me?
I've heard of that.
I've heard of Portland.
Yeah, you never, the Marcellos are notorious in Louisiana.
Okay.
Carlos Marcello and his mafia family.
family controlled Louisiana and everything that went on Louisiana, and they controlled politicians.
And at one point, the Marcello family and the Traficano family, they were out of Florida.
Absolutely.
I've heard the truck.
Yeah, as I understand it, they came to an agreement to share the Mississippi Gulf Coast between
them, you know, rather than fight over it.
So, yeah, boy, talk about powerful, super powerful.
But that's not surprising.
Yeah.
So they controlled, I mean, the fact that they had a turn.
and really high-powered people on these Lear jets going down to, you know, Belize is pretty remarkable.
Oh, yeah.
And how long do they operate for?
Oh, gosh, I don't know.
I'd have to look through the history books.
I mean, do they still have a presence today?
I can't imagine it's the same as it was.
You know, I don't know the answer to that.
That's fair.
I don't know the answer to that.
But, you know, Morcello, he came up into, what, 20s and 30s, and they finally made a case.
on him where he assaulted a, when he got off a plane, he assaulted a FBI agent or something.
So they deported him out of the country and then later he came back into the country legally.
And, of course, he's passed away since then, but they controlled judges, state politicians.
In fact, in the case I'm telling you about, about the Learjet and all that,
when the officers hit that warehouse deep in the woods in Louisiana,
they arrested, I think, about eight guys, eight of the bad guys.
And one of the bad guys was the grown son, like, you know, I guess late 20s or 30s,
the grown son of the state insurance commissioner.
The state insurance commissioner was married to.
one of
Marcello's Cap-Otes.
And later,
later,
I'm trying to remember what happened.
There were some different things
that happened in that, oh, I know what,
later,
either the state insurance committee,
she was busted,
or one of her associates was busted.
They were trying to bribe the district attorney
to drop the case against the son, you know, of her and the capo.
Right.
And instead, the DA was honest and made the case on whoever was trying that.
Then the son became a fugitive.
He didn't show up a trial.
And years later, years later, he was captured in England.
And it opened a bar in England.
and he'd been operating under the name of a name John Wayne used in one of his movies.
He'd been operating under that name, and he was found out when he applied to get a legal permit for a shotgun.
And I guess through his fingerprints or whatever, they found out who he was and arrested him and extradating back to the U.S.
In fact, I think I mentioned in the book, there was a newspaper article in the U.S.
that probably wins the headline or wins the prize for best headline it was grog's you know you get
grog's at the pub grog's father arrested you know that's funny anyway there were a lot of tentacles in that
case it it gets confused in trying to remember who's on first no of course now the pilot you were
working with that was the guy you were dealing with for the longest time right and what was his name again
That's Billy Wayne, Mahaffey.
That's Mahaffey.
He had, he had, whenever I was dealing with the,
the bad guys in Houston, Billy was there like at the airport,
but after that he dropped out.
And the reason he dropped out is he started getting suspicious.
And so he disappeared and dropped out.
And the reason he dropped out right,
The reason he got suspicious is when I went down to Houston, instead of flying down like we were telling the bad guys, instead of myself and one of my agents drove down.
And it was about a 12-hour drive.
And we drove down after having very little sleep like today.
And when we got down there to the airport and we met Billy Wayne at the airport and two or three of the other guys, you know, I was worried my three.
suit and everything. But I was so tired. I wasn't my usual self. And because of that, he was
kind of picking up that maybe he was thinking something was wrong because of that. So anyway, he
dropped out then later on, I think, trying to remember what happened. I can't remember he
pled guilty to charges. I remember going to an administrative hearing in Screveport, Louisiana,
where they had revoked his pilot's license.
And it seems like later on I might have heard from his son.
Mahaffey may have passed away by now, but anyway.
Was there a moment where you revealed to him that you were actually on undercover?
Well, indirectly.
Because, see, after I didn't see him after that first night on the deal in Texas,
Then on that third night is when we arrested everybody.
And, of course, when we arrested everybody, everybody knows, hey, I'm not Mike.
I'm Charlie Spiller.
So he knows that too instantly.
Later on, later on, he met with us in Oxford, Mississippi, and he was contemplating, telling everything he knew.
and he gave us a few little tidbits about things he knew like, you know,
somebody tipping him off about transponders being on the plane by customs, things like that.
So we had a meeting with him about him possibly cooperating.
But then after that, he never followed through.
I never heard from him after that.
When you met with him, was there a feeling that he was betrayed by you?
Or was he kind of like he recognized the game and he goes, ah.
Yeah, yeah.
Got me. Yeah. It's professional.
Interesting. Honor amongst thieves.
Yeah. There's a guy,
his name is Billy Up, forget his last name,
his career criminal in northeast Mississippi. He'd been in the pen number of times.
And I remember when I was with MBN, I was the NBN captain. I was over there in
Tupelo one night, and I think he'd gotten caught with a bunch of stolen goods,
maybe a stolen car. And I was over there just assisting.
and I was booking him.
And I was talking with him.
I said, well, are you going to, I said, how you been?
He said, oh, I've been fine.
I said, everything going to be all right.
He said, Charlie, he said, Charlie, man, things have changed.
He said, they ain't like they used to be.
And I said, what?
He said, man, you know, in prison, man, you know, when we were doing time, we all stuck together.
He said, but now TV earned it.
I said, what?
He said, he had TV ruined.
He said, now they've got TV a TV room in prison.
He said, you know, an inmate, he'll sell his soul to get TV privileges.
Man, you can't trust that.
I mean, it's run.
He was being serious.
He wasn't being funny.
He's roaring.
He said, damn, it's running.
It's not like it was in the old days.
Back in the old days, it was cards, you know.
These guys playing spades the way it's supposed to be.
Oh, man, yeah, yeah, you're right.
You're right.
That's so funny.
So, you know, when you're dealing with the career criminals,
they know that, you know, it's professional, hey, this time you got me and, yeah, you did a good job getting me, well, you know, good luck to you because you ain't going to get me next time, you know, that sort of thing.
I'm always so curious with undercovers that you build these relationships with so many different people.
And the relationships are, like you said, genuine and they're sincere and they're deep.
And I'm sure, you know, they tell you about their kids and they tell you about their wives.
And, you know, they share intimate details about their life.
And you, in turn, you know, you share details about your cover, which I imagine many details of the cover are probably related to your real life.
Right.
So you guys are forming this actual intimate bond.
Right.
Is there ever—
I wouldn't say an intimate bond, criminal bond.
So I'm curious.
This is the part that I'm interested in.
Like, you're building a case over nine months.
Is there ever a moment while you're building the case that you go, man, this is, you know, this guy is actually a good guy.
And he's got into some bad stuff, and he's doing the wrong thing.
He's a criminal, of course.
you know, I like him and I feel for him. How do you deal with that?
I wrote in, I think in the book Confessions of an undercover agent, and I wrote in the
epilogue of that, if you want to really read the gist of that, read the epilogues,
maybe three or four pages. Read that. Read that. And I believe in the epilogue, I pointed out
that there are bad people who do bad things, and there are good people who do bad things.
and that when I was a later, when I was a federal prosecutor, when I could, I would try to treat them differently when I could.
But yeah, there's a lot of good people who are committing crimes and doing bad things, but they're still doing the bad things.
And if you're a prosecutor, and of course if you're a judge too, and you recognize that, you try to treat them differently because those are the people that can,
probably be rehabilitated. They're the folks who appear before the judge and are sincerely sorry
when they say they are, whereas, you know, the others, you know, it's just a game, just to do that.
But yeah, yeah, I've liked a lot of people I've dealt with. They had good personalities. In fact,
criminals, criminal leaders often have charisma. They're often likable.
And see, TV gives us this image of this greasy, obnoxious guy in a dark alley, you know, that, oh, my God, he's so evil.
You don't want to be around him.
Well, some of the biggest criminals I've ever dealt with, whether it be drugs, stolen car rings, white-collar criminals, or some really personable people, people you like being around.
And there are people that, you know, they're friends who know them, say,
No, no, I'll be a character witness.
He's a nice guy.
He couldn't do that.
He's a nice guy.
Well, the problem is people who are nice guys,
and sometimes nice women, do sometimes commit major crimes, major crimes,
where maybe it's something like medical health care fraud,
where they're defrauding people of millions of dollars,
and they're a nice guy, and they go to church,
and everybody loves them.
but they're committing this terrible crime.
So, yeah, yeah, there's a lot of good people out there doing bad things.
Could you tell me an example of a criminal that you had to sort of work on and work with,
that you sort of formed a relationship that you were like, I like this guy?
I'd have to think about that.
I can't think of anyone offhand.
I like most of the people I dealt with.
I like people.
I like people.
Same word you.
You're a comedian.
You can't be a comedian.
and be good at it if you don't like people.
That's right.
Isn't that right?
I agree.
And your audience would agree with that.
Everybody would agree, you've got to like people.
I like people, and that comes across.
I've liked a lot of people I've worked on.
And, I mean, I liked them.
And I felt sorry for them.
But it wouldn't change the way I operated or treated them or whatever.
And later on, when I could, if somebody was deserving,
I'd try to help them when I could with the prosecution or whatever,
charges, whatever.
But, yeah, I like folks.
Did you ever keep in touch with anyone after they got busted?
I'm trying to think.
Yeah.
Yeah.
One of the, gosh,
Dean Hill,
he was head of one of those D.C. Mafia car rings in northeast of Mississippi.
Big bruiser of a guy,
big bully guy.
and one of the first times I dealt with him
he drove me around and I've got the recorder going
and he said you see that car?
He said I've got eight people that work for me
I've been doing this more than five years
you tell me what you want
you see that car it'll be gone
I put it wherever you want you do
you know we drive around he's saying this and that
anyway later on
later on you know he gets busted
out when we bust out the people
who were involved in the stolen car rings
who in some of the
of those people tried to harm these two women who had helped us too. And thank goodness the
women weren't hurt badly, but they tried to harm them. Dean Hill went to prison. Dean Hill went to
prison over stolen cars, and while he was in prison, I became a federal prosecutor. And while
as a federal prosecutor, his case came up.
And I said, Dean Hill, what's this case on?
They said, well, he got released from prison.
You know, he's on parole.
But he's got, they, he had a gun on him, which is violation of parole.
Yeah, one night, he was in a nightclub and he stuck a gun in somebody's mouth
and threatened to kill him.
So now, you know, we're going to revoke him.
And we're charging him would be in a, you know, convicted felon with a firearm.
and another prosecutor was trying the case,
and he had me go with him to try the case.
And so here's Dean Hill, who had sold me stolen cars,
and then he walks into court,
and I'm sitting there as a federal prosecutor,
prosecute him on a different crime.
I think he wound up pleading guilty,
and we didn't have to go to trial on that.
Well, jump ahead, and years later,
Dean Hill got out of prison.
When he got out next, he went into methadamine,
and went into it big time.
And I think he's the one that had a picture of a bed full of cash and guns and a little baby on the bed.
Anyway, he got busted on that.
Another prosecutor was handling the case.
And I went and stood in for the prosecutor for the citizen on Dean Hill.
And when I walked in, Hill saw me and said, Charlie, Charlie, man, I'm so glad to see you.
How you doing?
I'm doing fine.
He said, good.
He said, look, man, on this, you know, my lawyer told me to go ahead and, and,
do this plead guilty and everything.
He said, you think it's all right?
If you think so, I'll do it.
I said, look, I can't invite you.
I can't give you advice like that.
The complicate of interest.
Yeah, I can't give you advice like that.
But so anyway, he goes in.
He's pleading guilty.
And he's pleading guilty.
And the judge is asking him questions.
Do you understand this?
Do you understand that?
And the judge asks me questions, has he been told this and been told that?
And at some point I say on the record,
I say, I said, judge, myself,
and Mr. Hill go way back with his crimes.
And he and I were just talking to there.
It's time for him and me to both retire.
And both of us did not long after that.
Wow.
But yeah, every now and then I'll run into, you know,
somebody that I made a case on.
Oh, fascinating.
Yeah.
What was bad is when you run into them and you're still undercover,
you know, and I wrote about it in the book
and you're out with your wife.
you know, to go to a movie, and all of a sudden, as you're walking toward the movie theater,
you're saying, keep walking to your veer all for, or you're somewhere and something happens.
Anyway, I'm sorry, I'm, I've run my mouth here.
Now, Mark, this is what you get for dragging me in here is sleepy.
I know, I know, Charlie, I know.
Shame on you.
This is my fault.
Shame on you.
Shame has been felt.
This has been wonderful.
I really appreciate the time.
All right, good, super.
Can I go sleep now?
I think you should go to sleep, and then tomorrow, if you have some energy, I would love to maybe do a part two.
All right, well, check with me, and I might crawl on hands and knees down.
Check with me, okay?
Don't worry. I'm going to pull you out of there.
Thank you so much, Charlie.
All right, thank you.
I appreciate it.
Of course, brother.
Thank you.
