Locked In with Ian Bick - I Was In PRISON With MCLOVIN | Billy Johnson
Episode Date: March 30, 2023Addicted to drugs, Billy Johnson finds himself committing crimes that lead him to spending years in Medium, Low and Minimum Security federal prisons. Towards the end of his sentence, Billy ends up spe...nding time at a federal prison camp in Wisconsin with Ian Bick. Listen to Billy's story and how he was able to survive his addiction and come out of prison a new man. Connect with Billy Johnson:https://www.facebook.com/5dollabill?mibextid=LQQJ4d Connect with Ian Bick: https://www.ianbick.com/Subscribe to our membership program on YouTube to get early access to interviews, see behind the scenes photos & more:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRvVklIft6DMelVW18M0oBw/joinPowered by Q29 Productions, LLC Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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My name is Ian Bick.
and you're tuned in to Locked in with Ian Bick.
On this week's episode, I have Billy Johnson,
aka Facebook Billy,
who spent time with me at the Oxford Prison Camp
in Oxford, Wisconsin.
Make sure you like, comment, and subscribe.
Enjoy Locked in with Ian Bick.
We all make mistakes, experience failure,
and fall down in life.
But if you decide to get back up
and use it as fuel to your fire,
you can choose to not let it define you.
You can make it through to the other,
and turn it into an opportunity.
I went from owning a popular nightclub
when I was 19 years old
to becoming a federal inmate
by the time I was 21.
Join me, Ian Bick,
as I interview people from all over the country
who have experienced the rock bottom
of the American justice system.
Billy Johnson.
What's up, buddy?
Welcome to Locked in.
Feels good.
It's great to have you here.
You are our first guest
that not only was in physical prison with me,
which is like a whole interesting story our viewers are going to love.
So many.
And you were in a federal prison camp that we haven't had anyone come on and talk about that before
and you were in a federal prison medium and low security.
That's right.
So it's going to be awesome to get that perspective.
I took the tour, man.
I took the tour.
Awesome, man.
I like to start kind of from the beginning and kind of look at the time before I met you in physical prison.
So what was your past life like?
What were you doing growing up?
Where are you from?
What's your family like?
Born in South Carolina.
Family moved to Florida when I was young.
Great, great upbringing.
Father was military, police, fire department.
Like the true All-American meat and potato's dad.
I've got an older brother.
We were close-knit family.
We never went without.
Pat's on the back and belts when we were out of line.
Just everything that really just like a perfect picture-perfect
upbringing.
I lived in Florida for a while,
really came up in Arizona.
I lived in Arizona 20 years.
That's where I was junior high,
high school, and post high school,
college, and that's kind of where everything
took the downturn.
And how to take the turn down?
Just partying.
You know, in high school,
smoked little pot, drank, smoke cigarettes.
Really had a hard time
staying focused.
I was more worried about the world
and what was going on.
And I mean,
I got through school barely.
just wanted to be a little more wild.
College did radio and that's,
you know, it was partying.
We were partying sex drugs and rock and roll three days a week
and we got paid for it, man.
Some of the hottest clubs in North Scottsdale
in the, you know, early 2000s,
which was the heyday for my generation,
for music and fun,
and it kind of went downhill from there.
So you're using drugs, you're partying,
you're having a great time.
At what point do you get addicted to these drugs?
From the rip, really.
early 20s doing cocaine, drinking.
But I was still functioning because at that point it was still a party.
It was a Friday, Saturday thing.
We'd bump and go and have a good time.
And then I found less expensive ways to continue to get high.
And it kind of took over, you know, took my toll and lost relationships with friends,
had a relationship with a girl that stood by me for three years.
You know, I just, I destroyed it.
let the drugs destroy it.
And what type of people are you like hanging out with?
Are they criminals or are they just addicts, junkies?
It just, it started as just your regular, you know, blue collar people.
And then of course, as the life progressed, it was it was addicts.
It was pretty much anybody, man.
It was getting high and, you know, really.
And where's your family in all this?
Are they trying to help you, your parents?
I wasn't living at home at the time.
You know, I'd see my folks.
And I'd lie to him about what I was doing for work.
Sometimes I'd stay there for a couple days, couch surfing.
I was in a bad relationship there for a couple years with a chick,
and it was just the same thing, just drug-filled, you know, dirty, nasty apartments,
horrible areas, cheap, you know, what that fix was always was always number one for a lot of years.
Do you think if anyone tried to jump in and help you, that would have, that would have saved you or not really?
No, no, I was so in it and I was in that life.
and it was kind of, I kind of enjoyed the life, the fast pace, the adrenaline, really is what it was.
I was, I was in that life. I was feeling like a rock star because I was, I was always insecure, you know, growing up.
I was, you know, kids are mean, and I was always picked on. My ears and my teeth had been the same size since I've been six.
So maybe it was the insecurity and I kind of found something where I fit in and I could be, I don't know, the man like the rock star guy.
But deep down inside, I just, you know, I hate it.
it. What's the craziest thing you had to do to get that fix?
Oh, wow. Stealing criminals. We do, you know, we did checks. We did credit card fraud things.
So you guys are just doing whatever to get that. Whatever it was, man. My hands were in so many things.
It's almost kind of scary when I look back on it now, like how close I really came so many times to
go away for a long time. But that eventually ends up happening. Ended up happening.
How much do you end up getting sentenced to? How much time?
got 70 months. My guidelines were 57 to 71. The judge gave me 70 months and he racked the
gavel and told me to write him a letter when I got to prison so we knew how I was doing.
Now, why did you get indicted on this? Well, we left Phoenix and my dad wanted to retire in a small
town that he was from in northern Michigan, or southern Michigan. Went out there and I tried
getting clean, working at a bar, met some people that were using and fell right back into it.
And I found out like, hey, how much are you guys paying for this? This is crazy.
I've got people I can get it cheaper and just went right back into it.
And so we had the genius idea to send meth out in the mail.
You sent meth through the mail?
We had sent little bits to people and I'd heard stories about how great it was and people
were doing these things.
So we packaged up quite a bit and had it delivered to a, it turned out you to my co-defendant's
house and they did a controlled delivery.
You know, state police kicked in the door, the whole thing.
This is your first time ever selling drugs?
No, no, no.
This was what caused my indictment.
This was 2014.
I was 34 at the time.
So this was supposed to be like your big deal.
This was the big deal in my new place.
I was going to be the guy.
Before that, it was just, you know, it was small time stuff.
And I was just living that drug-fueled life through my 20s and into my 30.
So early 30s, police kick in the door, interviewing us, take everything from us.
And the postal inspector comes in and lets everybody know that, oh, state, this is done.
The feds are picking this up.
We're going to indict these people.
let him go, the feds are going to come with an indictment.
Did you know that there was such thing as postal inspectors?
Because I had postal inspectors in my case,
and I didn't know what the fuck postal inspectors were.
The rumor mill, rather than thinking realistically,
oh, there's only one postal inspector on the East Coast,
one on the West Coast, and they never check any packages.
Well, it wasn't the postal inspectors.
Man, they were checking packages at the airport,
and the dog hit on it.
I mean, just simple everyday things that they do
that we don't think, because, you know,
we're getting away with it.
Every single day.
How much money were you supposed to make from this deal if it went according to plan?
A few grand.
So that's it.
You risked everything for a few grand.
For this particular one?
Yeah, just a few grand.
What's going through your mind at the time?
Just trying to get high.
Wow.
Trying to get high and be the man, really.
Show off a little bit for this group of people that I just met and, you know,
trying to just push my insecurities down and really.
So you're just high all the time at this point?
I, every day.
Smoking meth.
just doing it, man, just reckless.
Did you have any like near-death experiences at all?
Were you almost overdosed?
Yeah, I did actually, one point.
Before this all happened, I was in Arizona.
Bad relationship.
And I had a headache.
We were just, I was arguing, this chick and I were just arguing and arguing,
and arguing and she was a pillhead.
She loved pills.
And she had always had them in a purse.
And what I thought were Exedrin were OC60s,
and I took a few of them.
and realized what they were and spent four days in a hospital in Kingman, Arizona.
Had me an ICU, Narcan me, the whole thing, in an observed room.
I remember one time I actually woke up and the nurse was pounding on my chest telling me to breathe.
Wow.
And that wasn't a wake-up call?
You just went right, like you left the hospital and let me get some more meth.
No, well, pretty much.
My justification at the time was, oh, I don't do pills.
And that was just a mistake.
So it's cool.
Yeah.
But eventually, you know, before I got arrested, arrested, it was.
everything but we'll get into that now and the people around you they're influencing you to do
these things too everybody was getting high did i did i associated with everybody was getting high
and by this point in time i didn't have a sober friend um the people that i knew that were sober
i'd lost touch with gotten older fell off um really what it was so you get arrested you get 70 months
just about and was that through a plea deal did you go to trial what's like no we um well the
when the feds came into the house that day when we got busted,
and they let us all go because the feds were going to supersede the state indictment
because it was the state police that raided the house.
So they basically took the handcuffs off me and they said,
you're not going to jail today, but you're going to go to jail sometimes.
So don't go anywhere.
And so I jumped on Facebook and started chatting up this chick that lived in Idaho,
and I packed a bag and I went to Idaho.
You left the state.
Left the state.
You were on the run.
Gone.
Middle finger of the world.
I'm out, bro.
Like, I'm done.
This is the end of 2013.
You're never going to catch me.
I'm going to go to Idaho.
And how old are you at the time?
I'm 33.
Okay.
Yeah, 33.
And was this your first time ever arrested?
No, I had done like some, some overnights and a couple weeks stents for.
But nothing major.
Nothing major.
Doing drugs.
I didn't have insurance in a vehicle.
I get pulled over.
Get a ticket.
Wouldn't go to jail.
Or wouldn't pay for it.
And I'd end up going to jail for like failure to appear or something.
I did like 30 days one time for a bunch of failure to appear for some cities in Arizona.
So you weren't like this big time drug dealer.
It wasn't like your intent to become like this kingpin or anything like that.
And I was, and honestly, dude, I was no good at selling drugs, you know.
I got high in my own supply.
I was no good.
You're not the first drug dealer.
We've heard this.
I was no good.
And, I mean, everybody's, oh, you can sell drugs, make money.
No, bro, because as soon as you have a bag, everybody that wants to get high is there,
oh, help you out, I'll get you this.
Cool.
Like, what's a broken TV going to do me, you know?
Like, the tweakers will bring you crazy stuff to try to trade for dope, man.
It's just, it's not a good life.
But it's the drug dealers that don't do their own drugs that are making the killing and feed off
of people like you.
Exactly. They're the, I don't know, man. I wasn't good at it. I was not good at it.
You fled the state. What happens next?
Living with this chick, it doesn't work out, obviously, because I'd met her on Facebook and
those never work out. They never work out, right? So I'm back and forth and I'm between there
and Phoenix for a bit and I settle back in Phoenix because I knew everybody. I lived in Arizona for a long
time doing dope there. The same kind of thing, but it's, you know, it's a downward spiral.
And my dad calls me and says, hey, Bill, two cops showed up with a warrant for arrest with a postal inspector.
What's going on?
And my heart sank.
He didn't know you got arrested at this point.
He had no idea.
Nothing ever came back to them.
He was dealing with, you know, my mom had a lot of health issues at the time.
And he was kind of, you know, he's caught up in that.
And he was just retired.
And I wasn't standing at home much.
And I'm like, no, dad, I got no idea what's going on.
I hung up the phone.
And my heart sank.
And I remember I cried.
And I just went wide open with the usage at that point.
We were couch surfing.
We were standing nasty motels, stealing copper.
Like we were, at that point, I was too afraid to live, too scared to die.
I was in the pills.
I was in the heroin.
I was in the meth.
Whatever it took to numb that pain and just to hide that, I did it.
It's a full-blown junkie at this point.
Full-blown junkie.
Five months straight, hard, hard, hard, harder than I've ever been before.
How long did it take for the law to catch up with you and for them to catch you?
kind of a cool story actually how I got caught.
I'm actually, I'm really happy that it happened.
I was homeless strung out at a Burger King in South Phoenix with a friend of mine.
And we had a hundred bucks between us that we just borrowed from her mom.
And we're sitting there and I got a napkin and I wrote,
God, can I get some help please?
And I put it in the window at the Burger King.
And we got a cheap room.
We were like four of us in this little one bedroom like we're sleeping on the floor.
And the cops came in the next day doing a warrant sweep because it was just a nasty,
hotel and that's what they did. And they were looking for this chick who rented the room.
And I mean, I've got a warrant. I'm wanted by the feds. I'm 140 pounds. And I'm like,
take me to jail. I'm done. Let's go. And I mean, by this point, I was starting to get,
you know, starting to get sick from not having the drugs. I was, I was done, dude. I was,
I looked horrible. I keep my mugshot on my Instagram as a reminder for, for me and for anybody else out
there. So you felt relief when you got caught that day? Total relief. And it wasn't, I didn't think I was
going to go away like I did, man. I mean, I mean, I didn't. I was.
I had no idea what I had to store.
How hard was it for you to get clean from that point to going to prison?
Like, did you have any side effects those first couple weeks in prison?
I was so sick.
Anybody that does any kind of opiate go through withdrawal.
And I was, it's the worst flu you've ever had in your life.
And it lasts for weeks.
Can the prison do anything for you?
Or are you just sitting there like the dying inside?
I detoxed in Maricopa County Jail.
And if anybody has heard of Sheriff Joe or Pio,
the toughest sheriff in the nation.
His jails suck, bro.
Two meals a day.
I let him know as soon as I came into intake.
Listen, I've been doing meth.
I've been doing heroin.
I've been alcohol, the whole thing.
And they kept me in medical for 72 hours on a mat just so they could watch me.
And I'm shivering, nauseous, diarrhea, throwing up the whole thing, dry heaves.
It's horrible.
And they'll give me like some aspirin and water.
And they monitor to make sure I don't go into Caesars.
And then they send me to a pod.
And I was still sick for two weeks.
until the feds came and got me.
And then you take a plea deal right away?
No, no, no, no.
They had to extradite me.
It was almost a year before I got sent.
Just waiting in county?
Waiting, well, a few weeks in Mericopa County,
and then the feds picked me up,
and I did a week in the federal facility in Southern Arizona.
And then they put me on the plane,
and they sent me to Oklahoma for two weeks.
Oklahoma sucks.
Four times I've been through there.
Yeah, so you're on Conair.
Conair.
Chackled the whole thing,
black box, the whole deal.
Because I hadn't, I saw the judge,
and they just were going to extradite.
So I had no security level.
So they put me in the back on the inside, the whole thing.
So I didn't actually get back to face my charges for like five weeks, six weeks.
And by that time, I had, you know, put a few pounds on.
I wasn't sick.
And the reality of what I had done was starting to set in.
And what's going through your mind when that reality hits in?
First question I asked, the feds give a bail.
You know, can I get out of here for a bit?
After you just tried to run away.
I've got 11 failure to appears for traffic.
violations thinking they're going to give me a bail. And so I get back to Michigan where my case was
originally and they send me, I do the initial hearing, they take me to jail and they send me down for
the bail hearing and my parents show up. And my mom had early onset Alzheimer's as a result from a
head injury from a motorcycle accident they were in. And by this time she had like no idea who I was.
She wasn't talking much. And so seeing my parents there in court when I'm facing these charges,
is it crushed me, man.
And at that point, it was just like, God, like, who have I become?
What did I do?
And you just, as you know, from being locked up, like, you look back on your actions.
And as an addict, you slowly devolve into this person that you never thought you would be.
Because you lose all track at time, days, weeks, months, they all run together.
And so you, what seems like a few months is really just, it's years.
And you don't realize how far you've come until you're actually able to be taken out of that situation and look at, oh shit, like, this is real, you know?
I wonder if your parents were almost like relieved in a sense, though, when they saw you because you're looking healthier, you know, you're off the drugs.
I knew they were.
And it killed me, man.
Like I was always really close with my parents.
We rode motorcycles.
We camped.
We fished.
family vacations. Like we did all the stuff together. And then through using, I kind of got away,
but I would still always make time. I still always check on mom, make sure dad was all right.
A lot of sentimentality because they were going through some financial time. So anytime I had extra
cash for my hustle, I'd always break them off. Like, oh, you know, I got to pick up a good
remodeling, you know, bathroom remodeling job. Dad, here's a couple hundred bucks. And in reality,
I was doing, you know, credit card fraud and all kinds of other stuff. No. And we don't really think
of it at the time, but sometimes going to prison removes us from negative situations that,
you know, could bring us down an even worse path. And we think like in the moment, wow,
it's prison. This is terrible. It can't get any worse, but we don't really think sometimes it could
get worse. And that kind of saves us and puts us on a path that we would, in a positive way that
we would never expect before. Absolutely, man. It saved my life, bro. And it wasn't, it wasn't till weeks later
that I was sitting in the four-man cell, which was horrible.
I mean, four men in a, literally you're locked in the cell.
Four men, you've got a TV and a shower at a toilet in there with a sheet hung up.
So anytime anybody's shit and they're pissing or fart and you're smelling it, it's like right there.
It's kind of thinking back on that.
And, you know, one phone call a week to my parents to, you know, because that's all we could afford.
I mean, they were hurting for cash.
I wasn't, you know, can't ask them for money.
Yeah, absolutely.
Now you get sentenced.
Do you think you would have got last time had you not ran and went on the run?
No.
Did they use that against you?
No.
With the feds, they've got sentencing guidelines.
And I had had, like you were talked about in one of your other shows, you know, they use, you know, even uncharged things against you.
The feds don't lose, man.
I mean, it's the United States government.
When they want you, they're going to win.
So they had brought up, like, the misdemeanor driving on suspended license.
I had a misdemeanor shoplifting charge.
So they'd stacked all those.
So my guidelines were 57 to 71 months.
And I'm like, all right, cool.
Maybe he'll get the low end.
Maybe he'll give me the 60s.
You know, never had a felony charge before.
I've stayed out of trouble like all 10 months that I've been in jail.
And no, that didn't.
He gave me the max.
He gave me one month shy of the max.
And he said, send me a letter.
Send me a letter.
Did you ever send him a letter?
No, no, no.
He had a great, that judge had a great nickname.
He said he would retire when he said he would retire when he.
gave out like a million man years of incarceration.
He'd been on the bench like 20 years.
He was just a hardcore old school judge, man.
Yeah.
What prison do you go to after you're sentenced?
They send me to Gilmer, West Virginia.
And you go to a low of medium?
I go to start out of a medium.
Why was it a medium that you got sent to?
Grand Prairie, who, which is like the headquarters for the BOP where they do all the
classification and paperwork, they didn't do their job.
They didn't verify my own.
education, none of that stuff. So when you have, you know, education and job experience and things
like that, those help you when they classify you for less risk, more risk, however they do it. So they
had me with medium points. They didn't verify that the fact that I graduated high school, that I had
college education, my ties to the community, anything like that. So they sent me to a medium,
a step-down yard, guys that had been doing, had done 20 years and still had 20 years left to go.
And here I am just a young, skinny, I call myself young, my 30s.
I got hair down to my shoulders so I hadn't cut it in two years.
Completely lost.
Completely lost.
What's a medium federal security prison like for this white kid in his early 30s
that's, you know, just coming off of being a junkie?
What's that like for you?
Scary.
Scary as shit, man.
Scary as fucking day in my life, really.
Conair, three stops, drop us at an airport on the bus for six hours.
shackled the whole thing. It's cold. It's November. We didn't get to a unit to like two
o'clock in the morning. And they put me, it's very political, very, very, very political. And they put me
in a cell with people that weren't on the same kind of time as me. And so instantly, like,
you're up the next day, you got to go see your counselor. You got to change cells. Got to find
your people. Got to get your JNC. So they know what you're in for. Make sure you're not a sex offender
or anything like that. And then your people come up, you're like, hey, you know who you run with,
who you want to sit with. Great. Yada, yada. Here's some toilet paper.
here's a pair of shoes. We need to see your paperwork. You got 10 days to get the paperwork in.
I'll show you how to write it. Here's mine. Make sure you're good. And it's, well, okay,
what do you need to see? Well, we need to get your PSI in. Well, you can't. We'll let you
send that in. Oh, there's a way to get it. And so they push you. And then people push up on you
to see if you're tough. So if your people go to war with somebody else, they want to make sure
that you're there. And who are your people in prison?
At that point, I was, I didn't know who to sit with.
I didn't know what I wanted to do.
And I told them, I'm like, listen to you.
Like, I'm not on racist time.
I'm not on gang time.
I'm not on drug time.
I'm in for a small time drug thing.
They screwed up my points.
I'll beat a low in six months.
And so I just sat with the white guys.
And how did you survive, like those six months to a year to get to the low?
I stayed to myself.
I worked out in my cell.
I'd hit the yard, do some jog.
But I didn't I had a few friends that we cook with, but I didn't I didn't click up with anybody because there were
There were people there that were like me that
Didn't want to get involved in any of the hustles. They didn't want to gamble. They didn't want to do drugs
They didn't want to they didn't want to do anything
They just wanted to do their time and go and in the older heads the older guys that had had they were doing time that ran the yard
They knew that
And they just you know they left me alone I didn't get any fights didn't do anything stupid I just I did my time
Now if you go into
these higher security prisons in the federal system with that mindset of staying out of the way,
is that acceptable? Or do you have to be involved with something and guys have to, you know,
check you and get you involved with certain things? Or are they just going to leave you alone?
Well, it really depends on the, I guess, on the unit. The unit that I was in was pretty chill.
A lot of the older heads were in that unit. And they, you know, they left me alone. And my,
unit job was I was the recycling orderly.
So when they would call for hot trash, I'd take the soda cans out of the recycling bag
and take it outside and drop it off.
And I could type and I was educated and they saw that.
So if people needed something type, legal paperwork typed up or a couple guys had business
plans.
They were wanting to do businesses when they got out.
I'd type it for them.
I go to library.
They gave me the, we had typewriters and you had to buy the ribbon and buy the correction
tape.
And so they'd have all that.
And I'd spend a day in the library typing up these things for these guys.
And it was cool because, I mean,
unfortunately, a lot of the people in the prison system,
they're not,
they don't have the education.
Is that higher if the security level,
they don't have educations.
A lot of them are getting GEDs.
I had one kid I would help them, you know, study for GED.
And they saw me kind of giving back.
But I wasn't,
I wasn't gambling.
I wasn't doing drugs.
But it's all there.
I mean, people coming up, you know,
you want to get high,
you want this, you want that.
No, I'm cool, man.
What's a sleeping situation like in a medium prison?
We had three men cells.
Three men, oh.
Which was,
they had passed a law the feds did because of like the size of the cell they were only allowed to have two people
but they still had three people in there so we had two bunks on one side a bottom top bunk on the other and then lockers
and they were eight by you know ten by tens and you had a toilet right there and they would lock you in at nine o'clock at night and they'd pop the doors at five thirty for breakfast
and they'd lock you in for the hour wow and then on weekends or fog count they'd lock you in at ten for an hour in the morning
now they had um it wasn't called like prison game
on the East Coast, it's like prison cars.
Right.
Is that what it was?
Yeah, it was your car.
You know who your car with?
You wanted to...
Can you explain what that is?
Your car is just your people.
If you're on gang time, that would be your car.
If you're on Michigan time, Ohio time, New Jersey time, whatever it was.
That was your car.
That was your people that you rode with.
That's who you'd sit with.
That's who you'd work out with.
If they had beef with another car, you know, that's who had your back and that's who's back you had.
But you were just staying out of the way.
not getting involved with them.
No, I didn't want to because I knew I was scared, man.
Honestly, and I'll put it that out there.
I was scared.
I didn't want to mess around with anybody.
I didn't want to get stuck because you hear the prison stories and you get there.
Like, it's real.
Like, I saw some nasty fights, dude.
What's the craziest fight you saw?
Two dudes actually got into a sick fist fight in the middle of the unit at count time at night
over a stamp, one stamp.
And it was two tiers.
and the cop was locking down at the top
was literally making the rounds
locking the people in the cells
and they went at it
and he looked down and he pressed the button
and pressed the deuce button on his radio
and yelled everybody to lock down and just kind of kept
doing like he didn't even want to get in the middle of it
and they went at it for a few minutes
and you know the cops came in maced everybody
so the whole unit smelled like mace and
everybody was coughing and hacking for a week
but I mean I've seen
I've seen some good ones dude
Are you dabbling with any drugs one?
No I am
I am completely 100% clean.
So you've been clean since the day you got arrested?
March 4th, 2014.
That is crazy.
You see a lot of addicts that go to prison because the prison system has so many drugs in it
that they're just right back to doing it.
It's easier to get stuff in prison than it is on the street.
Was it just a mental thing for you that I know I can get it in prison,
but I don't want to be that person anymore?
I was done.
By the time I got arrested, I was ready to be done.
I wanted my life back, dude.
Do you think you needed to get that?
much time in prison to change as a person?
I want to say no, but I really don't know.
I knew I needed help.
And that's the one of the issues with the federal justice system is sentencing disparities.
Because if my case would have stayed a state case, I would have gone to county jail.
They would have sent me, you know, would have sent me to drug court.
I would have probably done like six, nine months in county jail, got a trustee job,
a couple months probation, I would have been home.
But the guidelines with the weight, it was literally, it was an ounce of meth, which was short, by the way.
It wasn't even a full ounce.
It was short.
Five years, mandatory minimum because of the size versus a state case where it would have been six months, nine months, something like that.
But maybe you never know if you got a state case.
You could be back out there.
And that's the, you know, that's the backside of it is you don't know.
So did I need to do some time?
Did I need help?
Absolutely.
I did. Did I need to spend five years in federal prison? I don't know. How long did it take you to get to a low
security prison after the medium? It was nine months. You get reclassified nine months. And then they sent me
back through Oklahoma for two weeks to Lexington, Kentucky, Medical Center Lexington for the drug program for
RDAP. What's the drug program? Residential drug program. Everybody in the drug program stays in the same
housing unit.
It's, you've got the prison, like the institution rules, and then you've got the
RDAP rules, which are, I don't want to say stricter, but it's a lot more confined.
And there's a lot of stigma.
People are like, oh, the RDAP program, it's a snitch program.
It's where I was, I can't count for all of them, but where I was, it was different, man.
It was small.
There were 100 people in the program.
We had three phases.
A lot of self-reflection.
It taught me, it kind of opened my eyes.
about things. I mean, you'd see guys that have been down for
20, 25 years for
drugs and murder and they're telling their story at the end of
their thing, just breaking down, just
bawling, talking about
their kids, how they had shot their
friend on accident,
just a lot of real shit that was
talked about, and it was kind of a safe space,
but they monitored it, and if you were out of line,
they'd pull you down to what they called the honesty
room, which was where all the
RDAP counselors, the dappers,
and you'd have like
the mentors of the program there,
and they'd talk to you about it, they'd ask you about it.
What you want to do, they'd make you do,
like what they called them learning experiences.
So you had to actually write out like what you did,
what happened, the consequences,
what you've learned by it.
So it was, that was a nine-month program.
It was, I mean, it was intense.
Now, it's very strict, though, too.
Like, you can't get in any type of trouble.
You can't do no trouble at all.
And no, no side hustles.
Like, I mean, in prison, everybody, everybody has a side hustle.
In ARDAP, if you could call it side hustling,
you're done.
You're not, you know, iron,
iron in somebody's clothing for two or three bucks a week.
You're not, you know, if you could caught cleaning rooms or doing your own laundry,
but you weren't even supposed to break bread with anybody else.
Like we couldn't cook up with our people.
Now, what are the perks of the ARDAP program that makes guys want to follow these rules so strictly?
You get a year off your sentence and six months halfway house.
Which essentially takes off a year and a half of your sentence.
You're getting out early.
So if you got three years, you can get out and maybe a year with good time or anything like that.
And also where I was at Lexington, my unit,
It was clean, dude.
Like, it was a lot of these older, Lexington's 100 years old, man.
It was a state hospital, federal medical center.
It was run by the public health service.
There were a lot of, like, drug experiments.
It's got a deep, dark history.
And it's disgusting, man.
I mean, you got 1,200 people there.
It had a, it was a medical center.
They had a, one of the wings had its own pharmacy.
You'd see guys, you know, doing the Thorazine shuffle, people dying of cancer, an F4.
I mean, it was a disgusting place, but my unit was super clean.
Beds were always made, showers were clean.
So, I mean, it was...
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I had a one-man room with a door on it.
That's perfect.
I mean, it was a great way to, really was a great way to do time.
So you finish the program and then you get sent to a prison camp after this?
Yep. They put me to camp.
Which camp was this?
Oxford, with you.
Oxford, Wisconsin.
So I go back through Oklahoma for the fourth time.
And Oklahoma Transfer Station is.
Yeah, you got to give people an explanation of how bad Oklahoma.
You never went through Oklahoma.
I did to get to Wisconsin.
I spent Christmas and New Year's there.
And when I say that was the worst experience in my life,
and I did six months in the shoe.
So for me to say that Oklahoma City was the worst,
and you have all those cartel guys there.
You have, it was so bad.
Like it was terrible.
When you get to Conair,
when they load you up for transport,
when you're leaving your institution,
they call you out,
early, they go through R&D, they line you up, they belly chain, shackles. If you're higher
security, they put that black box on you. And if nobody knows the black boxes, picture
handcuffs and you've got the chain between the handcuffs. They put a hard, plastic-y metal box
in between those handcuffs. So you can't move them back and forth. There's no dexterity there.
You can't do anything. So you're stuck. And if you're really high security, they shackle you
in so your handcuffs, like you're stuck like one above another. So you can't move at all.
they put you in the bus, they take you to the airport,
they call you out on the tarmac,
where you're going off the bus, and they line you up,
and they're pulling prisoners off this old, beat-up, super-rattie airplane,
and they put you on, and it's got federal marshals,
they're lined up around the plane with guns,
and you're side-by-side, it's a completely full plane,
and you could go one-stop, you could go directly to Oklahoma,
you could go make four stops on your way there,
and they put you back on another bus,
people going to different institutions.
But when you're going to Oklahoma,
you get on the plane,
they fly you,
and it lands,
and you taxi you to the other side of this runway,
and it pulls up to the jail.
And that's it.
You're off the jail,
you're off the airplane,
they pull you out single file,
they unchackle you,
they unhankuff you,
and they make the announcements.
Crazy announcements.
If you're part of this gang,
this gang, this gang,
if you're affiliated with this,
come to the front of the plane
because there's like,
active gang wars going on like real shit smash on site these people will stab you up if they see you
from another gang um and people are calling each other out i was on a going to oklahoma the last time
and uh some dudes on the plane and he sees a sex offender from one of his other yards and he's
screaming out i got paperwork on this piece of shit he's a chomo he's a toucher just calling him out
i mean they're trying to fight you on the plane the whole thing and it's just designed to make you feel
uncomfortable like you get off that plane it's like a term the terminal is the prison cell the terminal is
the prison cell and they have you
in the basement or whatever, you get stripped out and we were in yellow jumpsuits and you're,
you're waiting there for hours because they have to process like a hundred or 200 guys.
Yeah, a couple hundred people and they've got three planes that come in.
I remember we got in at like nine o'clock.
I didn't make it to the unit until two or three a.m.
The last time I got there, we were late and we had to do the four o'clock count.
BOP has a four o'clock count every single day, seven days a week, 365 days a year.
and we're on the jetway.
They can't, the marshals can't turn us over to the prison system yet because they've got to do the count.
So we're on the jetway.
So we've been on this airplane, which they give you like one quick bathroom break with no door on it.
So if you got a shit, you're out of luck.
There's turbulence.
You're bouncing around with your ass hanging out.
And so we're on 200 inmates.
We're on this jetway.
And we've got to piss.
Like we've got to use a bathroom.
And they won't let us in the institution.
And they can only take like four to time to unshackle you when the count clears, which is at 5 o'clock.
And then they heard 150 people in these cells with one toilet.
People are shitting and pissing everywhere.
It's disgusting.
It is literally the worst environment.
And these cells are big concrete brick buildings with a stainless steel toilet.
And you have to shit in front of everyone.
Shit, piss.
And everybody knows what stale urine smells like.
Dude, multiply that for 20 years.
Now eventually you do make it to the camp.
Make it to the camp.
Probably one of the best prison camps in the prison system.
besides like Otisville.
Right.
You make it to the camp and you do your time, that little bit of time,
and then I come along.
What's your first impression of me when you meet me at the prison camp?
McLovin.
Now, I had that name before I even got there,
but you were the first person at the camp to call me Mcloven
before I said what my name was.
Because you look like it, man.
Here's this nerdy white kid.
Total suspect, man.
Total suspect.
But you knew sex offenders couldn't get to a camp.
Sex offenders couldn't get to a camp.
Well, before I got to the camp when I did my last two weeks in Oklahoma,
they sent me to MCC Chicago.
Terrible, too.
I hated that place.
To get to Oxford, you have to go from Oklahoma to MCC,
and then from there you take the bus to there.
Met a buddy mine, actually, in Oklahoma, too, that we wrote out with my first prison tattoo
on the 23rd floor MCC by a guy who's doing 27 years right now for smashing grabs.
Yeah, get to the camp.
settle in totally different time than what I'm used to, man.
There's no moves.
It's open movement.
You can do what you want.
What's a dorm setting like at the camp?
How many inmates are there?
When I get there, there's 80.
Camp's built for 200.
There's 80 people there.
Four man rooms with only two people there.
I've got two jobs.
I got a great job in the kitchen.
I'm the camp driver.
So I can, you know, I take the keys to the minivan at 2 o'clock in the afternoon.
And inmates that are working at facilities a mile away,
I got to pick them up
or if one of the
one of the administrators
or the cop has to come up
from the main institution
they call me
if it's raining or snowing
I gotta take them around
there's dogs there's a dog program
we're playing softball
we're playing volleyball it's crazy
now the camp's so small
that when a new inmate comes
it's always like a big deal
what was like the talk about me
like not knowing my name
but just like that new person
that was coming on the campus
just wondering who this new kid is
and where I came from
where I started going to prison
is when a new person hit the yard, man, you had the greeters would go out, would talk to them,
check their paperwork, do their whole thing. Well, camps are primarily white color criminals,
short time guys, bank fraud, wire fraud, things like that. And so for me just to, I mean,
they drop me off the bus. Like, here, throw that stuff in the dumpster and walk in. We're like,
we're not, I mean, we're not handcuffed. We're not shackled on the bus. It's crazy. Yeah, everyone else
that's going in the medium shackled, but at the camp here not. I was shocked. It was, it was nice to not
I'm like, I'm standing outside, bro.
Like, I'm out actually like, I'm in the parking lot of the camp without a guard around.
Now, when I'm introduced to you at the prison camp, it was like the first couple days.
Right.
You're introduced to me as Facebook Billy.
I want to know why you got the prison nickname Facebook Billy.
All right.
Not one of my, not one of my finer moments in prison.
Contraband is everywhere.
And at the camps, it's wide open.
And I had this genius idea to get a phone.
Now with Ardap, I got a year off.
Stipulations being if you got a 100 series shot or a higher offense shot, you'd lose that year.
Well, I've got a phone.
And I'm flicking up with people.
Like, I had just lost my mom a few months prior to that.
I wasn't able to go to the funeral.
I'm dealing with my own things.
Not making excuses, but I was in a pity pot, man.
I couldn't say goodbye to the woman that gave birth to me and raised me.
And that hit pretty hard.
And I'm sending pictures with people and I'm on social media,
and I take a picture of myself in my bunk.
and I send it to some friends.
I've got this genius idea.
I'll just post it as my profile picture.
I mean, nobody knows.
Fuck, I'm in prison, dude.
What's going on?
And the very next day, I'm working in the kitchen,
and I made an awesome pasta salad.
And the guard wanted one, so I gave him one.
And as I'm walking to my room,
they page Billy Johnson.
They never use my first name.
And whenever you get page to the office,
it's never a good sign.
Out of nowhere.
It was a Friday.
And I walked back.
and he turns the monitor, his computer monitor on,
and there's that picture of me.
He's like, where's your phone?
I'm like, what the...
Do you give them the phone?
Oh, no.
He closes the door, gets on the phone,
comes back in, and he gets on his office phone,
and he opens the door,
he's like, where's his phone at?
I'm like, I don't know what you're talking about.
So they go in and they wake up my celly,
and they tear my entire room apart.
I had this phone a week.
A week.
How much did you pay for the phone?
$500.
Totally destroyed, so pissed off.
And of course, at the camp,
everybody's poking.
fun. Everybody's talking shit.
Got rid of the phone. I get a 100
series shot. Guilty
because, I mean, there's no denying it. It's a picture of me.
Did they take you the shoe or you were still out?
No, I stayed on the unit. They wrote the shot and then they
rewrote it. And then I went to DHO and I tried to fight it.
And I lost that year because I got that 100 series shot.
Now, normally when you get a 100 series shot, you lose 33 days a good time.
Commissory restriction. I lost a year. Plus,
two months halfway hustle, 14 extra months I spent for making one stupid, stupid choice.
Just being reckless.
People get careless.
They get complacent.
And we see it all the time.
And there are people just being stupid.
But I got that name actually from one of the guards because I was a camp driver.
I didn't lose my job, nothing like that.
But he actually paged Facebook Johnson to the office.
And at that point, it stuck.
Like they wrote a song about me and they hung out on the bulletin board.
And the kitchen cops were talking shit about me.
You were a camp legend, man.
I know. It was crazy.
All right. Let's get into it. Contraband at the camp. What's that like? What's coming in and now the camp? And what's like the price range?
Pretty much everything and anything you want. Price depends on who's going to hustle it in for you.
I was working out every day. Because I mean, I went into prison. I was 145 pounds, man. I was sucked up scrawny. I think I could do like seven pushups.
And when I met you, you're all jacked up.
I was getting it in, you know, but I mean, that's all we did.
We'd get up.
We'd work out.
We'd take a nap.
We'd run three miles.
You know, we'd be doing burpees.
It was just stupid.
Like, what I'm going to work out?
And it was like, oh, you're never going to do it on the street.
Well, you know, it's cool.
I just passed the time.
But so I would get, I had protein powder.
We were getting stuff from the kitchen.
I think I still actually owe you two bucks for eggs.
I got some macros I'll give you.
Yeah, I remember I was just, I didn't need the money,
but I was just like so, like, it was,
fun. Like I was just loading up onions, peppers. And they didn't care. You know, I mean,
it's, I mean, we were so low security at that point. We didn't have fences. We had dogs.
We had vehicles. I got yelled at actually one time we had a big 4th of July, our wreck party,
because they do, um, rec events just as, you know, just for things to do was, you know,
recreation sponsored. And we had five on five volleyball tournaments. We had a sand volleyball
court there. And I was the camp driver on the weekends and I got the key from the guard.
And I'm like, hey, you know, in case they page me, I need the van key because we're going to be
out here playing volleyball. I pulled the van over by the volleyball and we turned the music on. And we
got busted for that. I got yelled at because the officer of the day came by to do her weekend walk and
walked right up on us with music blaring. There's like 30 of us playing volleyball.
I got yelled out for that. Everybody talks should be about that too, all the cops.
What's your prison hustle at the camp? I was in the kitchen. So when I first started, I
you know, onions, bell peppers, eggs, things like that, so people could cook because we were trying to, I mean, you know, throw that in a rice bowl. And that was it. And for the most part, the, you know, the kitchen cops were cool with it. You know, if you want to take a couple eggs out, you know, you could. And there was kind of a give and take there with the officers because if the medium went on lockdown, we would have to go back in the institution. We would have to make lockdown bags. So we'd work, you know, 14 hours a day, which we had to do. There were two lockdown.
downstairs when I was there. I went for one and they're like, all right, guys, you know,
skeleton crew, we've got to go down there and make lockdown bags. And what they mean by
lockdown bags is there's 1,500 inmates behind the fence in the medium. When you're on
lockdown, you're only given one hot meal every three days and a shower every three days. So you're
making bologna sandwiches for 1,500 people times three per day. So you're 15 hours a day.
You're on a slicer. You're throwing two pieces of bread, two pieces of cheese, two pieces of bologna,
in these paper bags so the entire institution downstairs can eat.
So the guards were cooler with us and they gave us a little more leeway.
And that's kind of the relationship that we had had with a lot of them to where they would
look the other way.
Now we had some assholes that were just there just to ruin our day.
They would come in, want to tear up your cell.
They'd want to tear up your room.
They'd want to get in your space.
Really just a flex.
Now on the topic of prison kitchen guard.
there was a point in time when we were both at the camp that word got out that a prison kitchen
officer was pretty much sexually harassing me and inappropriately touching me.
I'd love to put him on blast right now too.
What happened?
What was the rumors going around the camp?
Like what was going through everyone's mind?
And he would wake you up extra early.
He was the only one that would try to like be your friend, make sure, like everybody else
he would shake down.
He was like, here you go.
You know, here's an extra, you know, you want to take this.
You're good.
And he was a super cop too when we first.
He was super cop.
Shine the flashlight in your eyes at 5 o'clock in the morning for count just to wake you up.
Like he was an asshole.
And then the investigation popped.
And you were like, this is, you know, this is bullshit.
This is happening.
He's way out of line, way out of pocket.
And they sent him downstairs.
And then you left and they brought him back up.
I actually think he was, because you left the day before me.
And I think he was back up like that day.
And people used to see him stare.
at me in the chowland like it was obvious that he was a weirdo bro super weird and he looked the part of
being a weirdo too like that man if he was an inmate he would have been labeled as a sex offender like
from from the get go and that's cool man like i mean if that's his if that's his uh if that's his preference
you know if he wants to if that's the life he's going to live cool but you don't cross that line man
to put people like that in that situation that's just you know it's none of my business who you want
to go home with as long as they're not a kid male female whatever but what's the craziest
thing you saw at the prison camp during your time there?
Just people running and hustling.
What do you mean by running?
Running for bags.
And describe that process.
Running for contraband.
People taking off after count, middle of the day, running into the woods,
getting things coming back.
And it happens at every camp.
I had a partner of mine that one of the other camps made a dummy,
which it happens all the time because I see in the news like,
oh, you know, inmates walked away from this camp,
but they made a dummy.
And he had it in his bunk because he snuck out to spend the night with this girl in the hotel.
And the cops found it was a dummy at like two in the morning.
Like people would do it.
They'd take off.
I never did.
But they'd run out to get a bag.
They'd go see their girl.
Come back.
I saw that.
You'd see it in the middle of the day.
Pretty crazy stuff.
We had a guy sneak out and they called an early count.
They caught it on the camera.
They called an early count.
He tried to sneak in and shoved a whole bunch of food through one of the windows.
And they caught him.
But we had all this food floating around.
our wings. So we had, I mean, we got to get rid of the evidence, right? So we're smashing,
we're smashing pizza and fried chicken. I mean, everybody's eating good because I mean,
you got to get rid of it. So I remember the first week I got there, like I'm going down the
hall and there was a bag. It's always a big ordeal when a bag was coming into the camp,
because everyone's looking out. Everyone's getting tipped with fast food and stuff. And I walk past
a cell and because at the camp, it's okay to really be nosy because no one's like going to
shank someone or something. It's not okay, but it's not okay, but it happens. You've got the
older guys that are just looking around. And I look in and every. And every. And
Everyone's just eating McDonald's.
And I was like, what the fuck's going on here?
But then eventually it was a custom thing.
We were eating deep dish pizza.
We were eating Chinese.
I think we smuggled in fucking sushi one time.
Like, it was just crazy.
Oh, yeah.
No, we had, I actually had a cop.
Give me a piece of shrimp.
That's awesome.
I was walking by one of the cool cops.
If anybody was there at the camp, they know exactly who I'm talking about.
He had shrimp, like a, like a cocktail shrimp platter.
And I'd been down for almost five years.
I'm like, is that shrimp?
He's like, oh, go away.
And as I go to Turr, he throws in like the little fridgeery.
He's like, Johnson and I turn around, he gives me one.
He's like, don't say anything.
I'm like, oh, I got the shrimp, dude.
We had culvers.
People were drinking, smoking, whatever.
I actually, there was a, at the camp, there was another inmate who, he and I had a similar build.
And he was a smoker.
And I had gotten up one morning, and, like, I had just got up, and I was walking to the Chowhawk.
because a lot of times,
I was like when they had, you know, breakfast pastries
always be, you know, left over sitting there
you can kind of walk in the chow hall
and grab a pastry.
And I walked by and the cop goes,
hey, what were you doing down there behind the tree?
I'm like, what the fuck are you talking about?
Like, I just rolled out of bed.
Well, I can run the camera back and see.
I'm like, literally like my bed is still hot, bro, run the camera back.
And, I mean, they were doing stuff like that.
Now, eventually, like the prison or like every six months
would conduct these prison-wide shaked shakedowns.
Right.
What's that process? What's it look like?
Whenever they do training and get recertification, because the training center was back there,
and we all worked in facilities, and we mowed the grass out there.
So the whole place is usually empty five months a year, or five out of six months.
And then they'd have training out there where they're jumping through hoops and, you know,
recertifying everybody.
And once that was done, we knew that there was going to be a campwide, you know,
shakedown.
So everybody would get rid of their stuff.
We'd be all set.
And they'd come in.
They'd come in by like the van loads and you'd have the dental people.
You'd have like the education staff from downstairs that you never saw.
But all of a sudden they had a belt on and they were ready to go.
And they would tear us up and they'd come into your room.
They'd pat you down.
They'd put everybody in like the gym or the visit hall, whatever it was.
And they would tear up your house like crazy, ripping sheets off of beds.
Sometimes they wouldn't find anything.
Sometimes they'd find things.
Sometimes you'd have stuff in your locker that you'd,
shouldn't have, but they really, you know, some of them didn't care. They'd be like, whatever,
these are campers, let them fucking be, you know? And they were hauling out trash bags full of
contraband. Left and right. Now, at the higher security prisons, they make alcohol, like hooch,
whatnot. I'm sure you saw that all the time. But at the camp, inmates aren't doing that.
No. What are they drinking at the camp? Everything. And where are they getting it from?
People dropping off the bags, man. And it was just like full blown bottles of alcohol.
Wide open. Wide open. And it was, camps were in,
set for white collar criminals people that were going to be you know older people um
Ponzi scheme guys that were you know out shooting at me um Bernie Madoff type of characters
people that stole money you know where they could sit they could do their time and where we were
our camp was had like defense line from what I read like defense line would come up to the track
Batchie ball was there they'd never call you until 10 o'clock count where we were it was you know
when the sun went down, they'd call us in.
And so it would just, you had a mix of people and it was wide open.
I remember when you'd do like the random breathalizers and guys would, like if they got
a bottle in or stuff, like say it was a holiday night and guys, they got the bottle of
vodka and guys would get called in.
Some guys would get popped and they would go to the shoe for that.
Absolutely.
I mean, it was always on a weekend and you'd know, you know, and it was, they'd call count
and they'd be gone to see as soon as they clear count, somebody would take off and they'd come
back at night and you'd see it all the time.
But I mean, everybody was, everybody was hustling too.
It was with the camp, we had more freedom.
We had the library was there.
We didn't need to check out books.
We could take what we wanted.
And everybody had a thing, whether they were cooking like you.
I was, I made granola bars, Billy bars.
And we were, I mean, we would get so bored sometimes at the camp.
I mean, you could only exercise so much.
You can only play so much volleyball.
You can only watch so much TV.
We had four wings.
And I lived on wing three.
and I called it Third Street.
It was the end of Third Street.
It was a Colossack.
And I forget who I was talking to, but we're just like, yeah, you know,
we did the Third Street Merchants Association.
We were like the Homeowners Association, right?
And everybody on the wing had a hustle.
I made bars.
My selling made pillows.
Somebody had a store.
Somebody had a ticket.
My neighbor had Chip City, which you just stored out just chips.
Shout out Chip City.
There was a blackjack table in one of the rooms.
that we took for some money a few times.
I mean, we just find things just to pass our time.
I mean, idle hands are the devil's workshop,
and we would just be stupid and silly
just to pass a time and have fun, man.
I mean, we made the best of it.
I mean, it sucked.
I lost my mom.
I couldn't go to her funeral.
I lost a handful of people, like close friends that died.
And there's nothing you can do.
Like, my dad had a heart attack when I was in prison.
There's nothing I could do.
I think that's the worst feeling of being in prison.
And not only like you suffer through that like,
FOMO, the fear of missing out when you see your friends,
especially when you have access to cell phones and stuff
and you could see what's going on in the world.
And then when incidents like what you're talking about happen,
that shit just fucks you up.
Because you're confined there.
You can't do anything.
You can't just like race home.
Like you're feeling that pain within you and you're just stuck.
Totally.
And I mean,
I didn't have that phone for like the first year.
And I was trying to play by the rules.
I was trying to the thing.
But I just,
I fell back into it.
And it bit me in the ass.
And I'm glad it did too because it was, you know, sometimes you got to get that check,
man.
You got to get checked.
But I didn't,
I didn't have a lot of money, man.
My job paid $35 a month.
My dad would sometimes send me $50 a month if he had it.
He was on a fixed income, you know, Social Security, the VA stuff, taking care of mom.
She was in hospice care.
So he would go feed her breakfast and lunch every day.
They were married 53 years for my mom passed.
But they knew each other.
six weeks of the day, bro.
Like, they had a love.
And so I'm dependent.
We had email, but it was like a buck a minute.
It was 50 cents a minute or something.
You had for your true links you had to use.
So I would call home like every couple days.
Well, my dad, who was, you know, 79 when he passed away.
So it was like he was mid-70s, not the most technologically guy, you know, advanced
guy.
I think he had a flip phone up until like the last few years I was in.
He referred to text messaging as a piece of shit.
So like me trying to explain to him how to email me in prison was just way
out of line.
So, I mean, if something were to happen, you mean, you wouldn't know.
I mean, the only time they'd call him to the prison, why did somebody die?
No, all right, cool, bye, and they'd hang up.
Like, dad's in the hospital, you know, kick rocks.
You know, unless somebody's dead, they're not going to let you know.
You've got to find out on your own.
Were there any celebrities you were in the prison camp with?
At the camp and at the low.
I went, I was at Lexington with Struggle, Struggle Jennings, rapper, super good dude.
We'd chat it a little bit.
he's doing amazing things too
and then at the camp
well Georgie P, George Poppidopoulos
was my neighbor for two weeks
Do you ever get to talk to him?
Yeah, I was there when he came in
because he was my neighbor
and we were actually
his cellies, he and I were cooking up
I talked to him a little bit
but he, I mean he did 14 days
he was hanging out in the library
talking to one of the other guys and
I remember when he was in the library
we were all trying to snap pictures
of him with cell phones
sell them to TMZ
Yeah, I mean, somebody kept trying to steal his ID and I think sell his ID to TMZ.
Wow, I didn't realize that.
And then there was like always news vans outside when he first got there.
They pulled us in, they pulled everybody in the gym and they're like, listen, we all know who's going to be here.
It's been all over the news.
Don't go out front.
And it was kind of funny.
When you hit a prison yard or a compound, you go through ANO, admissions and orientation.
So they walk you through.
They give you your clothes.
You go through medical.
and it usually takes time.
And when you're at the camp, because we're like the afterthought,
it would take a regular camper two weeks to go through A&O.
When he hit that unit, dude, his A&O was done in a half a day
because they knew he had the hotline.
And they wanted to make sure he was, I mean, they put him with,
in a back corner cell with two dudes.
One was a head orderly.
And they just, I mean, they made sure like he was set.
It's super nice.
He's like, oh yeah, everybody here is so great.
they're shaking my hand.
I'm like,
cops don't shake your hand,
bro.
Like,
that's just weird.
When the wardens do it,
like the AW would come in and do it.
I never,
dude,
the only time we saw the AW
was when we had the food strike.
And he was there like twice or three times that week
for what George Popinopoulos came in.
Shaking his hand the whole thing.
Like he came up and yelled at.
No,
I think we had like the captain came up
when we had the food strike
when they took all of our stuff away for that lady being stupid.
Yeah,
I think these prisons just,
they don't want the extra heat on them.
And there's so much pressure on them.
He had the hotline.
He worked for the president.
Like you make one phone call there, everybody's done.
I mean, imagine if something happened to him there.
So there's just like a whole different level.
Oh, yeah.
And they definitely put thought under that when they're putting a prisoner like that in there.
Oh, yeah.
Now, over the course of your five years, you deal with a lot of prison staff,
a lot of counselors, case managers, dealing with them with the RDAT program,
when you're finally ready to go home, everything like that.
What's your view on them?
Are they helpful?
Are they not helpful?
I've had some really, really cool ones and some that were just worthless, didn't want to do anything.
Union protected.
They just, they didn't care.
Our DAP had seemed like the DAP counselors were there.
I mean, they were all psychologists, psychiatrists.
There was one there that was super, super cool.
The lady that was actually, she was my primary.
She's, you know, she was a sweet lady.
She passed away.
A lot of rumors surrounding that.
But it just, I mean, some were cool, man.
Some of the cops were really cool.
Even the cops hated the sex offenders no matter where you were.
When I got on the bus, the medium, the lieutenant was there.
He's like, listen, man, it's a good institution.
It's a new institution.
Child molesters are protected.
If you're a sex offender, sorry.
But, you know, we got to be nice to you, but we don't like you.
So be careful.
You're not to check in right away because they're going to come for you.
Yeah, you would have guards that would report who's a sex offender and who's a snitch.
And that was another thing too.
Like if people stuck to themselves, they didn't want to click up, they're like, oh, you know he's suspect.
He's got to have bad paperwork.
There were guards there that would tell you.
They were like, no, dude, he's fine.
Or, you know, he's no good.
And I saw a couple of them at the medium that didn't want to go.
And they'd be dragged out of the cells.
They're like, listen, you've got to go now or they're going to rip your fucking face off.
It's like there's going to be nothing left of you.
I mean, these are dudes that, you know, like kill cops for fun.
And they're coming after you.
So you really need to go.
It's in your best interest, you know?
It's scary, dude.
So out of this whole prison experience, you finally make it through, you do pretty much the five years, right?
A month shy of five, yeah.
A month shy of five.
And if you hadn't been on Facebook, you would have gone out earlier.
But I don't think I would have been in the situation that I'm in now if that wouldn't happen.
So I don't want to say it's a blessing in disguise.
So you get out, and I think we did get out the same day four years ago in January.
You got out the day before me.
It wasn't because, but we both, we've stayed in touch and every year you message me saying happy.
Happy free day.
Yeah, happy free day.
And you're one of the few guys from the camp I've stayed like in touch with regularly.
We have each other on Facebook.
Facebook Billy is back to Facebook.
What did you start doing when you got out?
Like how did you cement yourself and knowing that you did not want to go back into drugs or crime or what did you do?
Oh, I hit the, had to go to the halfway house in Grand Rapids.
I'd never done Grand Rapids.
Learning to move again and a whole new thing.
I'm going to major commercial kitchen.
stacking boxes of granola bar factory, riding three buses each way.
It's fucking January.
It's cold.
It's horrible.
They put me on home confinement.
I get a factory job and I get promoted.
And doing that and I'm kind of loving it.
People are giving me chances.
Like nobody gave me anything, dude.
Like my dad picked me up and took me to the halfway house and he's like, this is it, Bill.
Like here's $37.
This is it.
And I did it, man.
I walked in.
I was still on the GPS tether when I got the job in the factory.
I'm like, I just want to change.
dude put me out there. I'm going to work six days a week because I've got nothing.
And one of my buddy calls me and said, hey, I want to buy a hot sauce company.
And I'm like, cool. I mean, let's, fuck, let's buy a hot sauce company. And so he gets some things
together. We get some people. He buys a hot sauce company. It's a part-time gig, Grand Traverse
sauce company, Traverse City, Michigan. And it's a part-time thing. I'm working five days a week
in this office. I'm driving three and a half hours north to make hot sauce with my best friend.
Barely making any money.
It's pre-COVID.
January of, you know, December 2019, January 2020, the whole thing.
COVID hits.
So we're struggling, we're struggling, we're struggling.
They started opening up Northern Michigan, doing some farm markets.
We're gaining some traction.
We're going to make this full time.
So I quit my factory job and we found a house in Traverse City.
We became roommates.
Really good friend of mine.
And we grew.
And we grew and we grew.
And it was 12, 14, 15 hour days.
he's in the kitchen. I'm running around selling sauce. We're driving all over Northern
Michigan to farmers markets, knocking on doors, doing tastings, product demos, and we start
meeting some cool people to bring on the team. And it was two people three years ago. And now we
have active markets going in three states. I'm working in Florida, which is my fourth state right now.
I've got 17 people on the payroll. I have an amazing sales team. My production staff is great.
My management staff is awesome.
And we're doing it, man.
And you've created this amazing life for yourself that you never had before.
Never had before.
This was me.
This was my best friend.
This was, we were done with it.
I needed to do something, man.
Like, this is my, it's my comeback story.
Like, this is all I've got.
It's my child.
And taking it from a tasting to people in front of a store,
hey, you want to try some hot sauce, to worship in bottles.
to all 50 states.
We're gifting military people in foreign countries.
We're on UK YouTube hot sauce channels.
But you know what the craziest thing about this is,
is that you would not be here in this position
with this company,
this successful company,
if you were not a drug addict,
if you never went to prison.
You know,
like everything in your life brought you to this point.
It is crazy to think about it like that.
Like, I've done a lot of shit things in my life.
And I'm still not perfect, man.
I still struggle every day to try to be better than I was yesterday.
But yeah, if I hadn't gone down the road, I was in and put through the hard times, I wouldn't be here.
And it's, you know, I see it with you too, man, because it's a grind.
And anybody that's, anybody that's fallen on hard times, anybody that's made the mistakes that's gone to prison that's fucked up, it can be done.
do. Nobody owes you anything, but a chance.
Fill out that application. Be completely honest with them.
Yeah, I'm a felon. I did whatever. Put me on the floor. Let me do this. I was a stack
in boxes at a granola bar factory. It was 16 hours a day I was out of the halfway house. Snow to my knees.
I had no idea where Grand Rapids was. Southern Michigan seasons change. There's no AC in the factory floor.
I'm working six days a week building box trucks and step vans, sweating, GPS tether.
If you want it, you get it, dude.
But even if they're not giving you the chance, go out and create it.
Exactly.
You know, like I got lucky and got a great, you know, corporate job with Whole Foods when I got out.
And I grinded through that.
And when I realized that wasn't for me, it's not like I could go say, hey, I need, you know,
someone to invest in this idea I have.
I had to go out and create it on my own.
I took a risk, you know, I hit the pavement.
And life has just came full circle for me.
I went from promoting concerts and producing these shows.
shows with the biggest names in the country or in the world. And now I'm sitting here producing this
podcast, producing the cooking show. And it's just like everything in my life brought me to this point.
I went to prison to meet all these connections and to get that experience that is so unique to
my position because of my age, because of my background. And now here I am doing this. And that's just like,
it's so crazy to think about. It's easy to, you know, come from a wealthy family and to be handed a business or, you know,
get into a good college.
It's a lot harder if you start from literally negative.
You know,
if you're coming out of prison,
you have the whole world stacked against you.
And to be able to take that and turn it into something,
not a lot of people are doing that.
I mean,
I had some people take some chances on me,
you know,
take some risks.
And that's all I asked them.
It was like,
listen,
just put me to work one day.
Let me show you what I could do.
And that was what was told to me when I was talking to,
to one of my supervisors.
I'm like, listen, you know, I can do this.
I can do these like actions, bro.
Words or nothing.
Show me.
Do it.
So I did it.
And people would see that.
They're like, okay, well, maybe, you know, we could do this.
And I mean, I, in this whole time of me from start from my early 20s till literally about a year, year and a half ago, two years ago when my dad passed away,
I didn't have a lot of contact with any of my family because they saw what had happened.
They saw the progression.
And so the hard work now, the grinding, trying to be the best person that I can be,
they're accepting me back.
And Grant Cardone actually said it best.
He's like, if people aren't good, don't have them around.
Because he had a rough life too.
I don't know if you follow Grant Cardone.
A little bit.
But there was a time in his life where he even said he's like, my family shouldn't have been in my life.
Because he was because of what he was doing, the life he was living the drugs, the whole thing.
and look at him now.
Like, it's the grind, dude.
If you want it, you can be whoever you want to be.
You can do whatever you want to do.
You just have to do it.
Now, throughout this process of you building, you know,
this successful new life for you,
you experienced some loss, your father passed away.
Lose my father yet two years after I got out.
Do you feel like you were able to rebuild that connection with him
and end things on a positive note?
I really do.
my dad and I were
we got close man we were so different
he was so stern and strict growing up but I didn't respect the discipline
and when I got out now he got to see me
you know just grow this and just be a better person
and we'd I mean we would just take drives to eat
we're going to church together
we had a lot of fun and then when I moved to Traverse City
he came up and we'd do dinner
went to the casino one night
and sat on these big stupid overstuffed couches
and we're placing football bets.
And dad's like, oh, I like that team.
Pick that one.
He's not bet.
He's not looking at lines or anything.
And he hits on like a half-time over-bett.
He's like, I told you what I was doing.
I mean, just little things like that that we did, just drives and food.
I used to see you post pictures all the time.
And I was like so happy that you got to have that relationship.
We had so much fun.
Do you think it made him happy to see that you went from literally this bottom barrel junkie to
becoming successful? Absolutely, man. It was, you know, we had my older brother and I and him together
and we all went to church for a Christmas service and we both got sick and dad was in the hospital
and then they needed to put him on the ventilator because he just wasn't, he was, you know,
78 years old at the time, almost 79, a lot of issues. And I found out later after he had passed
when I had his phone, like he was texting, you know, the assistant pastor at the church, like,
you know, Billy knows what he's doing. He was. He was.
ready to be with my mom, man. I mean, they were, we're strong in our faith, and he was ready to be
with mom. He saw me turn my life around. And he was done. He did his job to see that I made the
right choice, and he was there for me, and it was his time to go and just let me take the reins.
That's something, you know, like, I think about every day, because my father's getting older.
He's turning 78, 79 this year. And, like, I'm so determined, like, that's something that drives me,
because I want him to see, you know, that I've been able to turn this.
around because he's proud of me now but I want him to see like the full success like I want this to go
full circle everyone gets paid back I could pay him back for all the money and times he saved my
ass you know put him on a beach somewhere let him relax so like that's a that's like such a like
a drive for me do you feel guilt that you lost that year year in a few months of getting out early
that could have been more time with him absolutely I do man I mean I mean
I kick myself in the aster just being the person I was and losing all the time that I spent with my family.
Because, I mean, it can happen in a moment's notice.
I mean, I've gotten phone calls from friends that I've known that have passed.
A really good friend of mine had a brain aneurism.
Done.
Mid-40s.
Lover to death, miss her every day.
I mean, it can happen so fast.
So you just don't want to take it for granted.
You don't want to put yourself in a position to where you don't have that choice to be with those people that you love.
because it can go quickly, man.
Now I want to close out with this last question for you, Billy.
What is your message to the person that's struggling with addiction,
to the person that is at the rock bottom of their life
and has no hope and doesn't see a future for them?
What do you say to that person?
If you haven't done it, don't start.
And if you want help, there is a way to get better.
If you need 30 seconds of encouragement, you'd slide into my personal DM, I'll be a cheerleader for you.
I'll let you know it's amazing.
You can do it.
Anybody can get clean.
They just have to want it.
But if you haven't done it, don't start doing it because it will destroy your life in a way that you have never thought of.
Or could you ever, ever imagine?
In any way.
Being in that life, being a drug addict, being homeless, stealing, nobody wants to be that person.
Just don't do it, man.
Billy, thanks for coming on Lockton, man.
Pleasure to see you after all these years.
It's been fun.
You know, thanks for keeping in touch, man, throughout all this.
And I'm so excited to see you grow.
I'm excited to try out that hot sauce.
Bring it.
And yeah, man, just keep being you, Billy.
keep being that energetic, you know, person that I met back at the camp and you're just awesome,
bro.
Perfect.
Good, good times, brother.
Thank you.
