Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast - Greed Destroyed His Life | 45 Years for a Bank Robbery
Episode Date: April 1, 2025Sean Marshall shares his evolution into becoming a bank robber.Main website:emarshallsmith.wixsite.com/iamseanFacebook: Sean MarshallIG: artist_seanjmarshallMain website:emarshallsmith.wixsite.com/iam...seanFacebook: Sean MarshallIG: artist_seanjmarshallFollow me on all socials!Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/insidetruecrime/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@mattcoxtruecrimeDo you want to be a guest? Fill out the form https://forms.gle/5H7FnhvMHKtUnq7k7Send me an email here: insidetruecrime@gmail.comDo you want a custom "con man" painting to shown up at your doorstep every month? Subscribe to my Patreon: https: //www.patreon.com/insidetruecrimeDo you want a custom painting done by me? Check out my Etsy Store: https://www.etsy.com/shop/coxpopartListen to my True Crime Podcasts anywhere: https://anchor.fm/mattcox Check out my true crime books! Shark in the Housing Pool: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0851KBYCFBent: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BV4GC7TMIt's Insanity: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08KFYXKK8Devil Exposed: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08TH1WT5GDevil Exposed (The Abridgment): https://www.amazon.com/dp/1070682438The Program: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0858W4G3KBailout: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/bailout-matthew-cox/1142275402Dude, Where's My Hand-Grenade?: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BXNFHBDF/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1678623676&sr=1-1Checkout my disturbingly twisted satiric novel!Stranger Danger: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BSWQP3WXIf you would like to support me directly, I accept donations here:Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/MattCox69Cashapp: $coxcon69
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I would pray to God before these robberies and be like, God, just let me get away with this robbery.
Like, I'm done after this.
I promise, this is it.
And at this time, mind you, I'm all in the news.
They have no idea who I am.
They're talking about the Get Down and Count Bandit.
The feds had dubbed me that after I started robbing the banks.
And I'm wearing different disguises now.
It started off where I'm fully masked up and gloved up
to now I'm putting on, gluing on fake beards,
wearing sunglasses and these crazy disguises.
I've experienced various highs in my life.
But when you do something like that,
the tear, exhilaration,
whatever we're going to label that rush is incomparable.
Bro, it doesn't matter how much you change or reform.
I can't forget how to do crime.
Like, that shit is ingrained in me.
I know how to rob.
I know how to sell dope.
I know how to get fast money.
That is in me.
So for the rest of my existence,
no matter how much I change and become a better human being,
when hard times hit,
I, like a drug addict, am constantly,
having to tell myself like, nah, don't take that drink.
Don't go down that path because all it takes is for that one slit.
And then you're back in it, bro.
So they're trying to get me to serve 30 years in prison before I'm even eligible to be a free man.
And the judge said that during the session.
He was like, your choice today is a matter of choosing between dying in prison or getting
out to your grandchildren and living out your golden years. My daughter had been born. She's an
infant. And my mom had brought my daughter up to see me. And in solitary confinement, there's no
physical contact. You have these visiting booths. There's a plexiglass window separating you.
Phones on other side of the window to where you can communicate with your loved ones. And I remember
my mom coming into that booth. I'm shackled to this desk. And I remember my mom placing my daughter
down on this desk and allowing her to try to call towards me. And she finally comes across that
window, bro, and starts patting on it and trying to get to me. And in that moment, I immediately,
I mean, instantaneously had some major paradigm shifts.
Hey, this is Matt Cox. And I am here with Sean Marshall. Sean Marshall received clemency. He is a
former robber. I appreciate you guys watching. Check out the interview. Whether it's true or not,
and more often than not, I would say you can, there's typically things that led to in your childhood
that maybe helped contribute to, you know, however you ended up, you know, incarcerated. And sometimes
not. You know, in my case, I had, you know, raised upper middle class like I was just a bad seed. But in
some people's instances like you i hear their stories and it's like wow bro like you you
have a chance yeah um so i don't know what yours is but can we start there can we start with like
where were you born your parents that whole thing yeah absolutely so it all began in colorado
springs colorado i was born october 7th 1984 um my mom and biological father my biological father
as a Creole brother from New York.
He and my mom had a quick little fling
there in the beginning.
And once my mom found out she was pregnant,
you know, went to him.
And at that time, he was involved in a marriage.
They were having an affair.
And my dad more or less threatened her
and was like, look,
If you have this kid, I'm going to pursue parental rights, the whole nine.
Was he just trying to scare?
More or less tried to scare off.
And what ultimately ended up happening is my dad left her a little check.
I think it was like 10 bucks or something, something minimal.
And then bounce, just vanish.
So I never knew my biological pops.
was gone out the gate. But my mom, amazing woman, former model, clothing designer from
Omaha, Nebraska, pretty large family, most of which is out of Omaha. And yeah, she made her
way out to Colorado, doing some marketing and some other, other ventures, and had me.
In Call Out of Springs, it's a nice place to raise a family.
I mean, it's a military town.
A lot of backgrounds and cultures exist out there.
Because of that, you have people from all parts of the country and abroad living out there and being stationed out there.
So growing up, you know, it was a good mixture of kids that I was able to hang out with.
I was exposed to a lot of different.
cultures. And I had a decent foundation. My mom, middle working class, and she loved me. She adored me.
I was her world. And in the beginning, as I've explained, I've told my story so many different times,
but I always say, like, in the beginning, it was just me and her, and it was perfect.
And that was up until I was about two years old.
And that's when my stepdad came into the picture.
And stepdad, he was much a little bit older than my mom.
A successful businessman, an entrepreneur.
He ran a business out there, a barbecue restaurant, prominent figure in the community,
well-established
and as he was on his rise
that's when he crossed paths with my mom
and I'm sure in the beginning
he seemed like a good enough guy
I mean my earliest memories of him
he was decent enough I can remember the like
little family gatherings
and all the
normal family stuff
that people engage in
you know those earliest years of my life uh and we moved out to black force with him he had this
pretty large house out there so it was cool as a kid being able to explore some of my earliest earliest
memories are you know living out in this ranch with horses and being able to venture out into the
forest by myself this is still in colorado this is in colorado like the outskirts of the springs okay
Yeah. And yeah, I just remember being able to have a blast because I had a very vivid, wild imagination. So as an only kid, I had to get lost to my own world, do me. And it was out in those little chorus, wandering around, catching snakes, doing the little boys do. That's where I was entertaining myself. But things were good until they weren't. You know,
those first couple of years that my mom was with my stepdad, everything seemed normal enough,
everything seemed good, the love seemed to be there. And I remember this one night in particular
that I always point to. And I always point to it because I now know in retrospect the impact
that that had on me internally and how it ultimately led to a lot of my rebellion later on in life.
I didn't realize how
impactful it was in the moment, but
there was a particular night that
my parents had gotten into a pretty
heated argument, and I don't
remember
why they were arguing. I'm pretty sure
it had something to do with some infidelity and cheating.
My step-pops was known to be a womanizer.
He had a lot of kids.
Papa was a rolling stone.
He was all over the place.
He's country.
Country boy from Kentucky, smooth talker back then.
I said he used to have his way with the women.
But I remember my mom and him getting into a pretty heated argument one night.
And I had never really witnessed this up until that point.
You know, they had always been pretty congenial with one another.
But this night, not the case.
And I just remember a whole bunch of screaming, hollering and shouting.
and my mom and dad
busting into my bedroom door
and my stepdad
throwing her on top of the bed
and I just remember
her trying to protect me from him
and shield me from him
while he was ranting and raving
and doing his thing with her
shortly thereafter.
I remember my mom and I
like rushing out of the house
and us just trying to get out of there
as quickly as possible.
Us leaving for a short
time and coming back just to see my mom's stuff like strewn everywhere. My stepdad
throwing all her stuff out of the house. And that night was ingrained in my mind. Like,
I didn't know it again in the moment, but there was an internal shift, like regarding my views,
my stepdad. How old were you? I was probably five, five.
six-ish maybe but that night i was like yeah fuck this dude and that was just ingrained in my
heart and mine mom wasn't about to put up with the room she got her stuff we left we went back
to the city we got us a little modest place and called the springs and uh again it was just
me and her and i thought it would remain that way for a while shit i thought she was done
with my stepdad, like, after that, I was like, cool.
He's out the picture.
We can live our lives peacefully.
So we moved back to the city, go back to doing what we do.
And it was good, bro.
I said, my passion as a kid was baseball, playing sports.
So I was, you know, heavily involved in sports and beginning to play competitively
or start to get into little leagues.
And that was a lot of my focus back then.
And then, of course, with my mom and her standards,
like she had high expectations of me
and definitely pushed me to go above and beyond
and everything that I did, school included.
Like, she just had zero tolerance for bullshit.
She wanted the best for me, and she was like, look,
especially being a black man in America,
you need to push yourself and strive
so that you can have the life that you want to make for yourself.
She was like, it's going to start now.
So she demanded that I get good grades, A's and B's, nothing less than that.
If I'm going to see, I'm getting punished.
So you were living with your mom.
You felt like she was done with your stepfather.
Yeah, thought he was done with him.
Thought she was done with them.
I said life went back to, quote, unquote, normal.
And there's not too much that I can remember.
remember from that time. Of course, I have good memories of my mom and I just sharing experiences
such as her, like teaching me how to ride a bike by pushing me down a hill, mind you. But it was just
normal, normal beginning. There's not much that I can point to, you know, that's so dramatic
or nothing that really stands out in my mind besides the love that I received from my mom.
and something that I've cherished all my life
and something that I truly cherished then.
But didn't last long.
You know, we were there in the city doing our thing for a while
and somehow some way, my stepdad weasled his way back into the picture.
And whatever, there wasn't a lot of resistance from me in that moment.
Again, so many of these things that had happened internally,
I wasn't even aware of.
So when he did come back in the picture, sure,
I resented him a little bit
and probably judged him for how he had treated my mom that night.
But I know we eventually went back to being a family
and doing all the things, the traveling and what have you,
all the little family outings and gatherings.
But, you know, that continued on for some time.
But again, I must point back to what I was saying earlier.
My focus back then was sports.
One of my dreams as a child was to make it to the major leagues.
So everything that I breathe talked about dreamt of was baseball.
I played shortstop, third base.
And every day, whether at school or after school, I'm just, you could find me in some type of sandlot at the ball.
ballpark honing those skills. I was trying to be the best that I could be. And so much of my focus
shifted from anything outside of that. Like if my parents, whatever they had going on, really
didn't concern me. I was in my own little world and focused on this dream of mine. And,
you know, for a while, it was just like normal upbringing, normal childhood, you know, sleep over.
some of the destructive activities.
I remember having an affinity for fire.
I was a little boy that loved to play with fire.
That was me.
But I was always out exploring, building tree houses,
having the sleepovers with my friends
and us just going on these little adventures,
whatever that might consist of.
I mean, we might have been running around the streets,
riding bikes.
It didn't matter, bro.
We were always fantasizing,
playing doing what
normal kids did in that era
definitely weren't sitting in the house all day.
Right.
So for years, you know,
that was the case
until I started getting into
like middle school.
And when I did get to
middle school,
the things that changed
was kind of
the environments that I was
now,
allowed to explore? Because early on, my parents tried to keep a good eye on me and sheltered me
to whatever extent. But as I started approaching middle school and getting into those years,
my stepdad would allow me to go to work with him. And he was downtown in a pretty seedy area,
his restaurant. And most of the times when I would accompany him to work, like I was exposed to
the most, bro, because I'd be left to my own devices when I'd go to work with him. Like, he'd go,
he was a workaholic so when he was at work he was doing his thing zoned out so i'd go with him
and i would like going with him because the reins were let loose like my mom if i would ever
hang with her that would never be the case like she would definitely keep a close on me but with him
shit i'm about to be in the back by the sewers playing with the vagrants that were around
the restaurant doing the most.
And I remember even a lot of his employees back then,
where they were like ex-cons
and had dark past themselves
and involved in all the wrong activities.
And just hanging around the pit,
as it was called, the barbecue pit.
We would just call it the pit.
I would hear all types of crazy stories
or be exposed to smoking and drinking and porn, stuff like that.
And that's where a lot of the seeds starting getting planted early on.
And I also remember one of the first times where I started getting exposed to, like, the criminal.
aspects of life and there was this dilapidated house that neighbored this restaurant and this family
you could tell dire straits like they did not have a lot struggling in every sense of the word
but this little kid that was about my age i think we were probably around i don't know what
10ish or so whatever around that age 11
I remember being at the pit hanging out with this kid one day.
We're in the back of the restaurant closer to his house.
And he had been gone for a little while riding around on his bike.
And I remember him coming back, like zooming back on his bike and skid into a stop before me.
And I remember in his hands seeing this brand new wireless Sega controller.
and I knew that was beyond his means.
I'm like, how the fuck did this kid afford that?
I'm like, that's crazy.
And he's showing it off to me like, look what I just got.
And I'm like, damn, that's crazy.
I was like, where'd you get that from?
He was like, bro, I just stole it.
I was like, you stole it.
What the fuck are you talking about?
He was like, well, they have this game store up the street.
He was like, I just go in there and take what I want.
And I was like, you take what you want?
Like, what are you talking about?
He was like, bro, it's easy.
He was like, I just go in there, whether I want a video game, he was like a controller.
It doesn't matter.
I just go in there and get whatever I need.
And I'm like, it's just that easy.
You walk in and do that?
He was like, yeah, he was like, I can get you one.
You want me to get you a controller?
Bro, and in this moment, I'm scared to death.
I'm like, I feel like I'm being.
You don't quite know what conspiracy is?
Yeah, yeah, but I'm feeling it.
I'm feeling guilty.
like my moral compass is freaking out right now like what is this kid talking about like we're
conspiring to rob this place like what is happening but i just remember in this moment not
really knowing how to answer that question because i have been raised properly so i know good
and well i should be telling this kid like fuck no i don't want the controller but there's a
another side of me that's like hell yeah like i want that let me get this because i can't afford it
and i know my parents would never buy that like they had no problem providing for
me. But one thing my mom used to tell me a lot when I was younger, she was like, look,
all I have to do is put a roof over your head and clothing. That doesn't mean that I need to
be getting you name, brand, and designer, this down and the other. If you want that,
you're going to have to get a job, little boy. And that's, you know, one of the reasons why
early on in life, I started hustling and mowing lawns and shoveling snow and all the,
all the things just to make money. Because if I wanted the New Jordans or whatever, I was
going to have to work for that. My parents definitely instilled that in me at the early age,
like the value of a dollar and how to earn it. So when this kid, you know, gives me this choice,
I'm like, man, I don't know. But I'm like, you know what? Fuck it. What's the harm that can come
with it? Clearly this kid does it all the time. So I tell him, I'm like, yeah, hell yeah,
go get that. So he pedals off. And about 10 minutes later, skids to
stop in front of me with this controller. He's like, here, bro, just gives it to me.
Now I'm freaking out because I'm like, okay, I got to come up with the next part of the plan.
And that's how do I get this home without my mom noticing? Like, fuck my stepdad. He's not even that
observant. But my mom, she would definitely notice that. So I'm like, how am I going to get this home?
Keep this on the wraps. So I don't even really come up with a plan. I'm like, well, guess I'll just deal with it when I
cross that bridge get home unpackage it i get to playing my little i think NBA jam or whatever
i was planning back then on Sega having a blast and uh i remember sure enough my mom coming in
later that night as i'm playing and very observant quickly called me out and was like boy where'd
you get that controller at and i was like oh my friend let me borrow it she was like oh okay well
you need to make sure your friend gets his
controller back immediately. I'm like, cool, whatever. So next day, end up getting rid of it. I think
I threw it away in the trash can or whatnot. But I know after that experience, another little
seed was planted. I was like, now you know it's possible. You've seen the fruits. Yeah.
of this forbidden tree into that sinful life.
Yeah, you're getting involved.
Yeah, I'm like, shit, okay.
But I don't act on that immediately.
This is something that's just planted in my mind,
just sits in there, and I don't even really reflect on it too much.
But I do remember that that stayed with me for quite some time.
So life continued on, bro.
You know, the situation when my parents was kind of back and forth,
if they would have their little riffs, they would separate, then get back together, and this
became a cycle.
You know, we would have these good periods, and then they would have this huge blow-up,
and then go their way, and then somehow end up back together.
And we were constantly moving, you know, not too much, but we moved, you know, here and
there.
They had their houses, or my dad would, my stepdad would have his house, my mom, she would have
hers. And it just became a thing. But again, I constantly reiterate so much of that I didn't feel
affected me at that time because I was hyper focused on sports in baseball. So as life
continued on, bro, that was all I was engaged in doing my thing. But towards the middle
of middle school pride, those latter parts of middle school role, I started again being more and more
immersed in these very toxic environments. And, you know, the two that I can point to in particular
is that environment around the pit because every day I was meeting characters. As a kid, I shouldn't
have been exposed to. I mean... That's the perfect name, by the way, the pit. It just sounds like something
Something nefarious is going on to the pit.
The pit, yeah, bro, but it was, I'm on the real.
Like, every day I was down there, I definitely was in the pit, exposed to all the crud, bro.
Because I said there were vagrants down there, drug addicts.
It was horrible.
And I'm just soaking up all this bullshit that they had to feed me.
Because they're telling me stories.
I'm entertained by it.
I was having a good time. I didn't see anything wrong with it. So I'm just absorbing that. And then the other environment that I started to kind of become immersed in was that of my stepbrothers. Now, as I was saying earlier, my stepdad had, I think, seven, six, seven children, four boys, three girls. Boys, a mess.
a mess. I think there was only one of them that was on a decent track. And they were much older than me, mind you. So at this time, 12 years old or whatever, these guys were like 20 plus years, my senior. And a couple of them in particular had some pretty extreme drug habits and struggled with alcoholism. And the drug habits were crack addictions, bro. So it was definitely extreme. And,
You know, for those earliest parts of my life, my mom and stepdad had tried their best to shelter me even from that part of the family because they knew what was inevitable.
They knew once I started getting around my stepbrothers that I would likely start emulating them and absorbing a whole bunch of their philosophies and trying to be like them.
And sure enough, you know, when my brothers migrated out here from Kentucky and other parts of the country,
You know, one in particular that I really revered, you know, it was all bad, bro.
You know, he would stay at my stepdad's house every once in a while, and we would constantly kick it, but it was, you know, hanging out with him where I really started to see, like, those darker sides of the addictions, really get exposed to, like, pornography and all this other crazy.
crazy shit. Because that was his babysitter for me. I remember many times when he would come over and be babysitting me. And as my parents were out doing their thing and as he'd lock himself in the bathroom and get it high, I'm sitting there knocking on the door, bugging him. Like, what are you doing? Come out and play with me. And he's like, brother, get the fuck away from the door or slide me a porn magazine or something. I'd be like, oh, he'd be like, yeah, go entertain yourself, man. Fuck out of here.
As a kid, you know, I started hanging around my stepbrother a little bit more.
And, you know, he had done a little bit of time here and there.
And I'm hearing these stories, hearing about this life of crime that he's glorifying.
And, you know, all the hearing about all the fruits of their criminal lives.
And, you know, they never tell you the real of that existence.
It's always the highlights.
Yeah, it sounds exciting.
Yeah, that sounds very exciting. They're only telling you about the thrills, the highs, the girls, the money, all of the instant gratification. And it sounds so alluring. And he seemed cool in my eyes. Like my brothers, my stepbrothers, they didn't seem to be losers to me. Even though they had these dark paths and were struggling with their addictions, I never saw them as being less than. And if,
was only in their darkest moments when I would even question who they were. And when I say
those dark moments, there were plenty of times when my stepbrother would go on these alcohol
dinges and get very violent. Like he was a very violent drunk. And there were many of times
where he would show up to the house or to my to the pit and these drunken rages and wanting to fight
my stepdad and they would get into these physical altercations. I mean,
I mean, to the point where they're drawing blood from each other and fighting in the parking lot of the restaurant and patrons are looking out like, what the fuck is going on?
Police are showing up and taking my brother to the detox unit and or arresting him altogether.
And I used to witness this all the time.
You just get accustomed to it, though.
It just becomes a part of your existence.
You become kind of numb to it.
It's funny because, you know, you see guys like that.
And then two weeks later, you're talking to him and there's just the coolest fucking guy ever.
And then a month later, they're just this despicable human being.
And it's, it's, if you don't have that problem, it's so hard to rectify in your mind.
You know, it just doesn't, especially since other people can be alcoholics or addicts of some kind.
And they manage it somehow.
yeah like but this guy's a lunatic oh no he would turn and it's crazy because just like you said it was day and night when he was sober this is he was the most lovable uh charismatic compassionate compassionate human being on earth and i used to love spending time around him but the moment he got that liquor in him bro and especially the crack once he was mixing the two because he would just sit there and smoke crack all day
And then start down in bottles of gin like it was water.
And, yeah, once that got in him, it was over.
I mean, there were times you tried to fight me.
He would turn on anyone in an instant.
And, yeah, that became like a cycle.
But again, this was someone that I revered
and someone that I definitely looked up to him
and the other stepbrothers of mine
and even the cousins of mine that I.
I was starting to come around and all of them, you know, a couple in particular, they're
deeply immersed in the gang lifestyle.
They're walking down that dark path.
And I'm just taking these notes, these subtle cues and notes from these guys, because this
is a very formative period of my life.
I mean, middle school, going into high school, that's when a lot of kids are forming
their identity and trying to figure out who they are.
So all these elements that I'm being exposed to, and especially when it comes to the black men in my sphere, these were my role models.
I mean, my stepdad wasn't anyone that I aspired to be like.
I was actually trying to be the exact opposite of him.
So outside of him, the only other black men that were in my sphere were drug addicts, drug dealers, gangsters, these guys that are thoroughly immersed in the streets.
and uh this is what i'm starting to think is the path normal right huh say it again i was going to say
the path to follow yeah the path to follow yeah it's so normal that's that's that's what's right
before my eyes and the only thing i'm really seen so i'm like this must be the way and with
everybody's expectations of me as a kid i mean i used to hear you know you're square or you're not
hard enough or whatever and you start taking that stuff to heart like yeah you're right maybe i
should dumb it down a little bit or maybe i should sack my pants a little bit or you know change my
lingo and walk and talk especially to be cool because that's all most kids are concerned about at that age
is how they're perceived and at school i just wanted to be the cool guy and for the most part i was
always was a popular kid but I was always fine to be even more popular especially with the gals
so as I'm seeing all those are the guys that are dating the that are dating all the hot chicks
even though they're they're losers and jerkoffs and they're not going to go anywhere but still
that's what women and especially in high school are attracted to yeah and that that right
there and just being immersed in these different circles is what
shifted so many of my ideas on who I should be and who I was. You know, and I started losing
that vision of becoming a major league baseball player. That starts taking the back seat. And you start,
I started assuming these other little identities and personas and wanting to be the cool guy,
the bad boy that the girls were drawn to. And little by little, you just start adopting
these little nuanced behaviors
and playing the role.
You start playing the role.
It starts as an act and eventually becomes you.
But at that time, it was just an act for me
because everything that I was portraying
was the farthest thing from who I really was.
I wasn't hard.
I wasn't violent, but I started to portray that.
Like, you know, I'm starting to get into fist fights at school
just to prove how tough I am to the girls
and to my peers.
But eventually you are that tough guy
because you're getting into fights all the time
and you are that hard guy, yeah.
Exactly, exactly.
So that is what started to begin to happen,
you know, towards these latter parts of middle school
and suddenly, you know, sports and academics
are not a priority in my life.
It's now impressing girls.
It's now my identity in being that cool kid.
and because of that, you know, the behaviors begin to change.
But what's interesting is I'd live a double life.
Well, I was very good at being what my parents thought I should be in front of them,
but behind closed doors and when I was with my friends,
I was a completely different character, something the exact opposite of what my mom raised me to be.
And for a while, I was able to hide all that.
Now, granted, some of the behaviors would come out because when I'm getting suspended from school for fighting and things of the sort, like, of course, my parents are called and they're like, well, what the fuck is up with you? You know what I'm saying? What are you doing? But I'm sure they probably are writing it off as normal teenage behavior. Like, you know, he's a boy going into high school. Like, this is to be expected. So I don't think they gave it too much thought until about my freshman year. Because that's the way.
that's when things started to get a little bit out of hand, because by now I'm like
experimenting with weed and smoking a lot with my friends, skipping school, beginning to get
into way more fights, and parents are getting called a little bit more and more here and there,
and it got to the point where they felt like they had to intervene. They're like, okay,
something's happening. We don't know what it is, but it's probably the circles that he's
involved in. And so not only did they try to distance me from some of these family members of
mine that they knew were bad examples, but I remember them trying to pull me out of public
school there for a minute and put me in private school for a year and stayed in private school
for about a year, played the role, did whatever I needed to do to appease my parents and make
them feel like I had changed or that I was walking this straight path and then went right back
to the bullshit but
about that time bro
it was kind of too late
um how old were you
so this is freshman year of high school
when things are getting kind of crazy
right like my circle of friends are
nothing but misfits gangsters
and losers of course at the time
you said it earlier like you don't see that then
the cool kids all the cool kids
that existed back then
or what later became
losers like
they're the nobodies in the world
and it's all these nerds
that we used to make fun
of that are now running these Fortune 500
companies and
living the grand life
you know because they put in all the work
necessary to get there right
but at the time we're like man
I'm trying to be cool fuck all that
getting straight A's and studying and working
hard like oh that's
not appealing. So yeah, to answer your question, it's about freshman year of high school when all this
is happening when my parents are thinking about these moves that need to take place. But again,
it's too late, bro. I'm too immersed in it. I'm too narrowly focused on who I want to be or
who I think I should be. And peer pressure, those expectations in my peers, bro, that was too much.
Like, I had to meet that. And I was such a people pleaser. Like, I was willing to do whatever
was necessary to be liked. And that was fucking dangerous, especially with the stuff that I was
flirting with back then. And I say it was dangerous because now it goes from just getting in
fist fights at school and skipping school and, you know, trying weed and smoking that here
and there to maybe even trying alcohol here and there to now my friends are getting into
criminal activity. You know, there were numerous lunch breakers.
of ours where I remember us going to like the 7-Eleven across the street from the high school
and friends of mine just taking whatever they want off the shelves, pocketing it, and engaging
in these little petty thefts.
And I remember the first time I saw it, it kind of reminded me of what I felt when that kid
next to the pit brought that controller to me.
Because my moral compass, no, I know better, bro.
I know better.
I know this is wrong.
But it felt so right.
And when you see your friends constantly getting away with it, it empowers you.
And when everyone in your circle is engaging in this behavior, you start to question, like, is it really that bad?
Like, this is normal.
This is what they do every time they go out.
And no one's getting caught for it.
No one's being held accountable.
Why wouldn't I indulge in it?
Why the fuck would I pay a couple bucks for this candy bar when I can just get it for free?
life. Well, and then there's always the justification like, oh, they're insured. They have plenty of money. They won't miss it. It's a huge corporation. Yep. Exactly. So eventually it got to a point, bro, where now when we go out to these little stores or we're hanging out, I'm engaging in it. And it, you know, the first time it was terrifying. You probably know this. Like the first time you dip your toe in that pond, it's terrifying as hell. But you just get acclimated.
to it. And one thing
empowers you to try the
next and empowers
you to try the next and you just keep pushing
the limit. So it went from us stealing
little candy at the 7-Eleven
and, you know,
pilfering these little cigars off
the shelves for us to smoke to
maybe stealing CDs
at the CD store
or little tapes.
Cassette tapes,
for those of you that are unaware,
dating myself.
So you go from that to still and maybe close
some articles of clothing from the clothing store when you're out.
And it just got progressive and more progressive
to the point now.
And we're into my, what, sophomore junior year of high school,
well, I'm thoroughly immersed in the gang lifestyle
because so many of my best friends at the time,
full-fledged gang members so even though at the time i hadn't yet been initiated into a gang
like i'm inheriting their beeps you know they're having these gang braws at school and at the
mall and it's not even my fucking problem half the time i'm getting in these fights because of
something my friend did or rivals that he's getting into it i'm just backing up my friend
so they hated him i hated them and i man there were plenty of bloody brawere
where we're just getting into it at the schoolyard or it was on site, bro.
Like there was so much bad blood between us and some of these gang rivals at his
that it didn't matter where we saw each other.
There were times where we saw each other at the grocery store and we're going at it.
Patrons just looking at us like, what the fuck?
The middle of the mall.
It didn't matter.
There was a time where I remember catching one of these game.
rivals, so to speak, coming out of a grocery store and he just, he tried to swing on me
and there were a couple of my partners there and we just jumped him right there in the parking
lot. Bash just had in with this rock, sent him to the hospital, but that was just like
a way of life, though. Sometimes they would get us and leave us bloody and battered. Sometimes we get
them and back and forth it went. And it never got to the shooting park.
Because the way I grew up, bro, it's not like these kids in our days.
Like nowadays, they're so quick to pick up guns and shoot each other.
You didn't get respect like that in the streets when I was coming up.
Like, if you were one of those kids that only played with guns,
they looked at you like you were a coward.
They wanted to know you could fight.
And it's interesting because being a handsome kid, bro, like I used to get a little bit more flak because of that.
Like they'd be like, oh, you ain't tough.
You're a pretty boy.
or this down the other. So it seemed like I was getting in more fights even behind that,
again, and trying to maintain this tough persona and image than I was, even with the gang
stuff, you know, I was constantly trying to prove how tough I really was because they'd be like,
ah, nah, you can't fight. So here, let's go, let's prove it. Let's see. So I'm constantly getting
into it, bro, constantly. And again, these patterns of behavior are just getting worse and
worse. You're getting into these petty crimes. I'm really getting into this violent aspect
of my life and just lashing out. And it's crazy because I was not intrinsically a violent
person. But the more I played that role, that's how I begin to express myself, bro. I became
very, very violent. Like, it didn't take much to get me to go from zero to 100 back then. You could
just be looking at me wrong. And I'd be like, what the fuck? What's up?
like what's on your mind like you're trying to do something i was always trying to fight over
the stupidest shit um so i'm doing that my friends and i are now it went from the petty thefts
to burglaries you know we're engaging in little burglaries and like we're sneaking out
with each other breaking into cars stealing car stereos breaking into businesses
into like motor vehicle theft. And I remember around like 15, 16. Well, 15 is when I started
having my little run-ins with the law. I remember getting ticketed one night for like some
underage drinking. They had caught us partying. And then I remember shortly thereafter, some
friends and I getting arrested for trying to do a little smash and grab at a pawn shop.
we had stolen a car, ran it into the building.
Yeah, bro, it's getting, it's getting crazy.
Right.
It's getting crazy, right?
Because we're not up to this point.
We had never been caught for anything.
And I'm living this double life.
I can't stress that enough.
Like my parents, I'm hiding all this from them.
They still, for the most part, are thinking like I'm this good kid.
Yeah, he gets in a couple of fights here and there, but they're not.
They have no clue how deep that well.
really is or how deep that hole really goes right and this one night in particular you know
some friends and i i don't know what even inspired the score but we're like hey we're going to rob
this pawn shop whatever so we still a car drive it into the shop we try to do our thing
long story short we ended up getting arrested that night and that was the first time i'd been arrested
but even then it wasn't a big deal because my boy and I that got caught we ended up going
to juvie for maybe a couple of weeks getting what's your mom saying at this point she's got to be
she's got oh she's livid she's fucking livid now she's like because she it just seemed to happen
overnight you know she goes from having this kid that's academically inclined playing sports seemingly
on the right path very charismatic like seems to have everything going for himself to now
problem child and is getting arrested and she was like what the fuck where did this come from
and i don't even i remember that night i got arrested for that first time i was more fearful of
her reaction than i was actually getting charged right because at this point of my life like
disappointing my mom or fearing her wrath was worse than anything imaginable or experiencing
her wrath, I should say, was worse than anything imaginable because I did used to get some good
ass whoopings. I will say that. That was another thing about that era I came up in. Parents had
no qualms about whooping that ass with a belt or whatever. And I used to get my fair share of
those. So when I got arrested, I almost preferred to be locked up, opposed to going home and
dealing with that ass whooping and everything else that was going to come with that.
Yeah. I remember my, I remember my dad telling me one time. He's like, listen, if you get arrested,
he's like, you don't want to call me. It was like, it was like, okay, so definitely don't get
arrested. He's an asshole. He's an asshole on the best of
circumstances.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, shit.
And that's how I felt.
I feared my parents because even my stepdad, bro, he, fuck.
Some of the worst beatings I got as a kid came from him.
Like, he did not play.
I remember calling the cops on him once.
This was when I was like, I want to say five, six.
I was very young.
And I remember him beating the shit out of me one night.
And I got, I was blood naked.
and somehow slipped this grit and ran to the kitchen and dialed 9-1-1.
And before I could talk to an operator or anybody, he snatched the phone from me and was like,
boy, I'll give you a reason to call the cops and begin to whoop my ass even more.
And what's crazy, we'll get back to the arrest here and just say.
But what's crazy is that night, that same night I got that ass whooping, my stepdad made it a point to take me to the police station.
after that. He had some friends that were police officers. So we're going down to the police station. He was
like, oh, you want to tell them what I did to you? I was like, yeah, you fucking right. I do. Yeah.
So we go to this police station. He was like, I'll let you tell him what I did. We go. We have this
little sit down with a couple of these officers. And we go to this room. And I remember my stepdad and my mom
like, yeah, go ahead. Tell him what happened. And I'm like, yeah, this dude just beat me,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blow him all the way under the bus.
And they just get to chuckling and they're like,
they're like, let me tell you something, kid.
They're like, your parents, so long as you're living under their roof,
can do whatever they want to you.
They brought you into this world and they can take you out of it.
And I just remember as a kid, especially being that young, five, six,
looking at this cop, like, are you fucking serious right now?
I was like, okay, and that's probably another shift that occurred within me
when I'm looking at these authority figures telling me,
like, yeah, good luck, kid.
Because he told me, all right. He was like, if your dad
wanted to throw you through a wall,
he can do that. And I was like,
oh, is that right? I was like,
duly noted. And I was like, yeah,
this is the last time I'm going to deal with y'all.
But,
yeah, the wrath, bro,
nothing to play with. So
when my mom,
when that night came,
there were a lot of tears,
bro, a lot of disappointment, obviously,
a lot of shame. And I remember,
remember even filling it myself temporarily, you know, because again, I knew better. I was raised
better and here I am. This is one of those moments. It's interesting because when you're in that
fast lifestyle, there's rarely those times where you slow down enough to really see your true
reflection. And it was in that moment sitting in jail waiting to be released and on probation
where you do start to reflect a little bit, but it's not enough. Like, I'm starting to
starting to wonder, like, maybe I should change my path or shift course a little bit
and examine some of the parts of myself that need to be changed, but it didn't have any
lasting impression on me, bro. Because when I got out, even though I was starting to think
about some of these choices I was making, well, you get out. The girls at school are pat me
on my back like that's that's what's up you's a bad boy for real because there weren't too many
of my peers that were catching criminal charges at that age so they're like oh he's a bad boy
this is he's he's the real deal so it just gave me more street cred peers of mine are like yeah
let's go so I'm empowered bro that stuff just emboldened me because now they're looking at me
like yeah you use a gangster for real and you just
There's a certain respect that comes with that.
And it's intoxicating to say the least.
Right.
And how much of a people pleaser I was to see how people were applauding that
behavior and to see how much people were aching it on
and to see how excited they would get even to watch me fight
or to just witness me do some of the things that I was doing back then.
Like, whoa, you feed off of that.
And that became my life.
You know, you just, I became entranced into the point where now I'm leaving home.
Like 15, 16, I'm out.
I'm thoroughly immersed in gangs now.
Like, I'm initiated into four-corner hustlers.
And I'm doing my thing running with my little crew out there.
And the behaviors just worsened.
So all of the experimentation is just getting out of control with the alcohol.
I never got to carried away with the drugs, the hard drugs,
simply because of all that I witnessed with my stepbrothers,
you know, and seeing crack addiction up close and personal.
Well, I made a vow to myself as a very young kid that I would never go down that path.
Right.
But I did start experimenting with cocaine.
You know, my friends and I are now selling it at this point.
Because you name it, we were doing it, bro.
Everything from the thefts to selling drugs, whatever.
We're in these streets, doing whatever we can to get by.
And like I said, we're living on our own.
So whether we're living house to house, eventually it got to a point where me and my boys got our own apartment.
But up to that point, whoa, we're just in the streets fucking running wild, living life on our terms, getting high, only concerned about sleeping with women, chasing the different highs, whatever the next robbery or score was going to be, we're always looking for the next thing to get involved in.
and still involved in all of the gang fights and all of that.
Mostly you guys are selling drugs or are you just,
you're just doing everything across the board?
Oh, across the board.
It was ridiculous because, well, let me put it like this.
We were mostly relying on selling Coke there for a while.
And I remember one night we had gotten robbed for some ounces.
that was funned to us by one of my older gang affiliates.
And I remember when that happened, not having the money, bro, to pay for this debt.
And I panicked because I was like, fuck, we just got robbed for all this cocaine.
I can't go back to my fucking gang affiliates and be like, hey, I'm out of this money.
Like, my bad.
Right.
So I'm like, what do we do?
Yeah, you don't have any more coke to, you don't have anything else to sell, so.
I don't have anything else to sell.
Don't have much money because we're blowing it.
As much as it's coming in, we're blowing it just as quickly.
And it's crumbs, bro.
In retrospect, we thought we were doing it, but we weren't doing shit, bro.
We were sitting, we were out there taking all these chances with our lives and doing the most for peanuts.
You know what I'm saying?
We're getting thousands of dollars.
Whatever it was, it wasn't worth the risks at all.
and it was not as glorious as most people will make it seem in these movies and everything else
when they talk about the life of crime like bro we were bottom feeders but the kids on the street
that are taking these huge chances are are making nothing you know 50 a couple hundred bucks
a day standing on a quarter making five bucks a sale five bucks a sale but at the end of the day
it doesn't add up for being being put in a position where you could get shot you could get arrested
did, you could have a pistol on you and sell a $10 crack rock and end up with 15 fucking years
because you got two felonies.
Like, you know, you don't even know that.
Nobody tells you that until you're sitting in prison until your attorney is explaining,
you've been arrested twice.
Here's how the law works and you're going.
Yeah.
Yep.
And again, none of us, no one in my circle, at least no one I knew had done any crazy amount of time
or had suffered any of these extreme consequences that come with that life.
So we're thinking we're doing it.
We're thinking with our little hundreds or thousands,
whatever we're making in the streets,
we're doing the damn thing because we got the new Js on
or we got the new fits and we looked apart.
We look like we got money, but it's nothing.
When you get robbed for that money, we'd...
Yeah, we're out.
Right.
And so I remember spending a lot of time,
content playing like, fuck, what are we going to do?
And I finally get the nerve to call my boy.
And I'm like, hey, I'm sorry, man.
I got, we got robbed.
And he was like, cool, let's sit down and talk.
So we go meet him.
And during this meeting, you know, he was like, well, it's unfortunate.
That's part of the game.
You know what's happened to the best of us.
But he was like, I need my money.
And he was like, we're going to get my money.
And one of the things that he had suggested was armed robbery.
He was like, well, you know,
the quickest way we can go ahead and get some of this cash is go pull a couple of nicks
because we had already grown accustomed to robbing drug dealers and everything else but he was
like well let's just hit a couple businesses or whatever cool we're done and mind you up to this
point i'd already been engaged in burglaries and this down the other so armed robbery wasn't too
far out the realm of what we were already doing i'm like fuck it let's go and that's kind of what
begin my journey into that realm and it's very that's extremely intoxicating because i remember the first
time we did an armed robbery like being terrified to death bro i mean my heart was jumping out of
my chest you know just plotting that score going into that establishment and then booking it from
there but I can't even huh I was going to say well what happened what was that I don't want to put
too much detail out there but I just remember it was a convenience store and uh cameras guys behind
the counter with possibly with a gun and the police actually investigate those crimes exactly
unlike a burglary where they take what was missing and they store it somewhere they're
actually looking for the guy that's robin 7-11s
Exactly. Yep. So we go in there, masked up. We had stolen a car, did our thing, bro. But I remember going into there, like, terrified to death. Like, that's, I've experienced various highs in my life. But when you do something like that, the tear, exhilaration, whatever, however we're going to label that rush is.
incomparable like I haven't felt too many things like that in my life and I've been in some
pretty crazy situations from being beaten damn there to death like I've found myself in some
pretty life-threatening situations and stuff that'll get that heart in adrenaline pumping but
nothing compares but what are you end up getting hundreds raws peanuts it's nothing
But again, we're just doing it out of necessity.
We're trying to take care of this drug desk.
We're like, fuck it.
Let's do it.
We go on there.
We handle business, bro.
We appease my gang affiliate and supplier.
And he was like, cool, bro.
And he's impressed.
And it's crazy because we're kids, bro.
We're teenagers.
And these dudes that are guiding us had done prison time, not a lot.
And the two in particular that I was up under.
had just gotten out of prison, had done like a few years inside.
These dudes were like late 20s, early 30s, and they're just misguided the fuck out of us,
which again, as I look back at that, I'm like, bro, that's crazy.
What are these grown-ass men, one, doing with teenagers?
Because these were our everyday guys.
Like, I'm sitting here kicking it with these dudes all the time.
These dudes are up at the high school picking me up, hanging out with the chicks that we're hanging
out with.
And I'm like, it's so crazy now when I look back on that.
time of my life because I'm like these grown men that had no business even being around us bro
and they were doing the most just poisoning our minds sending us on these little missions
like had no regard for our lives whatsoever but proclaim to love us same thing that same thing
that they probably went through that somebody did that same thing that they just thought this is
a natural progression of being in this life yeah and what what other options do they you know
I'm not justifying it.
I'm just saying that, like, in, you know, to them in that lifestyle, it's like,
well, what other choices do I have?
I've never really had a job.
And they think, oh, you don't make anything in a job anyway, you know, what are you
going to make, 10 bucks an hour?
I can make that in three minutes.
Yeah, but you can't consistently make that and not end up in prison.
But they don't think that far in advance, you know, and let's face it, you working at
McDonald's isn't cool.
you know those same guys who come in and order a cheeseburger from you and humiliate you and make you feel like you know and that's everything when you're a kid when you're in your teens that's everything what your peers think of you yeah yeah so these guys were perpetuating the cycles that they had come up under they're more or less probably emulating the things that they had seen you you pointed to it like well it's just cycles we were all perpetuating and
these cycles um and with me bro again after that drug incident in that first robbery that arm
robbery that first taste of blood so to speak was all it took because then you know you go from
spending all day selling dope to maybe make a few hundred dollars profit or pocket maybe on a good
day at thousand bucks to now like oh i can just go in an establishment and make
potentially thousands of bucks if I robbed the right place in a matter of seconds like forget drug dealing
I'm about to go to this robbery stuff so instantly I remember my crew and I came and say it was my crew
but our crew back then shifting our entire focus because the same guy that was supplying us
coke he was like you know what this is form a crew so we had our little armed robbery crew now
and now we're just going around bro plotting all these scores
little businesses here and there
we started scoping out like check cashing spots
because the more we're getting away with the like smaller robberies
the more we're inclined to you know what we need to up the ante we need to go ahead and start robbing banks
we need to start robbing check cashing spots it's even more now it's federal
they have a budget yeah they'll yeah and listen they've got and they've got
cooperating witnesses down.
They got people just waiting to find
out something. Yep.
So you got these kids, bro, and these
older-ass dudes, ripping
and running the streets. And granted, I'm still selling
a little dope here and there.
Still abusing drugs here and there.
I mean, a lot. Not here and there. We're barely
eating. Like, we're probably doing more
drugs and drinking than we are
eating anything
valuable
or real sustenance.
and that was our life.
Like running the streets, chasing the highs, living on our terms.
We're living on our own at this point.
Teenagers, not answering to anybody really.
And even though I'm on probation, like the standards are so low, the expectations are so low to where they're not even really messing with me.
Are these all, like, convenience stores or are these?
Oh, it's various businesses, bro.
hotels, convenience stores, various establishments, bro, all across the board. I mean, we were
predators. Let's call it what it is. We were praying upon whomever, and that's the unfortunate
reality, because we really had no regard. At this point, like, my moral compass is now gone.
Right. I'd silenced my conscience and everything that I'd raised to be, I can't say.
it enough. Like I was the exact opposite of that. And initially when I was just acting and playing
the role, I can't, we all, I keep pointing to that, but it's real, bro. You can only play a role
for so long before you eventually become it. And always liking it to like method acting. You see
these actors that really become that role and assume that role as they're playing that part. And
sometimes it can lead to their ruin. Prime example was Heath Ledger when he played the Joker.
they say that that role consumed them
and it's probably why he ended up Odean and dying
I was going to say they say like Joe Pesci
acts like they're like like he thinks he's in the mob
like he thinks he's a mobster he's a tough guy
like you're like five foot three bro you're not
you're not a tough guy
you know you didn't kill all these guys
you're not a monster
but they believe that
like they play these roles some of these actors
get so immersed in those characters
it really becomes a part of
them. And I think I know with me, those initial years, those very formative years in my life
role, it started off as a role and it became very ingrained in me. It was very real. And now
it's not a game. So we were out here doing the most. You name it, we were doing it. And
I'm earning stripes this whole time. So not only are we getting away with 99% of the stuff we're
doing. And that's empowering in and of itself. But the stuff,
status that I'm acquiring all the while in doing this because to my gang affiliates and those that are over me, they're like, man, this little kids got heart.
These little dudes, you know, me and my best friends at the time, 15, 16, whatever it may be, teenagers, they're looking at all this stuff that we're doing.
And the lengths that we're willing to go to, they're like, bro, yeah, these motherfuckers are the real deal.
Yeah, you're like, you guys are soldiers.
and they're feeding that in, you know, they're having these conversations with us.
Like, yeah, they're saying those type of words like, you guys are soldiers, you're real,
you're this, down, the other, and it just affirms something within you.
So all of that stuff that I've been raised with, the good morals and values, that stuff's
out the window now.
Because in my circles, that upright existence, that's not what was respected.
Right.
You know, it's who could be most treacherous, who could be the hardest, who could be the hardest,
could be the most violent. That's the stuff that was revered and respected. And those were the
people that I was trying to impress. Those were the only people in my circle. Right.
So years of this is happening. Like, we're just going, going, going, going. And I remember,
you know, now we're approaching 18 years old. When I turn 18, my juvenile probation transfers over to
adult probation. But again, it's not, there's not a lot that comes with that. It's just like,
oh, stay out of trouble, whatever, finish school. And I remember still being in school,
somehow, some way throughout all this bullshit. Like, I'm still managing to skate by through
school. Grades aren't the best. But I'm now senior year of high school. I'm considering joining
the Marines and had actually enlisted because a friend of mine at the time. Matter of fact,
my girlfriend, her brother had enlisted and he and I were going to do the buddy program together
and go to the Marines. So we enlist. I'm talking to the recruiters, blah, blah, blah, go through
the whole process. And I remember the recruiter first asked me, he's like, well, what do you want to do?
I was like, I just want to blow some shit up. He was like, oh, well, perfect. We're going to put you in
the infantry. And he was like, you guys are definitely going over to the Middle East right after this,
because this was shortly after 9-11.
So everything's kicking off over there.
They're like, this is where we're going to ship you
as soon as you get done with basic training.
Cool.
But I want to spend another little summer with my friends.
So worst to say, I don't know, I say it's the worst decision now,
but I probably would have been one of those guys
that went into the military and ended up getting court-martialed
for some crazy shit because I was so criminal-minded.
Right.
So I probably would have been over there raiding palaces and do,
doing all types of stupid shit and being one of these military veterans that ends up coming back home, spending time in the feds, because I lost my mind or did something crazy.
Who knows?
I have a buddy named Sharif who went to Afghanistan and nicest, calmest guy you'd ever know, and ended up shipping opium back because they don't check like their packs and all the stuff.
And he was shipping, you know, every few months shipping fucking tons of fucking, not tons, but whatever, pounds of opiates back to the until he eventually gets caught.
And it was just like, bro, like you talk to this guy, you would never, never see.
He was like, I know, I don't know what I was doing.
It was so easy.
Yeah, you're in a, you're in a position of trust when you're in the military.
So it's easy to find those loopholes and take advantage of them.
And then when it catches up to you, you know.
They don't play around with those sentences either, though.
10 years, 15 years.
Oh, yeah.
No, they don't.
And another thing about the military, bro, it's either going to bring out the best in you or the worse than you.
And I think the mindset that I was in, it would have just exacerbated, like, my criminal philosophies and those violent tendencies.
Yeah.
Or then you get out and you're even more lethal.
Yeah.
Now I'm not running into a convenience store and getting a little bit of money.
Now you're thinking, let's go take.
Let's do a bank takeover.
It's like, what?
Yeah, we'll dip tie everybody in the bank, go in the vault.
Like, are you fucking, like, yeah, you're going to get way more strategic.
You're going to, you're now plotting.
I was already considering we were already plotting on check cashing spots and banks and arm armored vehicles.
So I can only imagine what we would have been on had I gotten military training and now I got tactical weapons that I have access to.
We would have been a mess, bro.
But.
So what had happened.
is during that time, I'm considering, I'm really considering this military opportunity.
I'm even, even considering finishing up school early to get into the military quicker.
But for whatever reason, bro, something in me was like, just stay one more summer,
chill with your friends, and then go that following year.
And it wasn't long after that that I was going to prison for the first time.
some friends and I we had we just the short of it is we had planned to rob this hotel
bruh this one evening and it was one of those acts of desperation I don't even
it was this dumb-ass plot to rob this hotel that we were staying at
um we thought it was ingenious because they're like don't never suspect that people
that are staying here the ones that robbed it
We ended up getting caught for that role.
And it was just my co-defendant, Walter and I at that time.
The rest of them got away, Scott Free.
Is this like robbing the cashier, the head desk?
Yeah, the head desk, yep, the front desk.
What do they have?
Peanuts.
Okay.
Stupid, right?
Right.
Who didn't have cash anymore other than a convenience store in a bank?
Crazy.
I mean, they dealt with a lot of cash back then.
It was a whole different era.
Right. Right. So, you know, back then, those drawers were full of money, but nothing worthwhile. I mean, come on, get real. Maybe at most, a couple thousand. But for us, that was enough. Like, shit, that's a good score for the night. We could go party off of that, do whatever. And then tomorrow, go hit another score. That's how ridiculous our mindset was. So we get caught for that.
well how do you get caught like you i mean you rob the place you run out you jump into a car and
yeah so we rob it mind you this is the plan was
we had a friend of ours that was going to be the getaway driver he didn't even know he was
going to be the getaway driver but this guy we used to party with he stayed up the street from
there we this guy that we sold coke to we didn't have a car at the time
so as we're sitting in this hotel room we
both come up with this idea to rob this place and everyone agrees at some point like this is
feasible like this is doable let's go so the plan was to go rob them come back to the room change
clothes call our friend like we're just going to hang out have him come pick us up then we're
going to leave the place boom done deal now keep in mind on this particular night it's
snowing like crazy.
Well, it's beginning to snow like crazy.
So the ground is covered in snow.
And it's two separate buildings.
So you have the building where we're at,
and then you have the front desk in the check-in area
where all the guests come and do their thing.
So we're like, all right,
we're just going to creep down to the front desk,
do our thing, run back to the room.
Boom.
So everything goes according to plan.
We mask up.
We get the little sawed-off shotgun.
We go down there.
running the spot do what we do jet back to the room and as we're jetting out of the lobby a thought
occurs to me i'm like bro it's fucking snowing out i was like we're about to leave tracks everywhere
leading right back to the fucking room now granted they would end at the sidewalk of this other
building because there was like a little awning right so there wouldn't be tracks literally
go into our room. But I know just from past experiences and run-ins with the law been in
plenty high-speed chases with them the whole nine that once they get the canons involved,
they're going to get our scent. So I'm like, fuck, this thought occurs to me as we're running back
to the room. So my, that's a little late for that thought. It's way too late. It's way too late.
But the only thing I can think of that will give us a little bit of time, I'm like, let's go to all three
floors because there's multiple floors. I'm like, let's run the span of these floors, all of them,
door to door, to our scent is everywhere. And then ours is at the top of this third level,
the corner at that. So I'm like, we'll have, this will give us enough time to change,
have our friend come get us, and we can get the fuck out of here by the time they even deploy
the canine units. So I'm like, that'll give us, buy us time. Because I know they're going to have to go
door to door at that point, especially if our sin is everywhere. So we get to the room,
get away with it, we shower real quick, we change clothes. And sure enough, as I'm changing
clothes or we finish up showering, police show up and they do exactly as I anticipated. They're
going door to door. And you hear them knocking. And they're asking, they're like, hey,
there was a robbery that just took place. Did anyone see anything? There's just cause for
concerned because the dog is tracking this scent everywhere.
We don't know if these guys are at this location or what.
We just know that their scent is over here somewhere.
So we hear them going door to door, boom, boom.
And as they're doing it, now I'm trying to come up with another plan because this dude
that was supposed to pick us up has not showed up.
And I'm like, fuck our getaway driver.
And now I'm like, we can't just walk out there now because dogs are everywhere.
they're going to definitely smell us.
So I'm like, I don't know what to do.
So our two girlfriends are in the room with us at the time.
It's me and my boy, Walter, and our two girlfriends.
So my girl, she was like, what should we do?
And I tell her, I'm like, answer the door when they come.
Me and Walter are going to hide.
And it'll just be you and Javana.
And hopefully they'll see these two women and think nothing of it and go on.
Like, hey, check in like they've been doing with the rest of
the guest. And once, Nikita, that was her name. Once she's like, hey, no one's here. It's just
me and Jamana, blah, blah, blah. We didn't see anything. In my mind, I'm like, the police will go.
So they end up making their way to our door. Boom, boom, boom. Subtle knock. You could tell
they don't know we're in there. And my girl freezes. She was like, I don't know if I should
answer the door. So I'm like, fucking answer the door. I was like, if you don't answer the door,
this is going to be all bad. So she frees.
Jesus, bro. She doesn't do it. And sure enough, now they're suspicion because they know they can hear someone's in the room. So now multiple officers are beginning to gather outside the door. And I'm like, fuck. We got this shotgun in here. There's no back doors. So we can't go anywhere. I'm like, what? I'm looking at the sillings to see if there's ways to crawl into it or somehow get out of this room. I'm like, oh, we're, we're fucked.
I don't know if we're about to get in a shootout.
I don't know what's about to happen.
I'm like, this is all bad.
So I'm trying to play out all these different scenarios in my mind.
And as I'm doing this, the phone rings.
And it's the front desk and like a detective or whatever, negotiator.
They're on the phone.
And they're like, hey, who are the occupants of this room?
Blah, blah, blah.
We're talking.
I think they were talking to my girlfriend, Nikita, at the time.
And she's telling them, like, it's just a couple of us in the room.
They're like, oh, okay, that's cool.
We just want to pull you guys out for questioning.
There was a robbery at the hotel.
Do you guys mind coming out and talking to us?
So we're like, sure, why not?
So we stall a little bit, and I'm like, I got to hide this shit.
Now, what we did have going for us is that shotgun had never been fired.
So gunpowder residue, the stuff that these canons normally are sniffing
for. I'm like in my mind, I'm like, they're not going to be able to smell this gun. What I don't
consider is the shotgun shells are fucking right there. So they're still going to smell something.
But I'm like, let me stash this shotgun under the credenza. So we lift up the credenza,
throw the shotgun, the shells, the cash, everything, the masks, the whole nine, anything that
could possibly incriminate us under this credenza and then put it down. I'm like, fuck it. We're just
going to play stupid. Like we don't know what's happening. We're going to play along with the
police and see how this goes. So one by one, they have us come out of the room. Guns are drawn on
us. Canons are out there. There's tactical units everywhere. We're like, fuck, this is crazy. So we come
out and one by one, they're pulling us out and they have the desk clerk out there standing some
ways down the path trying to identify us now what i don't know at the time is he can't identify us
and what he tells them later on is like these dudes are way skinnier than i thought because we
had these baggy ass clothes on when we rob the place so when he sees us we're like a buck 40
soaking wet baby faces we look like kids bro so when this dude sees us he was like that couldn't
have been them right these dudes were way bigger way more menacing like look at these little cute
kids like they didn't rob me so they pull us into this neighboring room and they do a search of
the room and they don't find anything so they're going we hear them going back and forth on the
radio they're like 10-4 all clear blah blah blah all the stuff and and my mom like I can't believe
we just got away with this shit so one of the officers in the room he was like we're about to let you guys
go uh he was like it's clear he said but he runs there was a couple of things
he runs my girl's record Nikita at the time she's a runaway so she has to go home they run
my record they see I'm on probation and they're like well we got to take you in blah blah blah for
because I had a warrant because I whatever didn't meet some type of prohibition standard and they
had issued a bench warrant for my arrest nothing big but they're like we need to take you in so
you can get this cleared up and then Giovanna they're like we need to have her parents come
get her whatever whatever and then my boy walter they're about to let go scot free so as we're
waiting we're all there i'm sitting there in disbelief like i can't believe we just got away with
this shit this is crazy and i have no problem going to jail now just for this little probation
violation opposed to being arrested for armed robbery charges so as we're waiting i'm somewhat
relieved but we're sitting there waiting for giovanna's parents they finally show up they pull her out
And shortly after they pull her out, bro, we hear like a little bit of conversation over the radio.
And, uh, we hear them reinitiate the search.
So we're like, oh, fuck.
So we hear them go back in the room.
We hear them lift up the credenza.
And then we hear like all this other police chatter and blah, blah, blah.
And then he's like, yeah, we're going to be taking you in on formal charges, yada, yada.
So what ended up
happened is Javana ended up telling on
this. I mean, did she not realize
you were in the clear?
She realized we were in the clear, but what I think
happened is that her parents pressured her
into cooperating with the police
and just telling them what
happened and where the
gun and shit was.
Right. I mean, that's evident what happened.
That came out later. Like, we didn't know
that in the moment. But it came out later
in the discovery when the facts
of the case came out what transpired but that is ultimately what happened like she ended up getting
pressured by her parents and the police to go ahead and throw everybody under the bus so we end up
getting arrested that night bro and uh what came of that was a 10 year sentence oh yeah 18 years old
just had just turned 18 years old and my boy and i were both sentenced to the department of corrections
for 10 years.
The buddy system.
The buddy system.
The wrong one.
Should have took my ass to the Marines.
Yeah.
Instead, I signed up for a life of suffering.
Yeah, bro.
140 pounds soaking wet, 18 years old, pretty boy.
I'm going to a big boy prison now.
It's no longer.
Gun charge, right?
Yeah.
It's all down.
Yeah.
Yep.
So they get.
they get the shotgun, they get all the shells, they get everything, and they connect us to a
string of robberies. Because we had been dubbed the screen mask bandits. And you were wearing
the screen mask? Screen masks. So we would wear those masks from screen. Okay. Yeah, we would always
wear those during our robberies. So they had connected us to this long string of robberies. Because
remember for years
my boys and I were running
in this crew doing our thing
and now it's all
catching up to us because there's an MO
like there's a certain pattern
they know that we are these
guys that have been doing all these robberies
so now that they have us
connected to this they're like yeah these are the
screen mask band this blah blah blah blah blah blah
they got us we're hit
so we finally signed a deal for 10 years
bro and it's now real the real consequences of this lifestyle are now i'm now being faced with that
and uh i was sent to lineman correctional facility and this was 2003 when i pulled up to lineman
and at that time that was by far probably one of the worst prisons in colorado it was a lifer camp
most of the guys that had been sent there had been there for decades and there for like murder for some pretty
serious charges and the reason they had sent me there is because of my violent history because even
in the county jail before going to prison I'm still fighting uh I broke this dude's jaw in the county
jail and it caught some more assault charges behind that and this is before I'd even been sentenced
for the robberies so they're like
Oh, you're a little badass.
Okay, well, we got a place for you.
Don't worry about it.
Right.
Yeah, you think you're tough.
We're going to send you where the tough guys are.
So they, instead of sending me to Buny,
because typically they send the younger gang affiliates to Buena Vista.
Somehow I missed that train.
They were like, all right, you're just going to go to the big boy camp.
Yeah, I'm pulling up to Lyman 2003,
a buck 40 soaking wet, thinking I'm hot shit.
and stepping into hell for real.
But that time wasn't all bad.
You know, I, from day one of stepping into that prison,
I had some guardian angels watching over me.
And literally, day one, like, soon as I came out of orientation
and stepped foot into that first pod that I was placed in,
like a very grounded group of brothers took me under their wing.
And I think, I don't know what compelled them to take me under their wings as they did,
but I mean, I'm sure it was God, first and foremost,
but I think that in their eyes, they saw this naive kid
that could have very easily gotten swallowed up by that environment,
and I would have, were it not for their mentorship and guidance.
And the moment they recognized that, I feel like they knew they had to act.
And, you know, when I stepped foot into that pod, you know, these guys took me in, made
sure I had everything that I needed.
They orientated me and let me know the do's and don'ts of prison life and, you know,
the things to not get involved in.
And that began a real deep spiritual journey for me and kind of helped me.
need to begin doing that internal work and undoing a lot of what the streets and all that
indoctrination had done to me throughout the years. And all I ended up serving five years on
that sentence. And most of it was constructive. You know, there was a lot of violence that I
witnessed while I was on the inside murders, riots, this, that, and the other. But those mentors
of mine really made it a point to try to keep me away from all of that. They took me under
the wings. They made sure that I was reading and educating myself. Once they recognized that I had
artistic abilities, they pushed me to start educating myself and honing those skills. And there was
one guy in particular that I met in there as guy, he was a lifer named John Sherman. He was serving
in life for murder at that time.
And when I met him, he had already been down for damn near 20 years.
But he had worked his way up to earn the warden's trust.
And he had more or less like his own paint shop in studio in the prison.
So they had the maintenance shop.
And he had his own section, bro, where he was able to paint.
He did all the signs around the prison.
He had painted these massive murals around.
around the prison. And back then, that was kind of a rare thing. You know, the Colorado
prison system changed a little bit here late. And you'll see murals everywhere now. But back
then, you didn't see a lot of that in these prisons. But they allowed him to do that back
then. But this guy in particular took me under his wing and began to pour into me. He began to
teach me all these fine art practices. And I would just spend days with him as he's teaching me how
to draw and he got me to start assuming the mindset of an artist because it was more than
just teaching me the technical skills. He wanted me to start questioning life and to start
questioning my reality and to start questioning myself. And even through my art,
start encapsulating these broader messages. But I was just the budding artist.
like so much of what he was pouring into me was lost on me at that time like it it was in there
somewhere and eventually later on in life as we'll get to it sprouted and came out of me but
right at the time the things that he was instilling in me I didn't really understand the value of
them but all all that to say like I had these great men around me that were trying to challenge my
belief systems, trying to give me to think differently about the life that I was leading. And many of
these men didn't think that they would ever get another chance of living life. So they, I feel,
felt a responsibility in raising me like the children they had abandoned. You know, they wanted to
give me an opportunity to live a life that they may never be able to live. And through me,
they felt like they were going to be able to live vicariously.
So for five years, bro, that was my existence, you know, of me pushing myself mentally, physically, emotionally, spiritually.
And these guys, through working out with them, I ended up gaining like 40, 50 pounds.
Mentally, you know, these dudes are just forcing me to read all of these philosophical books, spiritual books, and getting me to really start thinking deeply about life and existence.
and I would have never even started thinking on these levels were not for these guys.
Because going into prison, I mean, yeah, I was educated to some extent,
but these guys were making me think on a whole different level.
All in all, bro, after spending that five years inside, like I thought I was ready for life.
You know, everyone saw the art potential that I had.
They saw, you know, the charisma and personality and character that I,
possessed and they just knew like I was destined for greatness. So like, bro, you're 23. You still
have a whole life ahead of you. You can get out of this and put your past behind you. And anyone
that reared me behind bars, everyone, they, they never thought I'd come back to prison, bro.
When I left in 2008, I spent exactly five years inside before I was finally parole on that
sentence. And then, what was it? February of 2008 is when I was released. And when I was
released, bro, there was no one inside of that prison that thought I was coming back. You know,
they thought that they had done their due diligence in rearing me. They had seen a transformation
because the transformation was real. Everything that I endured. Because while I was in there,
I ended up finishing my education and getting my GED. I ended up taking a
a whole bunch of vocational classes and getting all this training, from like the technical
trades and construction to that computer information processing. I was trying to absorb as much
as I could while I was in there. So whatever class they offered, I was taking it, especially when
it came to self-help and betterment, like I was absorbing what I could. So when I left,
thought I was prepared.
But I didn't leave prison
with the right mindset,
first of all, because I was very prideful,
bro.
23, had some muscles now,
good looks,
a little bit of talent.
I was like, shit, you can't tell me nothing.
I just survived hell.
I was ready to take on the world.
And going out and
But you hadn't really been humbled.
I hadn't been humbled at all, exactly.
Not like I should have been.
And going out, I had the right mindset in that it had shifted.
Like I had these grand goals now.
I had this path that I wanted to be on.
It was still kind of vague.
I knew I wanted to be an artist, but didn't know exactly what that was going to look like.
And keep in mind, in 2008, I didn't have the skills that I have now.
like I barely knew how to I didn't know how to paint I was just getting into that was good at replicating things but not creating from my own imagination so even what were you you're saying you were doing art was it tattooing because I saw you know the tattoos on Instagram are are you know oh no this is remember this is in 2008 we're not talking about now so back in yeah I had done a little bit here and there but most of what I was good that are on Instagram is what I'm saying.
that's current stuff right okay but actually i know it's not from back then yeah no so we'll get to
that the stuff back then that i was doing was a lot of portraiture you know celebrity portraits and
i'm just replicating what i'm seeing in magazines you know i would take these celebrity pictures and
replicate them that's all i was doing and i was learning a lot through doing that but when i got out
in 2003 bro there wasn't really any real skill that i could rely on whereas now and we'll get to how i got
to where I'm at, but I didn't have that. Skill base. And also keep in mind, 2008, this is the heart
of the recession. I'm getting out to instability. My mom's unemployed at this point. My stepdad's
filing for bankruptcy and about to lose his restaurant. So I'm stepping out to a pretty precarious
situation, right? But I tried in the beginning to do it the right way. Like,
When I first got out of prison, bro, I got two jobs immediately.
And I was willing to do whatever work.
It didn't matter.
But I got a job at a polling agency and was doing that for some time.
And I started working at a hotel, ironically, doing some concierge type stuff.
And I also was doing like these little side gigs modeling and shooting commercials and what have you.
And got enrolled in the Art Institute.
and was about to really seriously pursue an art career.
But life started happening, bro.
You know, financial responsibilities are beginning to weigh on my shoulders.
There were some family emergencies and a death in the family that had occurred.
There was a lot of stuff that piled on top of me very quickly.
And when these pressures mounted,
the first instinct wasn't to go back to the criminal lifestyle my first instinct was to go take out loans
and do it the right way so what i ended up what i ended up doing was compounding myself in this
ridiculous amount of debt i'm going to check cashing agencies to take out these loans and then going to
other check cashing agencies to pay back these loans and i'm just taking out all these different loans
here and there to handle the debts that are arising and thinking that this is the way that
civilians do it like this is how law about in civilians handle debt and little did i know that's
very irresponsible financially and that ended up catching up to me because now these agencies
are threatening to garnish my wages um the there's possessions of mine that are being threatened to be
repossessed. There's family members of mine that are needing my assistance as I'm trying to
build my life from scratch and they're asking for my help. Like all this crazy shit is beginning
to pile on my shoulders, bro. And it reached a point where I was just like, fuck it. You know what?
I know how to make some quick money. And if I would have just been patient, because so many
opportunities were ahead of me, but I didn't have the faith or the patience to let these things
play out, whether we're talking about the modeling agency or the talent agency that I was working
for. Like, they had gigs lined up for me, bro. I was about to start being and appearing in
these different roles. And I'd already shot a couple of commercials and was doing this down
the other. And then when it came to the Art Institute, well, I was already, my tuition's fully
covered. I'm starting school here in a couple of weeks. My friend and I are out here performing
concerts and on stage opening up shows for people like there were things that were developing
but again the immediate pressures that i'm having to take care of were overwhelming to the
point where i'm blinded by that i can't see the long term right so as i've become drowned in that
or i panic and another thing that you must keep in mind and it's something that i've told again
countless times through stories that I've told.
I was a child, bro.
You know, when they talk about arrested development,
when I went into prison, I was 18 years old.
I came out 23.
There was so much life experience that I did not have.
There was so much emotionally and mentally and spiritually that I lacked.
And when I came out into the free world,
though I looked like a grown man, though I looked like a grown man,
though I comported myself as such,
bro, I was far from that.
And when life happened to me, I reacted as a childhood, bro.
I reverted back to that 18-year-old mine and did what 18-year-old Sean would do in those circumstances.
And unfortunately, what do you think that was?
I hop right back in armed robberies.
I was like, I know a quick way to solve my family's solutions or I know,
immediate way to resolve these financial pressures that I'm feeling. And so what happened is that I go
into this situation thinking like, I'm just going to do this one robbery to pay this one little
debt off. This is the last one. This is the last one. I'm going to do this other robbery to just do
just this one time. And I remember this is how ignorant my thinking was. I would pray to God
during before these robberies and be like god just let me get away with this robbery like i'm done
after this i promise this is it just help me get through this one robbery and bro it just kept
compounding because i would pay this one debt and then something else would happen and opposed to
just doing it the right way i'm always looking for the shortcuts and then you get accustomed to that
it's intoxicating you get accustomed to that fast money it takes so much restraint for a criminal
a reformed criminal to do the right thing when you know how to do the wrong thing and it's so
much easier you know these civilians that are out here they're like just do the right thing kid
it's all right like it's easy to say that but when you're considering how to feed yourself
or put a roof over your head and you know how to go sell dope or you know how within 10 seconds
30 seconds to go get tens of thousands of dollars it takes a lot of discipline and restraint to just
tough it out bro or to go work overtime or some nothing paying job to make ends meet like the
restraint that that requires yeah people i always got the question like do you ever think about
committing fraud that I'm like every day like every day you think I you think I'm oh no I would
never are you kidding me do you know how tempting it is well it's like the best thing I can equate it to
is like a drug addiction because that's a lifelong battle right you struggle with that
anyone that struggle with that knows that there's not a point where you're just done with it like
that is a fucking demon that constantly lurks behind you, right, and hovers over you.
And the same thing with the criminal mind.
Bro, it doesn't matter how much you change or reform.
I can't forget how to do crime.
Like, that shit is ingrained in me.
Right.
I know how to rob.
I know how to sell dope.
I know how to get fast money.
That is in me.
So for the rest of my existence, no matter how much I change and become a better human
being when hard times hit
I like a drug addict
am constantly having to tell myself like
nah don't take that drink
don't go down that path
because all it takes
all it takes is for that one slit
and then you're back in it bro
you're back in it because once you're
going to fuck it
the
the thing is I used to always
say when people say well why did you commit crime
I used to always say well I needed the money
but then you know when you
go to prison and you really start thinking about it, it's like, well, wait a second, I did need the
money the first time I did it. But when you've got a couple hundred thousand in the bank or half a
million or a million, now why are you doing it? You know, it was like it's, it's not the money.
Like you've got, I've got a million and a half in the bank. Why am I now laying in bed
plotting another scam? Is it, it's certainly not for the money. You know, now I'm actually
justifying reasons why I need to do another scam.
So, yeah, it's absolutely, you know, the money becomes irrelevant.
Of course, it's a huge plus, and it gives you a reason to do it, but it's certainly not
the deciding factor in that decision.
It's the, like I said, it's like walking out of the bank going, wow, like that rush over
your whole body.
You're just like, that was amazing.
Yeah.
And that's so intoxicating.
And that's the danger in that life that we at one point led.
And it's one of the reasons why I'm so adamant about telling this cautionary tell
because I wish I would have had those forewarnings when I was signing up for the things.
I would say they should teach a class in high school all through high school.
They should teach the federal sentencing guidelines and whatever state sentence.
in guidelines that you're in because people or high school students would it would blow their
mind to realize that are you telling me that for doing something that's stupid I could spend
this much time in prison and then even if it's a minor chart even if it's something like oh three
months listen three months three months might as well be three years because the truth is
your your life is devastated when you walk out after three months you don't have a house all
your shit's gone. None of your buddies are waiting there with your clothes and a stack of cash to
get you back on your feet. Your car is gone and you've got bad credit. Like you are in a horrible
situation now. Yeah. Yeah. In high school you never even think that. You think, oh, well, you only
go to prison if you like kill somebody or something wrong. And they just need to know the true
consequences all and on what that entails. Um,
But yeah, bro, to get back where we were, like, that's when I crumbled.
You were in a bad spot.
You felt like, hey, my go-to move.
I'm going to go back to it.
So the robberies begin.
And again, it started off with these small businesses, the stuff that I was accustomed to doing.
And what's interesting, this go, this time around, my weapon of choice wasn't even real.
Like I had a BB gun when I had a BB gun because I knew what I was doing and I knew the traumas that I was not trying to inflict upon my victims.
And I think that's the interesting thing about some of the choices I was making back then because I was very measured in how I was going about it.
Like I knew that I was victimizing people, but I was going to try to lessen that victimization somehow.
Like that's how I rationalize it in my mind.
I'm like, well, if I'm using a BB gun, there's no real threat.
and maybe the trauma won't be that bad
and that's how I was able to live
with some of those decisions that I was making
and then I was like if I'm congenial
and nice to these people as I'm robbing them
like it's not so bad
I'm taking insured money like it's all good
and that's how I'm rationalizing it
because I know full well
what I'm doing and all the damage is causing
because I'm very conscious now
at this point of my life
especially with all the growing
and maturation that had taken place
during that five years in prison.
So, well, I know what I'm in.
I know the chances I'm taking.
I know exactly what I'm doing.
But it's not enough still to determine me from robin.
And it goes from again, the progression is ridiculous
because it went from the businesses to now check cash in spots
to eventually banks.
And there was a close call that occurred with one of the bank robberies
and at this time mind you
I'm all in the news like they have no idea
who I am supposedly
I'm in the news it seems like every other week
they're talking about the get down and count
bandit the feds had dubbed me that after I started
robbing the banks
and I'm wearing different disguises now
it started off where I'm fully masked up
and gloved up to now I'm putting on
gluing on fake beards
wearing sunglasses and these crazy
disguises like it's getting pretty
methodical
and well thought out and every week they're airing this stuff on the news like yeah the get down
and count bandit struck again and it's becoming intoxicating in the sense that not only am i getting
away with it and the thrills the highs and blah blah blah but people in my circle are now
enabling the behavior because they're like let's just hit a robbery let's hit a lick they're egging
it on themselves like let's go on shopping sprees let's go get this for that another and
it gets to a point where I'd robbed this bank, right?
And during the incident of die pack ends up going off.
We get away that day, barely by the hairs on my chinny chin, but it was after that robbery
where I started having some epiphanies like, whoa, you're taking some crazy chances with
your life for what.
I mean, granted, the money was cool, especially when we started robbing the bank.
banks and stuff. But I'm like, is it really worth it? And I remember telling myself that and
deciding like, no more. I'm done. I can't be out here taking these chances with my life.
I just got done doing five years in prison and here I am out here in these streets again on this
bullshit. Like, this is crazy. What am I doing? But it was too late, bro. A week after that bank
incident occurred, the feds came and knocking. And
how did they how they got on my trail yeah so the story goes and i still to this day don't even know
the legitimacy of this but they say that my bank surveillance photograph had been circulating through
various police precincts and they say that an individual old school resource officer of mine
I won't name him because I don't know what liability you'll have.
We put his name out there.
But this guy, just to give the people context, in high school, you already know about the fucking idiot that I was.
I was a misfit, bro.
This school, high school resource officer that supposedly saw this picture, he and I had the worst blood imaginable.
Like, he was constantly breaking up house parties that I was at.
He was constantly trying to catch my hands.
in the cookie jar because he knew I was thoroughly immersed in the criminal lifestyle.
What is a resource officer? Is that like a police officer? Yeah, police officer that was stationed
inside the schools. Oh, okay. Sorry. Yep. Yep. So this police officer, like he was constantly
throughout my high school years trying to catch me. It was this huge game of cat and mouse
between me and him. And there were verbal confrontations with him. Like, I could not stand
this clown. Um, this. This
photograph of mine is floating across these precincts as they're trying to figure out who I am.
Now, as the story goes, apparently this officer sees this photograph. Now, mind you, in this
photograph, I have a fake beard on, glasses, the whole get up. He sees this photo and he was like,
I think that's, I think I know who that is. And they're like, who is it? He was like,
that's Sean Marshall. And they're like, okay. How could you possibly?
and keep in mind I had put on 50 pounds since he had last seen me now there's certain facial features I guess maybe or that distinctive I don't know but he was like that's Sean Marshall but that's still not enough to get a arrest warrant but it's enough to give them an idea something to look into so they they researched that they put my name in the system they're like you know what he is on parole right now and this kind of fits his MO they're like let's go ahead and put his
mugshot in this lineup and take it back around to these businesses so they do that and but
it doesn't work to their benefits because they take it to all the banks and all these businesses and
no one can definitively say like yeah that's that's this guy there's a couple that are kind
of questioning like this guy kind of looks familiar but he had like they were trying to
frame a guilty man
So look, they go through this whole process, right?
And no one can definitively say like that's Sean Marshall.
There's a couple people that point to me and they're like, that kind of looks like him, but he had a full disguise on.
So that's still peeking their curiosity.
The old school resource officer now takes my mugshot in these bank surveillance photos to my old high school high school.
and has a conversation with the principal.
And he asks him, he was like,
who does this guy look like to you?
And apparently, as the story goes,
the principal is like, oh, that's Sean Marshall.
So the police are like, you know what?
I think we have enough to at least question him.
We don't have enough to arrest him clearly.
Right.
But we have enough to where we can pick him up and question him.
And that's exactly what they do.
They come and they, that day,
they had a whole tactical unit and whatnot following me throughout the streets and ended up pulling
me over in Denver because I'm staying in Denver at that time and at that time my girl and myself
were in the car when they pull us over and I know when they pull up behind me they don't have
any physical evidence like I'm not worried about that but what's going through my mind is that
someone in my crew because there were seven of us right and this string of robberies that I was
involved in, there were seven people
all together. So the first thing
that's going through my mind is someone got caught
and is now trying
to finger me and
implicate me in these robberies. So I'm like,
fuck, who got caught?
Not necessarily enough. That's still not.
It's not. You getting caught saying
Jimmy was with me.
Not enough. So I'm
panicking, right? I'm like, fuck.
I'm trying to play out all the possible scenarios
the police are behind me.
And, yeah, we end up getting pulled over.
And the last thing I tell my girlfriend is I'm getting out of the car.
I'm like, baby, they don't know shit.
Keep your mouth shut.
We're good.
Shut the fuck up.
And I was like, I get out, surrender to the police, play the role.
Long story short, bro.
They end up taking me and my girlfriend to the precinct.
and they end up getting her to connect me to a robbery and it snowballs from there.
I end up confessing to my role in all of it.
And they then at that point are now pressuring me to roll over on my accomplices.
They're like, well, we know there's six other people involved in this.
They're like, work with us, we'll work with you.
And I'm like, no, fuck off.
I'm not about to snitch on these people just to save my own hide.
I was like, I'm good.
So they're like, bro, you're about to go away for a long time.
You're on parole for a robbery and we're just arresting you for another string of robberies.
Like, you're done.
You have no wiggle room right now.
Like, you're either going to play ball with us or your life is over with.
And as enticing as it is in that moment to just be like, oh, man, fuck.
All right, it's Jim, John, and whomever.
I'm like, I can't do it, bro.
the fiber of my being
wouldn't allow me to roll over on my
accomplices. And I'm like, I'm not doing
it. I've been like, you have my cell phone.
I'll give you their phone numbers, bro. Okay.
Jimmy, Todd,
Todd lived with his mom.
Bill,
I mean,
fuck, I just got out of prison.
Can we spread this around?
Oh, so you're saying
there's 30 years.
Jimmy can do two.
Todd got five in them.
I couldn't do it, bro.
I could not do it.
For the life of me, I couldn't.
So they're like, bro, the difference between a fraudster and a guy that goes in a bank with a gun.
They're like, what?
I'm not even that close with Bill.
Yeah.
I never really light, Bill.
Be honest, will you?
Oh, man, I couldn't do it, bro.
I couldn't.
And I think for me, the big thing was this, and this is what it boiled down to.
The people that I would have been betrayed, they didn't deserve to be in prison.
Like, granted, they, they.
were involved in these activities
but in my mind
they were misguided
I had misguided them
and I felt a responsibility
with that the guilt that I felt
throughout all those robberies
and the reason why I was so careful
about how I was victimizing people
like in that moment as I'm being interrogated
I knew I'd fuck myself bro
and I knew that in the course of that
I had misled a whole bunch of people
and those people that were with me
they were just following my lead bro
this wasn't a kid anymore this wasn't little sean that was following his gang affiliates
and oh geez you know uh orders and footsteps this was grown as sean who had to be accountable
for his actions and i felt a huge weight in responsibility and i was like you know what
this is my fault i need to take this and i did and what ended up happening is i ended up
getting 45 years for that. Yeah, 45 years. And the reason it came to that is
throughout the trial, you pled guilty. I played guilty. And what led to that is that initially
the deal that was offered to me was like 30 to 65 years. And when the DA came to me during
that whole sentence in phase, I'm like, bro, you did a dick. I'm not, are you crazy? I was like,
I didn't even kill anybody like that. That's a life sentence.
I was like, I'll take a 20 year sentence.
I know I fucked up.
I know I deserve to be in prison.
But I was like, I'm not taking a 30 to 65 year deal.
That's crazy.
And for months went back and forth with the DA.
And the DA, all he kept saying is like, bro, if you don't roll over on your code
defendants, it's over for you.
I don't give a fuck what you're talking about.
And this is the only deal I'm putting on the table.
He was like, I know there are six other people involved in this.
So you either play with me or you're done.
And I still refused to do it.
And it got to a point where my lawyer at the time was able to negotiate what they call a mediation session.
And that's where a senior judge mediates between like the defense counsel and the prosecutor, kind of looks over the facts of the case and tries to help both parties come to a reasonable deal.
And during the course of that session, you know, the senior judge more or less just kept a real with me.
Sean, you're fucked. He was like, I'm not even going to sugarcoat this situation for you.
He was like, right now, your feet are cemented into the ground and the DA is like a semi
truck coming at you full speed. He was like, today you have a choice to make. You can either
die in prison. He was like, because if you take it the trial, because I was adamant about going
the trial, I was like, if you're going to give me a life sentence, I might as well get. Because
I was facing 100 to 400 years. That's how much they stacked those charges against me. Right.
There were like 10 plus armed robbery charges, each carrying a 10 to like 32 year sentence
on top of a simulated weapon menacing charge, whatever it was.
So in all, had I taken my case to trial the way that they stacked those charges against me
because all those sentences would run consecutively with each other.
Right.
So going to trial and losing, I'm facing 100 to 400 years, right?
he was like, bro, the senior judge is telling me, like, you're either going to die in prison because that's what's going to happen if you get a hundred years. He was like, even if you get the low end of that sentence, a hundred years, you can't do that. You're going to die in prison. And he was like, granted, you can take chances on appeal and hope that something goes wrong during the course of this trial and that you can come back and get resentenced or get your case thrown out. But he was like, that's rare. But he was like, that rarely happens. Right.
He was like, so today, you have to make a choice.
And I was like, today, he was like, today is the only time there were, this room, this
session that we're having.
They're like, today is when you need to decide whether you're taking this deal or not.
You can't meditate on this.
You can't think about this for any substantial amount of time.
This is it, buddy.
What's your lawyer, man?
My lawyer is like, Sean, take her the fucking deal.
Because the DA, he comes back after these conversations.
And he was like, I'll give Sean 45 years.
if he's not going to play ball with us 45 years is all I'm willing to give him but so my boys role
say it again you have parole but so 45 years a violent 45 is what they tried to give me to plea to
on that I would have had to serve 75% of it before being eligible for parole so they're trying to
get me to serve 30 years right in prison before I'm even eligible to be a free man and the judge said that
during the session. He was like, your choice today is a matter of choosing between dying
in prison or getting out to your grandchildren and living out your golden years.
Right.
I was like, what type of choice is that? And he was like, that's the choice you have, my friend.
And in that moment, I was like, you know what? Fuck it. Give me the 45 years.
signed off on the deal
and
that bro is what started a crazy journey
because in the beginning of that sentence
because this time I'm sent to Sterling
which is another treacherous prison
one of the worst in Colorado
and this is 2008
very political, very violent
but I don't give a fuck
this time I got muscles
this time I've been to prison I'm experienced
I know what prison life
entails. I'm suicidal. Don't give a fuck about much of anything. But what I just learned,
the night of my arrest, I find out that I have a child on the way. So not only am I having
to come to terms with this life sentence that I've just been given. I'm also wrestling with
the reality that I have a kid on the way. You know, my mom.
mom is as despondent as can be like yeah yeah her son twice now has thrown his life away
for what because she knows that's not me she knows the potential within me so she's i can only
imagine what was going through her mind at that time i know we're not talking there's a lot of
distance between us the only person that i'm really talking to at that time is my girlfriend um
But I'm suicidal, bro.
Like, when I first go to Sterling, all I'm thinking about is either escaping, like, literally escaping from prison.
And I'd already tried in the county jail.
I tried to escape.
But I'm now in prison.
I'm like, I'm either killing myself or I'm finding the way out of here.
That's the bottom line.
Like, I'm not doing this sentence.
I can't do this sentence.
I'm not going to die in prison.
And that first year or so that I'm in that prison, bro,
those are my only thoughts.
You know, I'm debating whether to kill myself.
I'm looking for ways out.
And finally, I'm approached by this group of prisoners that are in there that are serving
life.
And they had already come up with this crazy escape plot.
They're like, hey, bro, we know a way out of here.
You're trying to join?
And I'm like, hell, yeah, what's up?
And these dudes tell me this elaborate escape plot that they came up with.
And it's six other individuals.
and they had come up with this idea to hijack this canteen truck.
There's this massive truck that used to deliver our canteen that used to drive onto the property.
And they're like, bro, we're going to hijack the canteen truck.
We're going to stage a fake fight where the officers respond, distract them.
During that moment, we're going to go ahead, hijack this canteen truck, take a guard hostage, drive this truck through this electric fence because this prison that we're at.
It has an electric fence surrounding it.
They're like, well, getting better and better.
This is, Jesus.
Crazy, right?
Like, you're just racking up the charges.
Now I've got a, now I've, yeah, hostage.
I've got theft of the truck hostage and escape.
Like, shoo.
Ridiculous.
And probably attempted murder charges because who knows we were all willing to assault these officers
or whatever was necessary to incapacitate them.
So the idea is to drive the truck through the fence.
And in the parking lot, we're going to have another car parked where we have guns awaiting us.
We're going to have a change of clothes.
And then miles from the prison, we had another getaway car parked with cash, fake passports, whatever, all these fake identities.
That's this plan.
And we start getting all the pieces together in order to actually execute it.
And by the grace of God, bro, they unearth it.
the prison officials unearth it before things are actually executed.
And the reason they unearthed it is apparently the security intelligence officers at the prison
had gotten word that these different races were mixing on the yard.
Now, mind you, Sterling is very political at that time.
Like, you're not going to see whites kicking it with too many blacks.
You're not going to see blacks, Mexicans.
There's not a mixture of these different ethnicities.
So our group had that mixture.
You had some white supremacists in there.
you had a couple of black guys
and her gang affiliated. You had this
little Asian dude. So
we're the only time we would ever talk about
this escape plot is when we're walking outside
on the yard. So they're taking
note of that. They see this
eccentric, eclectic group
walking these laps
around the yard. They're like, what the fuck
is going on with that? And their first instinct is
either a riot is about to occur
or there's some type of drugs that are
about to get introduced into the facility.
So they get on the roof.
with these directional microphones, and they begin listening to our conversation, taking pictures,
the whole nine, building the case, and it gets to a point where they finally pluck us from
general population and add sec us, meaning place us in solitary confinement.
I spent years. I spent two plus years in solitary confinement behind that escape plot.
And the warden- Additional charges?
Well, the warden didn't even bother charging me.
because I, of the seven of us that were involved in that, I was the only one that had daylight.
And I remember the warden telling me, well, he told me two things.
When I first got sentenced to solitary confinement, he said this.
He was like, the warden that's going to let you out of solitary confinement hasn't even been born yet.
I was like, Jesus Christ.
And at that time, they could keep you in that solitary confinement for an indefinite period of time.
Right.
So I thought I was going to spend at least a decade in solitary.
the second thing he told me he was like i'm not even going to bother charging you he was like you're the
only one in this group that even has daylight and your daylight is 30 years from now he was like the
rest of these dudes have life sentences i'm not going to waste taxpayer money to try to criminally charge you
for what not when you're just going to probably get a few years for conspiracy charges he was like
i'll just put you in solitary for years sit down and think about it for a little while
bro, that's where I hit rock bottom.
And it was in solitary confinement, bro,
when I really had to come face to face
with the demon that I'd become,
the monster that I had been acting as for years now.
And I didn't like what I saw, bro.
I really didn't.
And the thing that really brought it home for me,
I remember a visit.
of mine that I received. I had been in solitary for about a few months now. My mom and I were
barely repairing our relationship. And my daughter had been born. She's an infant. And my mom
had brought my daughter up to see me. And in solitary confinement, there's no physical contact.
You have these visiting booths. There's a plexiglass window separating you.
Phones on other side of the window to where you can communicate with your loved ones.
And I remember my mom coming into that booth. I'm shableness. I'm shableness.
to this desk. And, you know, she's coddling my baby. And I just lied up seeing the two of them
because my mom had always been my world, my rock. And then I'm seeing this little girl that's now
an extension of me. And I remember my mom placing my daughter down on this desk and allowing her
to try to call towards me. And she finally comes across that window, bro, and starts patting on it
and trying to get to me.
And in that moment, I broke down, bro.
I broke down.
And I immediately, I mean, instantaneously had some major paradigm shifts.
Because in that moment, I finally felt the pain that my mom had felt and losing me to the streets and feeling what that separation from your child feels like.
In that moment, I finally realized like the far-reaching effect.
of my choices and how the choices I was making weren't just affecting me. They were affecting
my daughter. They were affecting my mom. And I was now realizing that because I think for so much
of my life, bro, I know that for so much of my life, I thought the things that I was doing
only affected my reality. There were rare moments where I really thought that what I was doing
was affecting my family or the shame that they were having lived with behind the choices I was
making. And I didn't think that anything I was doing was really harming anyone. But in that
moment with my daughter, you start thinking well beyond yourself. You start thinking about the
victims. You start thinking about this long list of people that you had hurt throughout the
years to get to where you are. Right. And I was like, boy, I'm done. I can't keep doing this
shit. And I made a vow to myself not only in that moment, but sometime afterwards, like, I can no
longer keep contributing to the problem. Like I have to start contributing to the solution.
And even though I had thrown my life away and it accepted now that I could probably die,
I would probably die in prison. I was like, you know what? That doesn't mean that I can't
establish a positive legacy for myself. I can still become an established artist. I can still
become a man that my daughter can be proud of. I can still become a man that my mom can be proud
of and the man that she raised me to be. And I can still go on to affect lives in a positive way.
And I was like, even though I threw away my life, I can now devote my life to maybe helping
to change others and maybe be that guy for the youth that my mentors were for me when I went
to Lyman, that first time I went to prison.
I was now one of those lifers.
Like, let me be that mentor for them.
Let me use my life as an example for others.
Let me use it as a cautionary tale.
And that began that journey, bro.
And in solitary confinement, I know.
ended up writing my first book, Changing Faces, which ultimately was for my daughter,
because I thought she would never get to know me personally.
Right.
And I wanted her through my own words to be able to see all that I am.
And that's why that book eventually came to be.
It took me about two years to write.
Is that like a biography?
I was going to say, is that a memoir?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it's a memoir that really details like all those masks.
That's why I called it Changing Faces.
because throughout my life, I've worn so many different masks, literally and figuratively.
And I really take people on that journey where they see all the transformations.
But it was in solitary confinement where I began to truly dissect myself.
And it was through writing that book that that process happened.
Because I had to really reflect back on my life, bro, and really understand why I had done all the things that I had done or why I had taken the paths that I had taken.
And, yeah, I spent about two years writing that book, and it was very cathartic because it did help me really understand myself, my motivations, and also the future and what could be in my potential.
And from that point forward, man, it just set me on this very positive trajectory.
I went on to write another book, to mentor various people throughout the system, teach various classes while in prison.
My art skills, I dealt deeply into that and really honed those and became a skilled painter and got to a point where I was now what my art mentor was to me back then at Lyman.
you know I was versed with various mediums um and 10 12 years into that sentence
I had found peace with my circumstance like I knew I did it was probably it for me
I didn't want to accept that reality but I came to terms with that I finally owned my choices
I own the consequences of that and I took full accountability of my life
And with that freedom, it allowed me to function very peacefully in prison, very constructively, even though I was in the depths of hell because I was at Sterling, Buena Vista.
Like, I had only done time at these hard, crazy penitentiaries. But in these dark hellholes, I was somehow managing to be a light to my peers. And 12 years into that sentence, organizations started hearing about my name and some of the positive things.
that I'm doing. And there was a particular lawyer that came across my name, Kristen M. Nelson
of the Sparrow Justice Center. She had taken an interest in me and initially just reached out
to me out of curiosity because she had kept hearing my name in various circles and eventually
wrote me a letter. And she was like, hey, I don't know if I can represent you, but I at the very
least want to talk to you and just kind of pick your brain. Would you be willing to meet me?
I was like, absolutely.
We end up meeting each other.
And within minutes of that meeting, Kristen is like taking it back and just kind of in awe.
And one can't believe that I'm still in prison because she's seen how much I've grown and moved beyond the darkness, right?
But she's just-
It doesn't mean a whole lot to the system.
It doesn't at all.
But in her eyes, she's tripping just on the surface of it, the sentence that I'd received.
She was like, you got 45 years for robbery.
She was like murderers are serving less time than that.
She was like many murderers in Colorado are serving half of that time.
She was like, this is not justifiable.
And she was like, I'm going to get you out of prison.
And she made good on that.
I mean, that's nice to hear.
But, you know, that's, yeah, okay, great.
But did you really, what did you think when she said it?
Did you think?
Was that like hope or were you just like?
It was hope.
And after looking into her name a little bit, because she's renowned, like she helped Brian Stevenson establish E.J.I.
She's had quite the career on death row out in Alabama, ended up coming out here and doing some extraordinary things and establishing her own organization.
So in doing that research, like I had a little.
bit of hope.
I was going to say that's such an impossible task.
Yeah.
I know how shitty the system is.
In clemency,
that's something that's so rare,
though.
There's only a select few people throughout time
that have ever gotten that.
So my problem with you getting clemency
is that keep in mind what the governor is being shown
that while in prison,
he took part in planning an escape.
Like this guy may have,
you know,
had the staff not been able to for you know thwart that that conspiracy he may have tried to
escape like you know they tend to not you know guys that go to prison say hey i got 45 years i'm
going to go ahead and just make the best of it and they follow the rules but the guys that go
there and then they get in trouble the whole time they're like yeah you're a lost cause
so the escape thing doesn't sound good not at all no not at all and that was something that
even Kristen was worried about when first arguing my case because she knew there were things
in my, man, I have a long history, bro.
My jacket is fucking thick and it's violent.
So it's not like this kid just did a little bit of things when he was young.
Like my whole jacket is some pretty extreme stuff.
And then the fact you add to that, that wall in prison, not only the first time, like I'm
violent, I'm fighting people, I'm harming them in some pretty extreme ways.
And then the second go round, I'm just trying to escape from prison.
I had actually grabbed a guard during that escape from attempts in the county jail that we didn't even talk about.
Right.
Like very violent history, bro.
So I know that on paper, anyone that's looking at that, especially the governor's office, it's a wonder to me that they even took any thing Kristen was saying seriously.
Like, no, this dude, get the fuck out of here.
This dude's a minister to society.
I'm not about to give this dude another chance
to fuck you're talking about.
And that's probably what the initial thought was.
But there were so many people
that had gotten behind me throughout the years.
We're talking about correctional officers
that had written letters of support,
character reference letters.
Like that's unheard of, bro.
And there was more than 10 of them
that had written one for my clemency packet.
You had these big organizations
that I had connected with DUP
being one of them.
And I'm helping them produce a podcast.
like the change is inarguable like there's nothing they can point to to refute that this change
is real and even though they have all this dark stuff that they can point to on my past they're like
there's no justifiable reason why this dude is still in prison well you'd also know by the time
they went for the clemency you'd also had a long span yeah okay yeah 10 years had passed
because I got I was at sec for that escape stuff in 2009 and spent two years in isolation and we're now at 2020 2021 and these conversations are being had so it's a whole decade that has passed since this escape plot it's a decade almost of positive maturation and they see all this mentorship and growth and all these positive strivings they're like
This is real.
Like, he could be faking this, but that's a hell of a fucking fraud.
Plus, listen, it's a hell of a lot of time you already spent it.
It's not like you were in six months and they gave you fucking clemency, bro.
It's not like you didn't already do a chunk of time.
So by this time, what is it?
12, 14 years in, the governor's office is now seriously considering whether to release me.
And at one point, his representative comes and visits me at the prison,
to kind of fill me out, bet me, ask pertinent questions, and then, yeah, not too long after that,
I'm getting a call from the governor's office. It was December 22nd or so of last year. I'm getting
the call from the governor's office, and they're like, Sean, you're going home. And January 31st
of 2023 is when I was released after having served 14 years on that 45-year sentence. And what's
crazy as had I not received clemency, I would have had to serve another 20 years or so
before I was even eligible for parole.
That's nuts.
Crazy.
Crazy.
Bro, you, I don't know what it's like laying there thinking, like, you don't even think, like,
you must be still, and it hadn't even been a year.
You're still, listen, you're still walking around in a day's, right?
Oh, absolutely.
Every day is surreal right now, bro.
this is beyond my wildest imagination, especially all that I've achieved thus far.
It took me six months before, you know, around 3.30, you start feeling uncomfortable because
it's 4 o'clock count. I mean, I don't know what it is in the state, but you had to be,
you know, standing in your cell at 4 o'clock for count, like about 3.30, 345 for about 6 months,
I felt like, I need to be something. Like, I felt anxious. Like, I'm, I need to get. I didn't even know
where I need to get. I know I'm not in prison.
I need to get somewhere.
Like, I need to, listen, for six months,
I kept thinking they were going to come knock at the front door and be like, listen,
we fucked up.
I would have been, honestly, for the first three months, I'd have been like, I knew you.
I knew it.
I knew you.
That's why I didn't unpack my shit.
I knew it was too good to be true.
Yeah.
That's why my stuff still in boxes.
I knew it.
I didn't get rid of my sweat.
I still got my sweats.
Yo.
Oh, man.
You must be going through it right now.
It's crazy, bro.
it's a good feeling. And the difference between now and back then is that humility piece of
it. Yeah. You know, you hit it on the head when I was talking about that release the first time
I was too prideful. Now, I had been humbled. God humbled me in some remarkable ways. This
go around, bro. And, you know, coming out into the free world this time, like, I'm taking it
one step at a time. I'm trusting in myself. I'm trusting in God. I'm trusting in this
path that I'm on and I'm just looking at my North Star and allowing that to guide me
through life. And I'm just enjoying the journey and everything that comes with it.
Yeah. You're going to get me all upset. Um, oh yeah, I'm serious, bro. I get all fucked up. You know,
13 years like, hmm. Yes. That's, you know, and, and, you know, it is, listen, like, I'm a
narcissist, bro. It's so hard for me to be humble.
and appreciative you know like i have to constantly remind myself like hey you get a hold of yourself
bro you're lucky to be here yeah you know it's tough like it's um but definitely the humble because
you know listen i'm anything but humble so it's it's it's tough like i keep having to remind
myself of that because otherwise i'd be a lunatic that's the hardest part that humility yeah
Yeah, that's good, bro.
That's a good, that's a good story.
Thank you, brother.
And it's still continuing.
This is the newest chapter.
Where are you working?
Right now, well, I tattoo full time.
Okay.
I also work at a place called the Denver Dream Center and the beauty of what I get to do here.
I mean, we do a lot of community engagement and we help the city in various ways from feeding the homeless.
We work closely with the,
Denver Police Department in various ways, but the piece that I enjoy most about what I'm able to do is
the youth mentorship. And then we also have an internship program that we offer up to guys that are
in halfway houses and that are transitioning out of prison. And we literally get a walk side by side
by these individuals as they're reintegrating back into society. We get to help better that
transition, offer resources to them, and give them the guidance that they truly need to be
successful. And that's what I do part-time. And it's another thing that keeps me humble because
seeing that, seeing the desperation of some of these guys, because while I'm an anomaly in the
sense that I'm very blessed, both, the support system that I have and the opportunities that
have been presented to me post-prison, it's rare. Most of us that are coming out of incarceration,
especially after having served that much time,
it's scarce resources, bro.
It's not a lot out here for them.
And unless they really took it upon themselves
to grow mentally,
to acquire the skills and resources to be successful,
like it's a very hard fucking journey.
And I see that every day.
I see the desperation.
And when you see that and when I see where I could have been
or where I could be,
it's a constant reminder of how I need to count,
my blessings. I need to count my blessings and I need to pace myself and I just need to appreciate
what's in front of me because it's not something that many are afforded. Yeah. Well, I mean,
one, you know, now I understand, you know, I didn't realize you just gotten out. Yeah. Like,
I thought you'd been out for a few years at least. So I remember when I looked at your Instagram page
on the tattoos, I thought, man, you don't have anything on here. He's got, he got maybe 20, 30 tattoos.
Like, that's it.
And they're all good.
They're all great tattoos.
But I was like, boom, boom, done.
Now it makes sense.
Yeah.
It's like, yeah, I guess there's what is.
It's probably, I don't know, if it's 20 or 30, not a lot.
But there's not a lot on Instagram.
Go to my Facebook, though.
Because all my posts are on Facebook.
So you'll see a whole bunch more on there.
But the point is like, I'm just, I'm just, it's still old school.
It's still old school.
My daughter gives me shit behind that all the time.
I'm like, you're old, man.
Nobody uses that.
Yeah.
Yeah, and the mural's great.
You know, I saw, I, I, I, I just saw one thing where there was a mural, one post where there was a mural.
But that was great.
Yes.
Thank you.
Okay.
Yeah.
This is, this is all making more sense now.
Yeah.
So, okay.
Did you the tattoos?
thing your um you are you actually mentoring anybody or are you just work there for now no absolutely
so so much of what we do involves mentorship so we just had a program this summer that
we ran uh for the youth um and there was a handful of kids that we got to work closely with
teach mark skills give them the life lessons and impart the wisdom that i wish i would have had imparted
when I was their age, because the target group was 13 to 17 at risk involved in all the wrong stuff.
Right.
So we got to work with these kids for about eight weeks, get them painting, get in teaching them the life skills and just pouring into them, loving them, trying to guide them.
So that was just an aspect of piece of what we do here at the Dream Center.
Like that's all we're about community.
We're about building relationships.
Is that where you are right now?
yeah that's where i'm at currently okay yeah well um so listen if you send me your your uh you send me
like your links to your social media and to the dream center yes sir to the dream center you know
i i'll put that in the description box absolutely yeah that's a good story thank you my brother
yeah it's a good story because it's actually got a decent ending you know i mean i know you're saying
it's not ending, but, you know, if you had to end it, walking out of prison is a pretty good
ending. Absolutely. Especially after the grave I dug for myself, because, you know, this is a true
testament to like God's mercy, bro, because I don't deserve to be out here. Yeah. The lives that I
destroyed, the path that I once walked, I left a lot of destruction in my wake, bro. And I think
that's why I came to terms with the reality that I could potentially die in prison. Because I was
like, you know what? I did a lot. I've done a lot. And I didn't even sit my eyes down.
The system already made the decision that you're supposed to do minimum 30 years. Yeah.
You know what I'm saying? So it's not like you say. And the worst thing is, I used to always say the best thing about being in prison was that I put me there.
I knew guys that like shouldn't have been there. Like that would have been the worst. You didn't even do anything and you ended up in or you got a sentence that was so over.
harsh for what you did because I knew guys that were the prosecution's coming in offering them
three or four years and they go they're like fuck you I didn't do anything I you know I was
being scam too and went to print went to trial and got 17 years yeah like damn you shouldn't
even be here so that's the worst at least I deserve to be there you know what I'm saying
you're in the same situation you're like you put you there yeah I can't even bitch yeah
I can't even, I can't even point to somebody to be like, that guy's an asshole.
That guy, I'm the, I'm that guy.
So, yeah.
Yeah.
You got me all upset, bro.
But listen, I'm, I'm kind of a pussy.
So I want you to feel bad, you know.
It's just, all right.
Man, this is, listen, this is a good story.
Thank you, brother.
Yeah, I definitely, definitely send me the social media links.
And any photo, if you can give me a photo or something, well, we can talk about that.
Let me, let me wrap this up.
Is there anything else you want to say?
Are you good?
Man, I just appreciate, yeah, absolutely.
I just appreciate you taking the time to sit with me and to get this story out there.
I'm not big one.
It's crazy because I'm constantly telling my story through various ways, through literature,
through these podcasts, through interviews.
And it's interesting because I never like to do that.
Like, I've never been one to just put myself on a pedestal or talk, highlight my journey.
I'd rather just do and allow my actions to speak volumes.
But I feel like this is, I've come to understand this is a necessary part of my journey.
Because in us telling our stories, in us reflecting back on some of these past mistakes,
like we could potentially be helping save lives, bro.
you don't know who you're going to touch exactly and i wish that again i can't say it enough i wish
we had people like us when i was younger when i was making those critical decisions
and that's the only reason i highlight the story is not to glorify because most of the shit that i've
done in my life i'm not proud of uh and i wish i could take it all back a lot of it i appreciate
how it's molding me into who I am now, but I'd have to step on a lot of people to get
where I'm at. And for that, like, there's just a regret and shame that I'm going to constantly
have to live with because of that. So I just try to use this story as much as I can
and try to use it as a cautionary tell. So people can see the realities of the criminal life
and a lot of the decisions that come with that
or the gang life
or the violent life that I once led
because it's a dead and road
no matter how you look at it
no matter how much the thrills
and highs may feel
good in the moment the shit doesn't last
and never does right
and there's only two things that are promised
to those that want to devote
to devote themselves to that path
it's either imprisonment or the grave
and that's the bottom line
Hey, if you like the video, do me a favor, hit the subscribe button, share the video.
Check the description box for any of the social media links for Sean and the Dream Center.
Also, I'm sure there's probably a way to donate money.
You should probably do that.
And I really do appreciate you guys watching.
See you.
I grew up.
I was actually born in Washington State.
My parents moved back here when I was about three.
my dad was from Washington State,
farm boy from Washington State.
My mom ironically worked for the FBI.
Nice.
And they met up around D.C.
when my dad was in the service
and she was working for the FBI.
So at about three years old,
we moved out here
so she could take better care of her mom.
And been in South Carolina ever since most of that time.
Not your typical guy that you might have on a show like this
because I grew up with great parents.
Right.
solidly middle class um never saw my dad drunk you know mom might have a dacre and get giggly
but that's about it right um but i was just different you know i grew up and and was was curious
and all about all the bad things you know i was curious about drinking i was curious about drugs i
wanted to be a tyrant to some degree right something in me is wired that way um even now as
i'm trying to do better in life it's still just kind of wired that way i always look at
things with an angle about how I can lead the system.
Yeah.
So that's how it started out, you know.
Yeah, we were talking about that earlier.
We were just saying, like, you know, do you ever think about it?
Like, so I'm like, I think about fraud every day constantly.
It's just.
And we talked about this some because I did ARDAP while we were in prison, which is
the residential drug abuse program for those who don't know.
And we actually talked about that, how some people are just wired different.
differently. And their mindset is geared more toward criminality and getting around the rules.
You should have brought your book. I don't have it published.
Oh, okay. For me, it was more about just completing a project because I was one of those
guys that I've been an idea guy all my life. I've had so many ideas and tried so many different
businesses. But I was never able to have the focus to get all the way through it. Right.
What did you what did you think? I'm sorry. Just so we don't
What did you think of Ardap?
I thought if you're willing to go into Ardap and admit that you're the one that's causing most of your problems, then it's a fantastic program.
That's, bro, listen.
Fantastic.
You know, it's funny, like, it's funny because, like, 80% of the people that graduate are like, you know, oh, I fake my way through.
And you did.
And no doubt you did.
But the people that really work that program and have to really look at themselves and say, hey, I'm a scumbag.
I put myself here.
Nobody else did because everyone, you know, there's so many people that are blaming somebody.
Yep.
So, you know, that you put yourself here and you really look at it and you really say I've got to make some fundamental changes.
Like I had a program the other day where, I mean a podcast the other day where I was saying, I think everybody should have to take that program.
Like before you get out, you should have to take that program.
I agree.
I agree.
I think that there should be some kind of program, even if it's not necessarily R-DAP, you know, something that addresses.
is how you perceive the world because how you perceive the world is different than most people
do. Hardab wasn't even about drugs. To me, it's almost, it's really just about criminal thinking.
It really is. Or whatever, you know, thinking errors. I can't remember the term. We had terminology for
all that, though. Oh, that's great. That's great. Listen, Jess does it all the time. She'll say stuff
to milk. She'll go, oh, super optimism. Oh, she'll make these little, she'll make these little,
little comments. I'm like, don't, don't, don't do that. She's like, I'm just saying, I'm just saying,
you're awfulizing you know you're awful right brings back some memories i had even heard any of that
in so long but that's just yeah if you read this you'll die laughing because you know what i did i actually
pulled a bunch of my um my rsas so like every once in a while i'll throw an rsa in there oh yeah
listen like they're like like i wasn't trying to get the year off right i was trying i only went in
the program to stay in coleman so i literally did
seven months one time six months so i did over a year and something dropped out every time before
just to stay at colman but you learn so much about yourself if you're willing to do the work you do
you know but you got to be willing to do the work you really do because because a lot of guys
they do go through there and fake it right but if if you're willing to work on yourself you have every
tool available to be able to do that and when we got towards the end uh in phase three i became a senior
guide. And did you guys have senior guides? Yeah, yeah. They called them, you had like mentors and you
had big brothers. That's what they called. It's all the same thing. Everyone has a little
delivery, a little different terminology, but it's the same exact thing. Yeah. So when, you know,
I became a senior guide and I had to give a seminar. And at the very opening of my seminar and
everyone that I gave after that, I would tell everybody, say, look, you have an opportunity that
nobody else in the world has most people in the world anyway you have the opportunity to take
nine months and work on you all right and you have all the tools at your disposal to help you do
that so if you don't take this opportunity it's just because you don't want to on the street that's
a hundred 150 thousand dollar program absolutely like if you literally if your family was filthy rich
and they put you in some kind of a program like that it that's over a hundred thousand dollar easily
program and you're getting it for i mean granted you're incarcerated but you're there anyway you're there
anyway. I mean, you know what was funny? I would call my ex-wife. And like, I don't really see any
difference in me. You know, I'm not necessarily seeing this difference, but she, I would call her and she would go,
what's going on? What's wrong? What's this? What's that? And I go, what are you talking about?
She'd go, you called me up, you asked how my kids were. You know their names. You asked how her new
husband is. You asked about this. You asked about, we've talked. We've talked. We've talked.
almost 15 minutes and you haven't said anything about you and I'm like okay she's like usually
that's all you talk about is you like I didn't even know you knew my kids names right like and I was
like wow what a selfish prick like that it's so that that subtle change was so noticeable
to her it's yeah it's definitely it's definitely mind altering yeah I mean yeah and and people see
You know, they recognize, you know, it's like, it's like they say about people with, you know, some mental illnesses that take medication.
Your loved ones can always tell when you go off your medication.
Yeah.
They're the first ones to be able to notice.
Yeah.
So it's the same kind of thing.
But, yeah, RDAP was really how I got to where I am now because I came, I became a senior guide.
So for the third phase, which was the last three months of the program, you know, I was helping people.
And I remember one of the, what they call them, DTSs, the drug treatment specialist, he came to me and I was good with my living situation.
I was fine where I was.
And he's like, listen, I got this guy coming in.
And I think you could be a good help for him.
I think you guys will get along good.
You know, he's got some stuff he needs to work on.
I'm going to put you up in a room with him.
My first thought was, shit, man.
A problem.
You're giving them to me because he's a problem, not because you're trying to help me.
Yeah.
Not because you're trying to help me.
So got up there, met the dude.
He's a biker from Detroit, was a gang member in one of the biker clubs in Detroit.
But me and this guy hit it off like nobody's business.
We're still in touch now.
He's out.
I'm out.
I've seen him since we've been out.
Squirrel, what's up?
He, but he and I had some really good talks.
And he was in Ardap for the right reason.
And he wanted to do things differently.
Yeah.
And that was where I kind of.
got said okay this is what i want to do i want to be able to go out here and help other people
because one of the things that i was plagued with all my life was i always struggled with jobs
you know i'd work a job for a year and a half get pissed off at management quit because it was just
hard for me i always wanted to do my own thing so um shit no so you like you enjoyed helping him
it was the first time that you i get what you're saying yeah you were you liked helping him and
and it felt good and you felt like it was right for you yeah so that that's the path i've decided
to go down now and that's that's where i'm at um i spent 45 years being you talked about being
selfish and and just caring about yourself i was the same way i wrote my story up for something i think
i described myself as a taker yeah and that's really what i was i just whatever i could get something
from somebody i would do that so i made the decision pretty much in our adapt to spend the rest of
my life being a different kind of person yeah yeah i mean look it's it's it's you know it's funny it's
it's just life in general and we'll get into all that but so i can we can get we'll just get through this
and jump back because we kind of jumped ahead but the the truth is is that you know is that in prison
i definitely learned purpose like to me i know my purpose was just getting everything i wanted right
you know that was my purpose um and that you know i went to prison and then i realize well i really
enjoy, you know, I enjoy writing. I enjoy talking to other people. I enjoy talking about, you know,
what they've gone through. And I do, and I enjoy that. And unfortunately, the, the things and the
people that I find the most interesting are the people that have done, you know, that are, are, and
were involved in criminal activity. Right. But also having gone through that whole thing and learning,
I also realize that, like, I can't be, like, if you're doing, if you're doing dirt, you know, like,
Like, I can't be around you.
Like, if you did it and you got an interesting stories, like, to me, you're, you're an interesting person now.
You've had some experiences as a result of, as a result, you know, to the guy who, you know, worked a regular job.
Right.
And has, you know, have a wife and two kids.
You know, I wish I could have been that guy.
And I'm not, I'm not knocking that guy.
Like, I have, I know guys that will knock that guy.
Like, oh, yeah, he's not happy.
He's not.
Yeah, but I, he probably is happy.
He is, like, I wish I had been that guy.
didn't work out, but I always find the guys that had done crime interesting. But the truth is,
if somebody was currently doing crime, like, I don't want to be around you. Like, you did it,
you went through it, you learned something, you moved on. Like, that's an interesting person to
me. But the people that get trapped in it and can't ever move forward, well, now you're just
stuck in this rut. And, you know, if you're lucky, you figure it out. And if you don't, well,
then you end up dying in prison or, you know, or you end up, you know, you end up, you know,
on the street or something like it's it's never going to work out to you to your advantage no and
i think there's there's always those two kind of people in the world you know what i mean there's
there's the people that have gotten locked into that lifestyle i think that a lot of them have gotten
there because they just honestly don't know any better you know they they weren't raised with
any kind of manners they weren't raised with any kind of morals they just don't have that um i had a
sally one time right before i got out he'd been locked up for 24 years for manufacturing meth right
okay during the conversations we had he told me i can't wait to get out there i'm going to start
cooking meth again and i'm going to party hard one good time before i come back and basically
die in prison oh i with listen i i i i didn't know i don't know that guy but i know 50 or 100 guys
that are exactly like like literally you're listening to this guy work on his next indictment yeah it's
like you are right now working on your you haven't made it on the street you're already working on
you're already working on it yep so those guys are out there and most people never meet them no no because
they're always in prison yeah they'll make it out for six months to a year and they'll go right by if they make it out
the halfway house if they make it out of the halfway house we have one guy show up the halfway house
and within two hours to be in there he was in the bathroom smoking meth made it three days i think
I hate the laugh because it's really not fun, but I don't know what else to do.
You know, I can't cry about it.
It's like, I don't know the other person, but it's just like, what are you fucking thinking, bro?
Like, how good is that drug?
I don't know.
I don't want to find out.
No.
But, yeah, they're definitely out there.
And, you know, I work in recovery work now.
I'm a certified peer support specialist.
Right.
Which is like kind of like a low level, entry level counselor type person.
Basically, what they do is they use their.
life experience that they've overcome to help support others that are going through the same
kind of stuff. Yeah. So I've seen this. And one of the things that we talk about a lot is how
until somebody's ready, there's nothing you can do for them. You can plant some seeds. Let them know
that you're there when they're ready. Yeah. But until they're ready, they can't do anything.
It was the same way with me. I was drinking every day. I was waking up and drinking every day.
Everybody tried to talk to me. My parents, they tried to talk to me and my friends tried to talk to me.
but until I was ready to do it, nobody was going to get through.
Well, let's go back to, so you were, let's go back to, you know, the genesis of that,
which was, you know, you were in school, you went to high school.
Where'd you go to high school?
Went to high school.
South Carolina somewhere.
Upstate, upstate South Carolina, Spartanburg area, Greenville, Spartanburg's this town's up there.
Went to high school was constantly in trouble.
Right.
You know, not big trouble, just more shenanigans.
and a lot of it just being lazy and not wanting to do my work.
Right.
It's actually really interesting because I got awarded an award on senior awards night
because I was in the Deca Club, which was like business club, basically.
And they had competitions.
And I ended up going out to San Jose, California, to compete in the national competition
because I'd done so good at the district and state.
Right.
Okay.
So senior award night comes around.
I get an honorable mention and a little award for going and doing that.
next night was graduation i didn't graduate on time i didn't have all my units i didn't have
all my credits i ended up having to go to night school to get my diploma to be able to to do that
but um i've all i've always known not in an arrogant way that you know i'm i'm a smart guy
but i'm stupid in a lot of ways too or at least was yeah so um no i get i'm the same way
yeah i did that sometimes i'll work diligently on something for weeks and weeks and weeks
and super focused.
The problem is,
is typically when I do that,
I disregard everything else
that's keeping me going.
That's always been a problem for me.
Right.
No,
and I can totally get that.
So, got out,
1990, I graduated,
went into the Army.
My brother had been in the Army.
My dad was in the Army.
So it just seemed like a thing to do,
try to make things right,
go in the Army, do this.
I remember my parents
being a bit surprised
that I made it through
basic training they were so happy when i made it through basic training but um i ended up screwing that
up you know i ended up were you still drinking at that time or were you big drinking i wasn't really
doing it that much at that time i was 19 so it was just beginning okay but i went to germany in the
army ended up getting caught up in some shit there and and um got kicked out of the army um what was
what they had a we were in communications i was in a communications division
And over in the barracks at that time, they had these, what they called USA direct telephones.
Any button that you press would get you an AT&T operator and then you place either your collect call or your credit card call.
Well, being in communications, we figured out there was a little knob down there that you could switch.
And if you switch that knob, it would dial direct.
Okay. And so we did that.
And when I got called in, you know, I'm 19. I don't know what.
what the world's really like.
So I told him how it was done at the MPs or whatever.
And so because that happened, they blamed it on me,
gave me the rat for it, kicked me out of the army.
Okay.
Was it an honorable dish or dishonorable or was it just?
It's like right in the middle.
There's honorable and mine was other than honorable.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it wasn't quite general, but it was.
So anyway, I miss out on veteran benefits and whatnot.
So, but the bigger point is that this was,
a life pattern of just, you know, going a year or two.
Yeah, I would go a year or two and be able to keep my shit together.
And then being the key self-sabotage, I would just blow it all up for no particular reason.
Right.
So you go back to the States.
So what happens?
Come back to the States.
Fall in with my same old friends.
We're out partying all the time, this and that and the other.
Always having that criminal mindset, we were always looking at stuff.
You know, how can we do this?
How can we do that?
about three years after I got back
maybe two and a half three years after I got back
me and a buddy of mine
ended up doing a burglar at a restaurant that we worked at
or he worked at
so I got in trouble for that
did a little probation it was the first real trouble I'd ever been in
so it wasn't too bad but got a little probation
did that and then
so you did the burglary
I mean you didn't turn yourself in like the cops arrested you
Did you get caught in the middle of the burglary or just something led to you?
No, it led to us because they figured it out pretty quick.
Yeah, they did figure it out pretty quick.
There was some things said.
I think we'd been drinking that night, actually, when we did the burglary.
So it was pretty sloppy and whatnot.
Right.
So.
Oh, I know a guy who broke into a guy's house.
Yeah.
Stole his wallet, went and used all of his wallet, used all of his credit cards, broke back in the house to put the wallet back and left his ID.
his ID in the guy's hat like yeah that's that's ridiculous yeah I mean it's funny you know
like we were talking about adrenaline gets going you get all excited you get you know you just you just
fuck up yeah yeah you do so we did on that one we got busted and whatnot and um it wasn't too long
after that it was that was about 92 93 I think and uh I just kept partying you know party doing everything
drinking pot acid used to love acid did a lot of acid back then that was in my book there's a
little bit about that that um all the acid used and whatnot but anyway so about 1995 i was with
this girl and i kept throwing this idea at her of of robin bank said either one of was wanted to
work we want to just keep partying so 1995 november and december 1995 i finally convinced her
to jump in on a bank robbery.
So we talked about this, like the genesis of that idea was point break.
That was as much of an inspiration for me to do that as anything else was.
I must have watched that movie 20 times.
I can quote you all kinds of stuff.
It's a great movie.
It really is a great movie.
I feel bad.
Like, Connor has no idea what point break is.
Even if he does, he only knows the new version, which is.
nothing compared to the old one the year with with kiana reeves bro when he was
Patrick Swayze yeah young and then um was the other guy then was it Nick um wasn't
Nick Nolte what's the Gary Busey Gary Bucy yeah Gary Bucy was his partner in there I feel bad for
you bro like the new movies are there's nothing compared to the whole movie nope no no
great movie there were great movies came out in the 80s and 90s the dead presidents
that were in the mass they're doing the
robberies like
yeah that listen
I'll bet you that movie
got thousands of banks robbed
thousands of them
it made bank robbery look so
fucking sexy yep and it
and it did you know that's what all those movies did
um
yeah up until everybody starts getting shot and killed
and falling out of planes and it's fucking
yeah people always forget that they do forget
that I love crime movies I always forget about
the part when they go to jail for fucking 20 years
I don't you know that's not gonna happen
at me that happens in the in the in the
A&NNED groups, they call that play in the tape all the way through.
You got to play it through all the way to the end, not just the good parts, too.
I suffer from super optimism.
Yeah.
I suffer some super optimism as well, you know.
I never wanted to face the consequences of what I did, but I was like, I can do this.
I can do this.
I'm smarter than them.
I'm better than them.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, me too.
That's what all of us think, isn't it?
Yeah.
Right up until the judge says fucking 26 years.
Yeah.
Then it's like, I was off.
Like somewhere.
I have time to think about it now, though.
Yep, somewhere I got off on my path.
So, yeah, we were just hanging out, partying all the time.
And she was working a little bit here and there, but, you know, money runs out.
We didn't have anything.
And we kept talking about it late night, drug fuel conversations.
And after about a week, she was like, okay, let's do it.
I'll drive the car.
You're going to go and do everything.
So I went by Walmart and got a devil's mask.
and put it on and had her pull up to the bank.
I thought about all this all the way through.
You know, I planned it and thought about it.
I watched point break about 20 more times
and realized you couldn't go into the vault.
You just had to stay at the drawers up front, you know?
Kill time at the vault.
So we talked about it for about another four or five days.
And then we went and did it.
And the first one we did,
um how did you know what bank did even rob like did you i lived in this apartment complex and across
the street there was a a bank that had a unique setup it was just the perfect setup there was
privacy fences on three sides of the bank and then on one side of it was a shopping center
and then it was at a big intersection where the roads uh crossed like this there was a little
shopping center right here convenience store right here and
the bank was right here with three privacy fences around it and a residential area behind it.
I'd been looking at it.
Ever since I moved in the apartment, I was like, that'd be a great bank to Rob.
So we went and did that.
And she dropped me off.
She pulled up to the convenience store that was at the corner, killed 15, 20 seconds,
because I'd already timed it all out how long it was going to take me to do everything,
you know, unless something went awry.
And so then I ran through the shopping center to the other road,
and she pulled up perfect timing pick me up and we will get out of there um well you missed
the bank robbery part what i mean you went in the way you went i wasn't going to talk about all that
no i'm just so um wow it's i haven't really recounted it i guess in really specific terms you know
since then so uh forgive me if i'm a little slow sometimes no i i'm just curious because like
Because, you know, and we've talked about this, you know, off, like, this is, you know, I've talked to guys who do podcasts and they're always like, like, I've had guys actually say, well, I don't usually want to talk, talk to the guests, you know, before the podcast. And it's like, really, because I'm like, oh, I always thought, oh, that's rude. You're being a jerk or whatever. But the truth is is that, like, we had a great discussion. Sure. About adrenaline, about, like, you know, going in, like, and that's what I'm wondering about is, like, going up to, like, me walking into, like,
a bank with fake credentials and everything.
I have a certain, you know, the whole thing.
You know, the adrenaline, you walk in.
I know certain things.
I mean, I'm just wondering, like, were you, did you think about changing your mind?
Like, were you, when you're walking towards that bank, are you just like, like, tunnel vision?
That's it.
Okay.
So it's like, tunnel vision.
I'm doing this and that's it.
Yep.
Yep.
I had tried to do it a couple times myself and honestly pulled up in front of the bank.
was just like tried to sight myself up whatever no just can't do it um so i think it was having
somebody else involved maybe that that pushed me to go do it um so we pull up she had went in
uh maybe four or five days earlier to just do something fake to see if they had a security guard
or not so we knew there wasn't a security guard so i didn't have to worry about that it's a
fairly small bank there was like maybe two three tellers i don't remember because i had a ton of
vision the whole time. So two, three-tellers, you know, one person in the office, something like that.
Um, got my devil's mask on. I got, I got a hoodie on so that I can cover myself up completely had on
dishwashing gloves actually because the, the vinyl gloves weren't that big of a deal yet.
You know, you get in the boxes that they've got now. Right. Um, so I dishwashing gloves because
they would grip money. Good. Um, I wanted to have everything covered so I wouldn't leave any hair,
DNA, anything like that. Um, this is going to make it. Funny.
And the funniest thing is I used to BB gun.
Are you real?
An unloaded BB gun.
I knew I was going to shoot anybody.
I didn't want to hurt anybody.
I know, I know a guy that that used a, use a pellet gun and fired the pellet gun in the middle of the robbery.
He said his adrenaline, he was yelling, people weren't getting down fast enough.
He was, so I pulled the trigger and it ricocheted off the ceiling and hit a woman in the, in the calf.
And she screamed, ah, I've been hit.
And she falls down and he said, he panics and runs out of the bank.
Never got any money.
He's like, oh, my God, I shot her.
It's like, how did you think you shot her?
You had a pelican.
It's like, I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I wasn't seeing straight.
You can't think when you're doing that.
I mean, it all is a blur.
I mean, it really is.
You know, at that time, I was 23 years old.
I've been watching point break.
You know, I go in like a gangbuster, got this gun, devil mask.
I'm all hooked up.
I go over.
the counter just go straight over the counter right and start waving the gun around i think i had a
pillowcase at the time to put the money in dilly's up of money blah blah blah blah did that jump back
over the counter and was gone you know were you worried about die packs or anything like that um
not really um i had a friend of mine one of the guys that i got in trouble with during the burglary
um we had talked about doing a whole lot of things and his mom was actually a bank teller okay so
When we started getting into doing some of this kind of stuff, he started talking to his mom and asking questions to find out, you know, what was what?
So we knew about what diapacks look like.
They're a little bit thicker and they're heavier than a regular stack of money.
So I knew kind of how to identify them, but mostly I just wanted to see if I could do it, I think, at that point.
So went in there, vaulted the counter, had them fill the bag up, got out.
that's that when you said tunnel vision that was really about the best way to describe it um when you
start going in there that's your sole mission and in my mind you've got to get away yeah yeah so
if there's a pile of shrubs or whatever out there you're going through that shit yeah um so
you're going through over under yeah yeah no matter what uh and i've also come to the conclusion
that fear will outrun anger.
If somebody's mad at you and they're chasing you and you're scared of them,
you're probably going to run faster than they are because you're going to get that adrenaline going.
So when you go in the bank, I mean, like the, it's just a bunch of tellers.
Like they immediately just go in the drawers and just start handing it over the money right away.
Like that nobody puts up a fight, nobody says anything.
Nobody just runs, nothing.
They just, they can't stand there in shock.
Oh, they stand there in shock for a second.
So you kind of have to prod them along, you know, tell them, do it now.
you know right put it in here so because they'll just stand there in shop until you
guide and they're like they're they're they're they're trained to don't give the guy any
or just give them the money immediately it's not your money give it to them get them out of the bank
like they wanted to get you out of the bank before something happens to us customer or right and that
was one of the things that I found out from that friend of mine who talked to his mom was that they
are trained to do whatever um in fact one of the ones that I did I carried in a walkie-talkie with me
and I told them I said don't hit the alarm I
I got a police scanner, and I'll know if you do.
Right.
I didn't know it until later after I got arrested and everything.
When I looked at the paperwork, I found out that they did not hit the alarm.
Right.
They waited until I left and called 911.
So if I would have gotten to do any more, if I would have had that knowledge,
I would see if I could make them cook like a chicken or something, you know?
Just something off the wall, just to see.
So you got the money and you're out of the bank.
Out of the bank.
We take off.
We'd found a route that would get us quickly to another town.
and her friend worked as a bartender in Appleby's.
So we said, we'll get there as quick as we can.
Right.
And then she'll swear we were there the whole time at Appleby's hanging out.
So we did that and went and had a couple drinks just for appearances.
And we went back out of the car and started looking at everything.
What year was this in?
1995, November of 95.
Okay, because there's no, it's not like there's cameras on every, right now.
There's cameras just everywhere.
Everywhere.
I mean, they can walk around.
They can do a small perimeter and find somewhere,
they've got your tag number.
Somebody, some business, some place has a tag number or something.
Yeah, but back then we didn't have to worry about that.
You know, they weren't even on the outside of the banks.
So I had her pull right up to the front and drop me off at the door.
So we got home and we went through the money and we had $5,000.
Yeah, yeah.
I heard that like the average bank robber gets $3,500.
Like that's the average or something like that?
It's not very high.
No.
I mean, that was, that was, I heard that, by the way, I heard that before I even went to prison.
I don't know if it's higher now, but five grand.
Yeah, got five grand.
I was mad as hell.
Not going to lie.
I'm like, man, we just robbed a bank.
We got $5,000.
You're looking at like, with a gun, because it doesn't matter that it's a pellet gun.
At that time, it did.
Oh, it did?
Yeah, the law had changed since then.
Because it in like seven years, like minimum, you're getting sold like seven.
Just for a gun.
Yeah.
Back at that time, it was just counted, I think, as a weapon.
But it wasn't considered a firearm because it has to be propelled by an explosion.
Right.
so yeah we're mad as hell you know we got five thousand dollars that goes pretty quick in any
kind of world and if you're partying it goes even quicker yeah so a month to the day a month
December 7th 1995 um we found another bank we were going to do and this your girl's down
she's down for anything bro that's yep she was because she's robbing the bank she's probably
thinking no no i'm just driving the car no no you're kidding
charge you're bank robber conspiracy to rob a bank the way they've got it turned is a hand in one
is a hand in all yeah so if you have anything to do with it you're all the way in but yeah she was
she was as dumb as i was so so we ran through that party and you know just that's not an exciting
story at all so we found the second one and we went to do it and it was set up a little bit
differently. So there was a big parking lot for a grocery store and a couple little stores
beside it. And there was a couple of trees over there. So she was going to go parking the
parking lot. And I was going to hit the bank and then go over to the parking lot and get in the
car. Went into this bank. Same way. I think I had a little bit of supervillain in me and wanted to be
notorious. So I wore the same devil's mask as I did in the first one. Nice. So yeah. Make sure there's
link there right you gotta do that because it does see it does seem cool to have a theme you know
it does you know i wanted to be the joker or something so in the movie it's in the movie version
it's cool but in reality it's like i really want to do this vastly different right they catch me for one
they got me for one yeah yeah so but i get it i'd have done the same fucking thing yeah you know
so did that went in um did the same exact way had you know the mask hoodie gloves had the
begun, vaulted the counter like I did before, and jumped over the counter and told them fill the
bags up. They fill the suitcase or the pillowcase up. And I thought about that $5,000. And I said,
this ain't right. Where's, where's the big money? Where's the other money? Well, as it turns out,
the, they've got a top drawer, which is the till, like you'd have a grocery store or something.
Yeah. There's a drawer underneath it. This got all the banded money where they can refill their
drawer. So I was like, yeah, put all that in here too. So they put all that in there. I take off out of
there. And there was, as I run out the back door of the bank and go this way, I ran by the
drive-thru. And there was a woman in the drive-thru sitting there gawking at me. So I ran up to her car
and I tapped on the window. And I was like, you got to go. And she just looked at me and I said,
go and she beat feet out of there. I still don't know to this day if that's the person that
followed us, but somebody followed us from the bank. Went back to a friend of mine's house that I was
staying with at the time, dropped my car off and got her car, switched everything over, went to her
house to do all the count of the money. So we get back there and I took all the money into the
bedroom and was sitting there starting to go through it and count it had pencil and papers
right everything now i'm all excited you know yeah this is going to be a lot better than five thousand
dollars yeah you know all that i get started with it it's a great big pile of bed and i'm all happy
and whatnot and she comes walking there and she's like hey baby there's a cop car outside
i was like just one she said yeah i said okay well if it's just one that's fine and she said uh
now there's two shit you know so well
Sweetie, you're going to have to take this money and go out there and just admit what you did.
So, of course, being the...
I'm going to put money on your books.
I'll stay out here.
I'll stay out here and take care of you.
Exactly.
Yep.
So we said, you know, we're just sitting there stunned for a moment.
And her sister lived next door to us.
It was family land and all that.
So we get a phone call and it's her sister.
And she's like, there's people from the FBI over here saying that y'all are
property bank and need to come outside, which I already knew once we knew there was two cops out
there. That's over. I know, but you have to, you have to admit, like, even when things were going
wrong in my case, there was still this little part in me that said, it's a coincidence. It's not,
they're not going to figure it out. It's not like, it's up right up until you hear the voice and they
say it. It's like, then it's just like, there's just makes it real. It's so real. It's like suddenly
It's so real.
There's just, at least before there was a 1% chance.
Yeah, that sliver.
Well, my philosophy when I planned these things was always that if I can get away from the bank, you'll be all right.
I'll be fine.
Yeah, but now you've got this money with bands on it.
Yeah, that wouldn't, that didn't mess us up.
I mean, there was.
I would think the bands could be tracked back to that bank or something.
Like, I mean, I would think something I would be concerned.
Well, we got caught on that one.
yeah yeah no no that's what i mean i'm saying like if you're i thought you were trying to say
that i figured even if they caught me when i was away from the bank i could still say that wasn't me
but but not if they've got the bands on the money yeah no i'm still thinking you're still in the
right okay yeah um so you know they asked you to politely come out they ask us to probably come
out i go and look out the window and by that time there's like 10 12 cop cars out there and
they're all behind their cars with guns out because they think we got a gun because that
a BB gun yeah so they think we're armed and dangerous and that's when i decided i wasn't ready
to die yet i wasn't going to run out there and a hail of bullets because that was my idea was
fuck it i'm not going to let him take me alive um yeah that's that's that's a bunch of macho
bullshit so the what was it sundance uh what's name the sundance kid butch cassidy
it sounds it's beautiful it's a it's very romantic it is yeah yeah only if you get to leave
that theater afterward that definitely helps so
We sit there for maybe three or four minutes, and like, what are we going to do?
What are we going to do?
Well, stupidly, we hide the money and mask and everything under the bed.
They'll never find it there, right?
This is here when we got here.
We've been set up.
Yeah, right.
So we go out and surrender, you know, and that was really all we could do.
They charged us with two banks.
I got 63 months, I guess.
so five years got into the federal system in 96 and it was a completely different federal system back then
too they were they were kind of phasing out the club fed days right you know so it's still kind of
sweet yeah but not as sweet as it was maybe five or ten years earlier um so that was the first time
yeah um back in 95 and 96 um didn't do much in there really just you know where'd you go uh so
spent most of it at butner up in north carolina um i signed up just to kind of break my time up to
go to the drug program and they sent me to lexington kentucky for that was that ardap mm-hmm oh okay
yeah it was i'm not even sure if they called it ardap back then but it was something okay
it was it was an intensive residential drug program all right so i went up there didn't like
it purposefully pretty much flunked out just messed with the dTSs and after we're like yeah
get out of here. So I went back to Butner and finished it up there.
Got out, met a girl, got married, bought a house, was doing great. Everything's fantastic for about seven years.
And I think it was that memory of prison that kept me on the straight and narrow for a little while,
I tried to build something. And then one day, about 2007, I was just like, this isn't what I want.
I'm leaving. Left her, gave her the house, said, I'm going.
I'm out. So I went off and that started a whole other spade of just partying all the time,
you know, jumping into this, relationships, whatever. I was good for 16 years. And that's how long
it stuck with me, I guess. And then I got into another situation with the girl. And what were you
doing for work at this time? Like warehouse work, menial general labor stuff, really, you know.
like I said before
I always had a problem
with the job
because I knew
that they were just using me
to make money
for themselves
and get themselves rich
and I always thought
enough of myself
to think you should be
the guy up there
at the top
that's you
then you gotta work
and work your way up there
you do
or you really do
or you hit the lottery
or you have to have
a rich family member
rich parents will help
but you don't have any of that
and you work your way up
yep you got to work your way up
but at that time
I wasn't willing to do that
so
I worked all jobs here
in there tried business ventures with friends and whatnot but when you're partying all the time that's your
yeah yeah that's your your your mission you're not you're doing this to be able to pay for partying yeah
you know so nothing ever went anywhere had had good ideas and had a lot of people that supported what
i was trying to do but i didn't have the follow through and whatnot to be able to pull it together
so yeah i've shot myself in the foot quite a few times too man i'm telling you dude i'm like
i'm like the world master of self-sabotage um and that's one of the things that's
that I'm most aware of now of anything else is before I make any kind of big decisions,
make myself stop and think about it for a minute.
Do an RSA.
Huh?
Do an RSA.
Do an RSA.
I can't remember what it stands for.
What is our rational self-analysis?
Rational self-analysis.
I remember doing those damn things all the time.
Good Lord.
But that's what a lot of people need.
They just need you have to stop for a minute and think about what you're doing.
Normal people do that.
Like they don't necessarily need it
You know fuckups need that
Like I need that
Because I'll take the shortest route
And but like a normal guy
Who's lived a good life and has
And his thought processes are normal
He just naturally does it
So he doesn't understand how you came to your
Your analysis of the situation
You know
Because you immediately snap or I snap
Or I immediately say the first thing
Where these guys are a normal person's like
Well I'm gonna say this
But if I say this this will happen
And that'll happen and this will happen
But if I do this, then this is that.
And that's what I want to happen.
So I'm going to do this.
Yeah.
I don't do that.
Well, I do now.
But normally it's bucket.
Let's fake it.
Let's change this.
Let's fix this.
Let's do this.
Call so-and-so.
I'll verify the employment.
Like, I immediately go fraud.
I immediately think this is the easiest, quickest way to get what I want.
And it's guaranteed.
Yeah.
Even though it's not.
No.
I think it is.
Yeah.
It's the same thing.
It's the way it works in your head.
Yeah.
One of the things that I always said to some of my guys in Ardap and stuff was if you worked as hard,
at trying to do something legitimate
as you did it
trying to do dirty shit
then you'd probably be successful at it
because you work very hard
to be in a criminal
and you keep it
yeah and you get to keep it
nobody gets to come along and take it
you don't have to look over your shoulder
you don't have to go to prison
you don't have to disappoint your family
none of that stuff
so
um
so not all of that 16 years was a struggle
there was some of it that was good
but I still had this mindset of just
I really don't know how to explain it
other than just being a negative
angry person you know every little thing that would come my way that didn't go my way it was terrible
and it would spiral into just being a miserable thing and i had this one girlfriend that i had after i
after i left my wife we were together for about a year and on our final big breakup um she just kept
taunting me she was trying to get me to hit her and she said you know what you're going to do you're
going to die miserable alone and unhappy and man that shit hit me you know i was like damn you're not
happy you're you're almost never happy something can always be better you always find something wrong
with shit so that was one of the big things that i worked on you know in the second time and i finally got it
turned around but yeah a lot of people just like i said before you know there's two different
kinds of people there's people who don't understand okay why don't you understand the hard work
pays off i just don't think that way we don't think the same yeah so i trudged along and
and and managed to survive but that's really all i was doing was surviving
um being a taker like i said before you know just just um reaping the reaping the benefits of
what my people who loved me had done and borrowing money and staying at couches and everything else
um just being a user and a taker all right so i was living at my parents house because they've got
an RV and we're gone and i met this girl and ended up moving her in with me and a couple
of kids and we ended up having a child. And that's when everything really changed for me in a
couple of ways. Because in the first way that it changed me was it made me want to be this good
person, but I never wanted that much responsibility in my life as having a child. So it kind of
drove me a little bit insane at the same time. And her and I fought constantly. We were together
for five and a half years. And out of all that time, we probably actually lived together maybe a year
and a half two years the rest of the time we fought so much that i couldn't stay there all right we
just fight all the time um had all kinds of arguments just constantly the pressure being a dad
couldn't find a regular good job because i couldn't stop drinking long enough to be able right
i think the last year that i was out i i went through four jobs because i'd show up drunk so and they'd
fire me they don't like that no they tend not to yeah so i was at a point where i i didn't want to live anymore
You know, like we were talking about before, I told one of my best friends when I was 30
that if my next 30 was going to be like the first, I didn't want to live them.
I was just that miserable of a person inside and everything.
So at 45, in the situation I was in, I was pretty much ready to kill myself.
I was just that low.
Right.
But I had this daughter, my only child.
And how can I do that to her?
you know um so in my mind i think i had to do something to dramatically change the course of my life
suicide wasn't going to be it didn't have any money screw it i'm going to rob banks again um threatened
her with that a few times and then i finally made good on it i was like you know couldn't work couldn't
stop drinking couldn't do any of that screw it i'm going to go back to what i know
I did it back in 95, so I've learned lessons from it.
Right.
Maybe I'll be better at it this time.
So I started looking for banks.
The first one I found was in my hometown, and the layout was really good.
I was doing it by myself.
I didn't have a driver this time.
So, you know, I made sure I did things like parked far enough away from the bank that cameras wouldn't see my car.
But you could still get to it.
But I could still get to it.
to it and there was some kind of sight line something breaking up the sight line you see what i'm
saying so like so i get the other side of something and then go away yeah so the tellers don't
run outside and say he was in a blue ford exactly yeah no tags no cameras no nothing just
far enough away to where i get to it quickly because what i always figured when i was doing them was
a minute a minute or less door to door from the time i laid my door to the time i get back and that's
about what it takes yeah um so i parked on another street and i remember when i was running to the bank
um didn't have my mask on yet because i wasn't close enough and i just stopped and i stood there for a minute
i was like justin are you really going to do this i was like fucking a right i am and ran in there
didn't use a gun this time um didn't use anything still had a mask on hoodie gloves all that i think
I took a grocery bag because I didn't really care.
But having learned from the last one, I just went in there.
I said, we don't have to say much when you go on with a mask and gloves in a bank.
They kind of know what's already going on.
But I'd go up with the bags and I would hand each of the tellers a bag.
All these are small banks.
I never want to anything because you don't want to have eight tellers that you've got to manage with one person.
So I went in, I handed them bags.
I said, fill them up with money.
I want the bottom drawers and the top drawers both.
Got it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Not just getting those top drawers again.
Did that and said, don't give me any die packs and don't give me any tracers.
And at that point, they're still standing there looking at you kind of blank.
So I was like, do it now and that get them moving.
So while they're filling the bags up, I do a loop around, you know, just spin around in the bank to make sure nobody else is making any kind of moves or anything.
Right.
And I take off.
And seconds later, I'm sprinting back to my car as hard as I can go.
as I can go jump in the car take off and go pass a cop on the way right he keeps on going I
keep on going like okay I'm good I mean no like even though you didn't have a gun and you didn't make a
threat you didn't anything they they just handed over the money yep okay that's what they're
trained to do no I mean I know guys have robbed them with bang I mean robbed people are with a note
but I also knew a guy who he said he said I have a I have a weapon
giving the money and the woman said let me see the weapon and he's so he shows the weapon and she's
like fuck and she just you know she's a veteran yeah she's she's been robbed before maybe many
times yeah she was kind of like let me see the weapon you know because he's got no math and he's like
hey giving all the money and the thing and she says let me see the and he goes I got a weapon she's
let me see it and he's like oh okay you're good we're good we're good she's got bigger balls and
have the convicts I know oh so and so you you you you're
God. Got out of there, called her and was like, meet me at a certain spot, handed her a band with $2,000, and she's like, oh, my God, I didn't think you were really going to do it. I was like, yeah, I did. Yeah. So ran around doing what I do, you know, party and doing all that for a while. I think we got 17,000, 18,000 out of that one. That other one where we got busted on before back in the 90s. Oh, yeah. How much was that?
Um, 22.
Okay.
22 and some change.
So figured out that was the trick.
So that was half of my logic going into this with a foggy drunk brain is, oh, you can do it better this time.
You know what you're doing.
So you're professional now.
I'm professional now.
Yeah.
So did that.
Got away.
Fine.
Scott free.
You know how money is.
If it's easy come, it's easy to go.
Yeah.
So that shit went quick.
Yeah.
So about another month later.
Um, ironically, I went and hit the bank that I hit the very first time.
I didn't still had those three fences around it.
It still had the same setup.
So this time, because I didn't have a driver, I just pulled into the residential area behind the bank.
It's middle of the day.
Everybody's at work.
I just pulled in somebody's driveway.
And there was a big enough hole in the, in the privacy fence that I could squeeze through it.
And I already scoped it out.
Busted in there, went in.
no gun no note i didn't want to leave anything behind right didn't use a note and like i said when
you got a mask and everything they know what it is so went in that one did it went just fine um got
away 20 000 or so off of that one nice so that was about average 20 to 22 23 um ended up
doing four before i got before i got caught got caught on the fourth one how did that how that
happened somebody followed you or yep oh okay
Yep. And I heard about it from a guy in jail, actually. Well, I knew kind of what went on, but it was funny the way it happened. I pulled out of the bank, went in, you know, about the same kind of thing, had the sight line broke up. Pulled out of the bank and took off. And I was going to go up the road, take a left and take another left and get on the highway. So I go up here and I take a left and I see this car behind me. I'm like, okay. So I go up a little bit farther and I turn again and the car turns again as well.
bad so i'm like okay i'm going to keep an eye on for just another second and then i'm
then i don't know what i'm going to do but i'm going to have to do something yeah so i pull
across the road instead of turning right and as i pulled across the road he came behind me and that's
oh shit what am i going to do is this just a regular person or this a police officer
yeah he was in a little hunday something or another came out of a pawn shop that was close by and
just happened to see you running or just happen to pick up on what was going on said i'm a
of this dude. Yep. And call 911. So after I got across the highway and started going
around the road, I had blue lights behind me. Yeah. I knew at that point it was over. So I panicked
and tried to run and crashed. Oh, really? Oh, yeah. Yeah. Um, yeah. Look, I just robbed a bank
45 seconds ago. I'm still running from the cops is the least of my problem. Yeah, that's the least
of my problems. So I get blue lights behind me and I stomp on it and end up crashing into a tree.
Um, I, I was going to say, you know, that we talked about the die packs.
I, I knew a guy who robbed the bank with someone else, like actually took a hostage to get them in the bank, got a bunch of money, put it in there.
It was a blue dye pack, had it in, they had it like in a bag.
And they were driving in like a stolen vehicle.
And he's like, man, we're going like 50, 60 miles an hour.
And we're driving.
And the die pack goes off.
And he said, you have no idea how much.
He said how much it blows apart.
He said, blue apart.
And he said, the windshield straight blue.
So I'm covered halfway in blue.
He's covered all in blue.
He said, the windows are completely, he said, we're literally driving, rolling the windows down, trying to look out.
He said, it's that bad.
He said, I finally had to stop and we ran.
He's, we're running down the street completely blue.
Covered.
Like, it's, it was, he said, and he said, and it stains.
And it was over.
Yep.
So I definitely, I can't imagine being drive, trying to outrun the police.
Especially with all that adrenaline.
I mean, it's, it's so much adrenaline, Matt, that it about makes you sick.
Yeah.
You're ready to throw up just because it's that much adrenaline.
You know, guys will throw up, like they'll get into, I had a buddy who got into a fight.
And right after the fight, we were driving, and he said, pull over, pulled over and puked.
It was just the adrenaline.
It hits everybody differently.
Yeah.
And it will definitely do that.
That's where the tunnel vision came from.
I mean, I remember specifically after that first one running to get to her car.
And literally, I couldn't see anything in my peripheral vision.
It was all just right in front of me, what I've got to do right now.
So the cops chase you.
You'll lose control and rack or?
Yeah.
They started chasing me.
I wasn't really going fast.
I was trying to figure out what to do, trying to calm my mind down.
Because I still got the adrenaline just going.
I'm like, you've got to stop and think.
This person's following you.
What are you going to do?
blue lights behind me
shit hit the gas
tried to make a turn that I knew I couldn't make
right you know
no matter how badass
anybody says they are
when you're right in the middle of that shit
it's hard to think
so stomped on the gas
tried to make a turn I couldn't make
it was actually a little building
I crashed into the building
cops come running up guns all that
yeah whatever fuck off
did you get you get out
or they drag you out
the car or did you get out and immediately just no he came over to me um i was sitting there like
well i mean i i hit a building at like 45 miles an hour oh okay so you were in you're in bad shape
yeah well i wasn't in bad shape but i was stunned you know at least airbag popped all that kind of
stuff so i'm just kind of sitting there and he's next thing i know i got a gun on my face yeah all that
so um yeah my fear you know my my fear to me that the whole out trying to outrun the police you know
To me, I'm already thinking, well, eventually they're going to catch me.
And to the truth is, I'm probably better off pulling over and trying to get out on my own because I may end up getting shot.
You know, these guys, their adrenaline's going.
They think I've got a gun.
If they think I've got a gun, then I end up getting shot.
Right.
You know, so to me, I mean, I've known guys who have been chased by the cops.
And they literally, like, just hit the brakes and hit the brakes, you know, pulled the emergency brake and jumped out of the car just as soon as it was done with their hands in the air.
and immediately
dropped down on the ground
because they were like, look, I mean,
like they'll shoot you in the car.
Like, they can always say,
I thought I saw a gun, I thought this.
Some of the cops are super,
I don't want to use the word,
vigilant,
but they're just overly enthusiastic
about possibly putting a bullet
in somebody's head, you know,
and you're, you just rock the bank.
You're running for the police.
He's in fear.
You know, and things maybe might be,
or they're just going to take advantage
the situation, you know,
not that all cops are bad,
but sometimes you've got to,
All you need is one dickhead, end up with a fucking bullet in your head.
And that's all it takes.
And there's plenty of them out there.
Yeah.
Because.
Yeah.
So did that.
I was standing there.
And one of the cops was really cool to me.
He's like, you smoke?
He said, you smoke?
And I was like, yeah.
He said, go a cigarette for you, Joe?
Like, yeah, that'd be great.
So I'm standing there.
He moved the cuffs around to my front and gave me a cigarette.
And I'm sitting there smoking it.
And something that my girlfriend had said to me earlier that day, she's like,
just please come home to me today.
and in my drunken stupid mind, I'm like, I've got to get home to her.
So I shot to run.
What are you doing?
I'm drunk.
I'm not, you know, I'm drunk, adrenaline, whatever it is.
So I run up to this one cop and I knock him down.
He rolls down a hill.
I find out later he broke his freaking ankle.
Oh, my God.
So I'm like, they're just, they're going to crucify me.
um but i tell you what matt when it all comes down to it when i landed in that jail cell i
passed out for like hours when i finally came to the first emotion that i really felt was
right it's over yeah yeah now i can try to rebuild from here um it wasn't exactly relief
but it was there was a sense of i can't yeah yeah it's over destructive life like i was i was
got to do something different um and that's where i started trying to live for my daughter and said
okay you got to figure out a different way to do shit and this is your opportunity to do that so i got
you know jail was jail was 10 times worse than it was in 95 96 there wasn't a lot of gang
activity the feds wasn't that big a thing back then no no the feds were they were still looking at
basically bank robbery mobsters like like like
more high, I don't want to say high brow, but, you know, more sophisticated types of crimes as opposed to now where it's basically almost like a state prison.
Yeah.
It's a big state prison.
It's just a big state prison.
I mean, if they decide they want to get you for seven grams of coke or meth or whatever, they're going to get you with seven grams and lock you up for 10 years.
Yeah.
So the, the people that I met in prison the first time as opposed to the people that I met in prison the second time was so vastly different.
I remember when I got out the first time, one of the things that I said often was I met a higher caliber of person in prison than I did outside of prison.
You know, we knew guys in there that, you know, they were smuggling opium from Afghanistan.
You know, another guy that was, he was on the run for seven years in Columbia before he finally got arrested and thrown in a Colombian prison and they extradited him.
So it was just, I met a lot of good people under that time.
This time was completely different.
There was all the gang activity.
there was all these people that run around just on dumb shit all the time were you in a medium or
i started out in a medium yeah okay started out at beckley west virginia did you end up in a low
ended up at a low but ashland kentucky um got got nervous as hell because the first time i talked to my
attorney she's like you know they're probably going to career criminal you over this um you
didn't know what that was i was like okay all i know is that means a shitload of time yeah so
I was like just flabbergasted.
And I was like, well, she said, well, I got to check it out thoroughly to make sure.
But you're looking like that.
So, and you know how public defenders are.
They'll talk to you once every month or two, maybe.
Yeah, yeah.
So I'm sitting here for weeks just bugging out thinking I'm going to prison for 20 years.
As it turns out, the way it works is that 15 years from the last time you were incarcerated for a crime.
Right.
15 years is the cutoff for whether it's career criminal.
Oh, okay.
So they can't use those crimes against you for the purposes of career criminal.
Now, I had five years of supervisor at least when I got out back in 2000.
Had I violated and gone back to prison for at any time, for any amount of time, it would have counted.
Yeah.
And I would have been career criminal.
But because that didn't happen, and like I said, I did learn a little bit from the first one.
So I didn't use a weapon.
I didn't threaten anybody, any of that.
um i got 45 months nice um i did a plea deal i had four banks i did a plea deal they dropped two
of them in exchange for the guilty plea for two of them so i got counted for two bank robberies
and got a 45 months in it did 35 months yeah roughly okay so yeah i knew a guy who robbed a couple
of or i think he robbed three banks with a with a note he got uh roughly basically like 30
I want to say 36 months,
but I'd bet 40 months,
but roughly the same amount of time.
Sounds about right.
I mean,
and when you tell people out in the feds
that are just getting in and stuff,
they're like,
why the hell didn't I rob banks
instead of selling drugs?
Yeah.
Or, listen,
counterfeiting, too.
It's another one that you,
these guys that can counterfeit,
like they tend to get very little time
for something that, to me,
has could have huge,
a huge potential
as long as you're not using a weapon.
Listen, the moment you start using a weapon,
they have an issue.
With anything.
Yeah.
With anything.
See,
counterfeiting because of course, you know, at 23, I'm in prison. I'm still fairly criminally
minded. Right. So I'm going through the sentencing guideline manual, you know, the book they
used to decide. And I'm looking for what's got the least amount of time. And counterfeiting was it.
Yeah. But what I learned later on was that the feds will actually take it and they'll count each
bill as a charge. They can. They'll stack it. But if you take the best they can. Yeah, typically
you can take a plea. You know what I'm saying? But if you like go to trial, oh, no, you're done.
like that's just now we have the opportunity to really just destroy you like we can give you 30 years you could have taken three years now we're going to give you 30 because you passed 500 thousand dollars worth of fucking money like every every dollar bill is is possibly a three year charge yeah so um man um oh gosh gosh i gosh i talked to a guy the other day though that actually chad um mark chad marks yeah he actually i think got 40 years he actually went to i mean he
actually went to trial. It's like, you're guilty. Like, what are you doing? You're guilty. He's like,
I thought this. I thought that, you know. But yeah, he got 40 years for something that he probably
could have gotten, you know, 10 or 15 for something like that. I don't know Chad well, but we've,
I've seen his, his post on Facebook a good bit. He's very active in the, in the, in the community with
trying to help people out now. Yeah, yeah. He's, and he's a nice guy. Like, he's genuinely like,
well, I talked to him before we, we did the podcast for like 20 minutes and, and just seems
like a nice guy was telling me all the different things that he's doing and he's like look you know
he got clemency or is i don't know uh it's it's it's i want to say clemency but it's i don't
think it was it was basically what i think they modify they knock off time off your sentence they
modify it so there's another name for it but right anyway um or was it the second chance act because
of no no anyway whatever the point is is that he got out he did like 17 years and uh now he runs a legal
he runs a consulting firm he also runs a he also runs a what do they call it it's like a legal
he does legal work for for for people and he's doing some great work from everything i've seen
because i've seen him getting some people off yeah well he and this other guy that was on 60 minutes
like they've won like sorcery in front of the the supreme court like like they've done stuff that
like career lawyers who've been doing it 20 years don't do and these and he's doing great
work but then again he also had 16 years to hone his craft or no 17 years to hone his craft i mean
god's sakes yeah because you have to find something to do with your time in there you know
it's one thing's we obviously said i'm sure you've heard it you know everybody that's got their own way
of doing time yeah some people you know go grab a bible some people exercise um some people do
legal work and hang out in the law library all the time well that's what i said was um you know
i i didn't want to play i didn't want to join a softball league you know i didn't want to learn how to be a
a chef you know because they have the culinary arts class they had culinary arts so i didn't want to
be a chef or chef i don't want to be i didn't want to join a softball league you know i didn't want to play
handball i didn't so i didn't want to learn to play the guitar so you know what i was like all these
things that listen to her guys that are amazing in there that like my god like this guy is
phenomenal and then they joined bands and they're they're amazing but i you know i just started
realizing i started talking like i would talk to someone like you and you hear their story maybe
bits and pieces and then one day you cut maybe even you hear it in a two hours they tell you
their whole story because they have plenty of time they they drag it out they tell you every little
instant and then by the end of it like if you can keep me you know like wow i mean like like
like boziac when i talked to him we talked for like two hours or so in the cafeteria and i mean
the like at the end of it i was like bro we got to we you got to write this down like we we got to do
something with what can we do with this is a great story
It's the same thing.
And then, you know, the problem is you meet so many guys like that,
but nobody can write their stories.
Like, they can't write their stories.
It's very difficult to write your own.
You wrote your own story.
It is.
You know, it's hard.
It's tough.
It's hard to see you as you truly are.
So what happens is people write their stories.
They become like a, like a superhero.
And it's like, but that's not really you.
You're really, like, as I was writing my story,
I kind of started to realize, I'm a dickhead.
Like, this is not really,
if I had to rewrite it multiple times to kind of go back and realize,
You know, you made yourself sound like a super villain, but the truth is, you know, this was stupid.
This, your dickhead here.
You don't mention that you were scared of death.
And that's what I was about to come out of my mouth was I was scared to death the whole fucking time.
Yeah.
Yeah, but the amount of talent in there is amazing.
I met so many talented people in there, charismatic, good people.
You know, they're wired differently.
Yeah.
And, you know, Boziac and I were talking about this the other day.
Boziac's a guy that I do, um, others.
I do a other podcast with us and we were talking about we were answering questions and one of them was like what programs would be good and we talked about art app he and I talked about art app and you and I talked about art app but the problem is is like because you know recidivism is ridiculous like that it's through the roof and well but you're you're so set up to fail when you get out yeah and and I'm not saying that a lot of these guys aren't they're just not putting enough effort in but also like
there's no one I think everybody should have to take an ARDAP tile either program
something inside or out I mean you could scale down ARDAP so it was just about behavior
modification because a lot of it's just ARDAP really 95% of it is behavior modification
so some type of a program like that there should be more of an incentive to take the program
and pass it you know a year okay but you go through hell for that year and if you could you could
give everybody that year and then people go to ARDAP maybe they get two years so there should
be more of an incentive. And then when people get out, like, I got lucky. I got out. I had like
three, four hundred dollars to my name. Right. So I had a little bit of money only because I
wrote books and I got lucky and was able to actually get a book deal, a couple book deals,
while I was incarcerated. And I was a part of an option of one of my books. So that money was
basically gone by the time I got out. Sure. Luckily, while I was incarcerated, after going to Walmart
and spending $300 of my money that I paid,
you know, of my own money.
Right. Luckily, a few weeks later,
the option hit again,
and I got a nice little chunk of money.
I was able to buy a new, a Jeep,
and, you know, and get a year's worth of insurance.
And I had enough money.
I remember I had $1,000 left over,
and I thought this $1,000 I'm putting it aside
in case anything breaks on the cheap.
But I saw so many people would go.
they have their family would come in they would give them a bunch of money they would you know they would
they would they would they would help them they'd come visit them they've got a place to stay they've got
everything and with their first paycheck they're buying a hundred and fifty dollar pair of nikes yep
and it's like your family gave you a chunk of money you your brother-in-law got you a job
you were everybody pulled together and with the first bit of money you got you spend it on a
a $150 pair of fucking Nike's,
you're coming straight back to prison.
And they do, because their mindset is,
I still want to be a baller.
I still want to impress anybody.
I still want, as I cry, broke all the time.
Yep.
Everything I bought, do you know,
I don't think I bought,
no, that's not true.
That's not true.
The only thing I don't buy at Ross or Marshall's,
the only thing I don't buy is these t-shirts,
Because I buy these t-shirts at Target because I really like the way they fit.
And you can get two for, I think, $26 a box.
So they're like $13 a piece.
To me, that's a lot of money for a T-shirt.
Everything I buy is at Ross, Marshalls, Bells, everything.
I'm exactly the same.
If you give me a million dollars right now, I can't imagine spending.
I used to buy blue jeans that were $2,300 bucks for a pair of blue jeans.
I still have blue jeans.
I still have blue jeans that I bought in Walmart three years ago.
And I'm glad.
Yeah.
I mean, I was actually, when I was riding down here, I had a buddy come with me and we were talking, you know, just about your story and a little bit and stuff.
And one of the things that occurred to me, I was like, I wonder how that is to live the way you lived, you know, you had an exorbitant amount of money.
And then to get out here and not have that, it had to be kind of tough.
And you, you know, I get it.
It would be different if it was, the difference is it's not like I was still out and lost it.
Right.
when I went to prison, you know, that, so by the time 13 years goes by, and you get out
of prison after 13 years of me, all the money I use, I spent on Quarlings, so I could write
stories, print them out, email them to people to put into Word, and then send them back
to, like, I had a whole process down.
Right.
So, all, I'm eating, I'm eating soups.
Mm-hmm.
I'm eating every meal, every meal I ate at the Chow Hall.
Yeah.
And, you know, look, some of those meals are good.
Some are good meals.
Hey, some are horrible.
Some are horrible.
But, you know, it, listen.
It'll fill you up.
Yeah, you'll stay a lot.
You can be fine.
Didn't go to commissary a lot.
And when I did, I bought coffee or creamer.
I taught the real estate class.
So guys would give me coffee and creamer.
Gotcha.
For I hustled certificates.
Ah, yeah.
But getting out here, I think after going through ARDAP and being so humbled.
that even now I get out
and I have those moments where I want to buy
a new vehicle and I can afford that
and it's like bro what are you doing
you've got a brand new car
like I bought a I got a little Jeep compass
to me I always say it's a chick's Jeep
I got a little chick Jeep everything works
the AC works the the brakes work
it's got Bluetooth that's magic to me
isn't it everything so
so I just have to keep telling
being trying to be
humble and you could ask my girlfriend it's hard she's constantly looking at me i'll say something
and she'll look at me and i'll be like fuck like you're right you have to be thankful and humble
and have to remind myself over and over and over again to do it yeah because naturally i you know
naturally i i i want to be driving i want to drive a i want to drive a hundred thousand dollar car
i want to live in a half a million dollar house which in florida is a million dollar house
anywhere else. I was going to say in Florida, that's a shack, isn't it? No, no. In Florida, half a million
that's like a million, money goes far in Florida. Really? As long as you're not on the coast.
Ah. Look, you saw where we are. Like this house, no, I get that. It's probably worth, I think these
things are just selling for like, this is like a $300,000 house. Okay. But, bro, this house is huge.
It's a brand new. It's a year and a half old. Okay. Now, you know, somewhere else in California,
it's probably worth $2 million. Right. So I'm saying, you know, I just have to constantly be humble and,
and try and be thankful for what I have.
And I think that's something that prison and ARDAP put into me because I had a friend
named Pete who used to say, and everybody's heard me say this, you know, you cannot go to
prison with the same mindset that you had prior to prison, go through prison and get out
with that same, those same thought patterns and not expect to go back to prison.
You really can't.
Right.
We were talking about that earlier.
You know, definition of insanity.
Yeah, yeah.
Keep doing the same thing over and over and expect a different result.
Right.
It's the same thing.
Look, you drank that whole time.
You happen to stay straight, but only out of the fear of going to prison.
And then you finally got to that point, same issue you had before.
Start robbing banks, go right back to prison.
What did you expect?
Of course you're going to go back to prison.
Nothing had changed.
Nothing had changed in my mindset.
Nothing had changed in my personality.
And, you know, it goes back to what I was talking about with recovery until you're ready to do that.
Right.
And whatever it takes to you.
get you to that place where you're ready to do that you're not going to do it so well so you're but
now you got out you're you're you're starting you've started it but you're still doing the groundwork
for um for a re-entry program phoenix reentry yeah is that the exact name phoenix phoenix
reentry resources resources is actually what it is um when we're in our app i don't know if you guys
had to do this or not but you had to be a part of a committee of course of course so i had a
friend of mine, let me tell you a quick story about Ardap right quick, because you were talking
about how you kept dropping out of Ardap or something. Yeah, I dropped out twice. Okay, so let me
tell you how I got into Ardap because because I was in for robbing banks, no matter whether
I used a gun or not, it was considered a violent offense. They don't want to give you one year
off. They wouldn't give me my one year off. So I've been at Beckley for about two years,
and my custody level dropped to a low. So they put me in for a low. And when I got designated,
they designated me for Oakdale, Louisiana.
It was SCI Oakdale.
I was like, where the hell is Oakdale?
Right.
I had to look it up and find out it was in Louisiana.
So they've got me designated to go there.
I talked to my mom.
She's like, Justin, that's 800 miles away.
Yeah.
We're not going to be able to bring your daughter to see you.
Yeah.
You're going to miss that.
So I'm sitting here brainstorming.
You know, I'm talking to everybody.
They're like, well, if you get a shot, it'll kill your transfer.
I'm like, eh, the R-DAP coordinator is.
have almost as much power as the wardens, right?
And the one that we had at Beckley, I had interactions with him.
He seemed like he was one of the only people there that at least acted like he cared,
whether he did or not, he acted like it.
Right.
So I snagged him going across the compound one day, and I said, look.
And I went and basically fed him this whole line about family acceptance and whatever,
blah, blah, blah.
I need to be in our dep.
I need to be in this RDAP, whatever.
He starts getting on the phone and making arrangements to get me into RDAP.
And it ended up the morning, one Monday morning, I was on the call out to go to R&D to pack out to go to Oatdale.
And I was on the call out to go over to move to the RDAP.
Wow.
To the RDAP building.
So everybody's kind of freaking out a little bit, figuring out what to do with me.
This guy stayed on the phone all day to get me to be able to stay in that RDAP program.
so i just thought it was funny when you were talking about that earlier i i meant to mention that
but uh no no you're it's the same you're lucky to end up on a bus man you ain't even kidding you ain't
even kidding because i very seldomly do they they uh stop a transfer they have to make the phone you
know they have to they have to go to um grand prairie grand prairie thank you they got to go to
bring grand prairie get somebody even on the phone there is hard for even for them so you got
lucky but that was the same thing i was supposed to be transferred it hadn't gone through
But they were saying, we're going to transfer you.
And I said, oh, no, no, I'm going an ARDAP.
Can't do that?
So I go over there immediately talk to Dr. Smith, which was the Ph.D woman that runs the program, you know, that you're saying there, coordinator.
You're called it.
Yeah, they call it a DAPC.
Right.
Yeah, Dapsie.
We threw an RSA and did the same thing to me.
I was like, RSA.
I ain't heard that shit in a while.
So same thing.
She got me in there.
And then, of course, six, seven months later, I drop out again.
Yeah.
And she just would, no, because she thinks I'm there because I want the one year.
I never told anybody, right?
I mean, like my buddy Pete knows.
I drop out because I figure I got the, I've got a management variable on me.
Can't move me now.
It's good for a year.
Six, no, about three months later, they call me and they go, okay, we're going to transfer you.
And I went to a camp because I had like, listen, when I went to the medium, I had like, I had like three points.
I don't have any violence at all.
It kind of surprised me when I heard you were even at a medium.
Well, because I had 26 years.
Okay.
The time.
Right.
So I was like, what are you talking about?
You know, I was like, no, no, I got a management variable.
She said, I know, but they're pushing people to go to camps.
And so I'm going to call and have it removed.
And I didn't know it was that easy.
Like, you guys made it sound like you couldn't remove it.
And they were like, well, I mean, in this case, man, we've got to be people to camps.
You should have never.
You should never have been in the medium.
You shouldn't even be here.
And I was like, you know, you're as soft as cotton.
No.
When you got your female counselor telling you, my God.
And I was like, I was like, we can't do that.
And she was, I said, I'm supposed to go back to Ardap.
She goes, you are?
And I was like, yeah.
I said, I've already had a meeting with Dr. Smith.
And she said next, she goes, when?
I go like next week.
And she goes, oh, gosh, okay, well, I'll hold off then.
I won't put it in right now.
So hopefully you'll be on the call out next week.
I said, yeah, definitely, immediately go back and send an email.
Yeah.
And sure enough, luckily a week later.
I did get a meeting.
She said, okay, no problem.
And a week later, she put me back in.
But it was the same thing, transfer.
Yeah, I mean, that's one of the things that you learn in there is you've got to work.
You've got to work the system as much as you can.
Oh, absolutely.
Yeah, they're not looking out for you.
No, not at all.
It's a terrible whole system.
I don't know if you have seen all the news stuff lately.
It's just been so much going on with the BOP.
Oh, they're falling apart.
Oh, they are.
I mean, it's, and you know, they can't, they're, my buddy Pete who said literally, he's like the most senior CEO, correctional officer, the most senior, you're trying to use the correct, because I want to say cop, you know what I'm saying, like the inmates, the inmates say cop, you know, oh, yeah, the cops over here, the cop. So the most senior correctional officer on the compound at the low is, has 18 months. You have to think the most senior before would have 20 years. Yeah. You know.
There'd be five or ten guys that have, you know, 15 and 20 years there.
Now the most senior ones, 18 months.
He's like, literally, we're telling the counselors how things work.
This is what you do.
And they'll come to them and say, and say, hey, man, this is what's going on.
What, like, I'm not even sure.
You know, like, I don't even know what.
And he's like, well, fuck, if you try this, did you call so-and-so?
Did you say, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'll do that.
Yeah, yeah, that's a good idea.
It's like, Jesus, God, almighty.
You know, you got inmates there have been there, 25, 30,
years and they're like like they know the whole place they could run the whole place practically
they could use a computer but that's how bad it is like and the the the budget is they're being
crushed by the budget and they have no budget they have this this nobody wants to work there
the the guys are getting like the the CEOs are getting are getting are getting COVID and then
getting it again and then getting it again and then quitting their job like I'm done because it's so
it's just everywhere in there it's so you know not that it's dirty because Coleman was super clean
But the fact is, is how do you get rid of staff when you've got 180 guys living together?
You can wipe that place down every single day with peroxide or bleach or whatever you want to wipe it down with.
You've got 180 guys.
You just can't get rid of the staff.
You just can't.
You know, the showers.
You know, it's moist.
There's no, you know, it's like, you know, where's that?
There's really no happy medium between keeping them in from escaping.
and being able to have showers and toilets and sleeping in bunk beds.
And, you know, it's just people just aren't meant to live like that.
So it's a problem.
No.
And I kept up with a handful of guys that I was in there with, you know, some of them in
R-DAP, whatever.
And those guys in there that didn't go outside for a year and a half.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
You know, did not go outside.
Yeah.
You know, they're on lockdown all the time.
The short staffing thing is making them basically because the one thing that was ubiquitous all the way across the BOP that I saw was nobody really wanted to do any work, CEO wise.
You go ask them to do something and that pisses them off.
They didn't get a job.
They didn't get a job as a CEO because they wanted to change the system, clean up.
Like I'll talk to cops who will say, you know, I genuinely, when I got hired, wanted to make a difference.
Like, I really thought you get a CEO job.
You're like, I'm trying to kick back and make my 80 or 100,000 with some over.
overtime. Yep. I don't want to do any work. I don't want to do any work. Right. So, yeah, and
so they, now they put anybody on lockdown, like on the regular, you know, just for no particular
reason. Y'all are getting a lockdown for the next week, two weeks. Well, I mean, because at this
point, this is, they're still able to use COVID as an excuse. And, and, you know, this is
the thing, whenever I talk about prison, is that, you know, the truth is that I, I know a lot of guys
get in there and they hate on the COs and they hate on the, you know, and look, but the truth is,
it's like, listen, like, I probably, I met one or two people who are in prison who probably
shouldn't have been there. You know what I'm saying? Maybe I've met five or six that shouldn't
have been there for something. Now, almost everybody across the board shouldn't have gotten the time
they got. Like, it's insane the time. Like, you know, okay, you broke the law. You fucked up. You
You need five years, but they gave you 30.
Your first offense.
Right.
Even their second offense for something that's always minor.
It's like, are you sick?
So you had a gun that was at your house five miles away and they enhanced you because they
found a gun when they searched your house that you didn't bring to the drug thing.
And now you got 15 years.
Oh, yeah.
Because, yeah.
It's like, holy shit.
Like, you know, it's, there's, there's all kinds of reasons.
But, you know, the, the truth is is that, look, 95% of the guys that are locked up.
like, I don't want to live in my neighborhood.
You know, they're just, they're, and not so much because, not because they're criminals
or they did something wrong, but because they're in there.
And like we talked about, they're, they're just plotting their next indictment.
And to me, but also by the same token, the best people I've ever met in my life I met in
federal prison.
So, you know what I'm saying?
Like, where's that?
Like, and that to me has to be there needs to be.
there need to be programs.
And these guys are going to fuck them up.
They're going to fuck them up.
Yeah, they're not, there isn't any government system that's going to work to try to fix this.
But just like Ardap, look, it doesn't matter that you're right, half the guy or 80% of the guys might be faking their way out.
But to save the 20% is still saved so much for overall, it saves the taxpayer so much money.
They don't, if you do the math, that program more than pays for itself and it saves the taxpayer so much money.
And what would save the tax payer even more money is if these people had some way to get themselves back into society in a decent way.
Because the truth is, and this is what I was going to get at, and this is me just being a fucking narcissist, is that most guys are not going to have the savvy to set themselves up to be able to get themselves back on their feet, even with the halfway house.
Because the staff at the halfway house doesn't want to help you.
They're making $10 an hour.
They don't give a shit.
They hate your...
And they just hate you.
They're doing everything to want to fucking make it as hard as possible.
Dude, I had a dude made a statement and said that I hit him, that I punched him.
Right.
A halfway house staff.
Well, I cussed at him a little bit because he took my phone.
Everybody had smartphones.
You're right.
Everybody.
He took mine.
And he showed me where they put the rest of the phones.
And we came out of there and I was cussing him.
You know, I was mad.
to my brand new phone and uh so are we're not allowed to have it when you were there no the the policy
was that you could have uh a phone that couldn't get internet yeah i mean it's just like stupid it's just
stupid it's like it is like what are you doing yeah why you're gonna try to get us back in the community
but don't you're not you're not going to give us any access to be able to do it right i can't have my
laptop i can't have a smartphone or an iphone or a cell phone or smart whatever you want to call
it you know i can't have any of that stuff i can't have access to this i can it's the those the halfway house is
of being in prison.
And to me it was.
It was more, they were on me more.
If you're not mentally prepared for it, you're right.
Because it is, it's them giving you enough rope to hang yourself.
Right.
Is what they're doing.
It's a test, pretty much.
Yeah.
But yeah, this guy accused me of hitting him.
So I get called up there by the head of the halfway house.
I mean, what they're called.
So for the next 10 hours, I'm like, shit, I'm going back to jail because this is somebody
lied on me.
Yeah.
No doubt.
And I said they're bugging at 12, 15 hours later, within 24 hours.
He recanted his statement, got to keep working there the whole rest of the time, everything.
I'm like, you try to get me sent back to prison.
You get to keep your fucking job.
Yeah.
Yeah. So probably because there was a camera, probably because somebody else wouldn't back up a statement, not because he felt bad, but probably just because there was a reason he recanted his statement.
You know, where did you get hit?
Where is it on the camera?
Where were you standing?
Okay.
Then the camera should have gotten.
Or we talked to so-and-so.
He said he didn't hit you.
Or, you know what I'm saying?
It's like, it is.
It's a fucked up situation.
He had to.
But anyway, that's the kind of people we have to deal with in there.
And it's the same way in prison.
Guards are the same way.
I mean, they know that you're disadvantaged.
They have almost complete power over you.
So they take advantage of that.
And they use whatever they want to do to you, they can pretty much do.
Yeah.
So, but you're absolutely right.
There's a lot of people in there that, that have tried to go through that change of mind like you and I've had.
You know, because obviously you went through it too.
you got in there and I can't do this shit anymore yeah let me live different um when you talk about
the resourcefulness to be able to get uh to get their plan together and everything else
they might be able to do that but the resources aren't really there for them to do that all right
um you know you you can't even get a resume typed up in word document or anything you got to use
a typewriter and put it on paper yeah um yeah yeah it's if you want to learn anything besides
plumbing or construction you're you're just shit out of luck you can't get any of that stuff so but i
believe that that prison is a place that you're taking a time out and if you're going to be able to get
through to somebody and and help them change their lives that's the place to be able to do it because
their life's pretty much on pause yeah so when i was in our dap and i helped my buddy squirrel out
and and that was when the light went on for me and i said i want to help these people that are in there
that want to do better, but they don't really have the resources to be able to do it.
So when I got out, almost immediately when I got out, I started brainstorming about doing a reentry
organization specifically for the feds.
I took about a month off when I first got out and just kind of got acclimated.
I was fortunate enough.
My parents were like, you know, come stay with us and we'll try this again, you know, whatever.
And so I took a minute.
And I went up to a temp agency, I remember, because they said, yeah, we, we.
got a job it's okay that you got a felony we'll we'll get you into the job and everything i get up there
and they pull up my background and they're like oh no we can't hire you i was like okay well that's fair enough
you know they were nice about it and everything so i go to drive away and they called me and they said
you need to call this person at the justice resource center and said they work in a reentry division
as soon as i heard reentry i was like really okay so i called i didn't get that person i got another
another person that her and I sit there on the phone for like 45 minutes talking about reentry
stuff and that led me down she didn't get me a job but that led me down the path and introduced me
to the whole reentry and recovery community up there in Asheville right and she told me she said you
need to become a peer support specialist and without even asking what it was I knew what it was
and she told me it's somebody who uses their lived experience to be able to help others who are
struggling with, you know, either substance abuse or mental health challenges or whatever.
I came up with the idea of a phoenix one day when I was walking around the track in prison
and I was like, that's what I want to be. I want to be like a phoenix. You know,
I'm born 45 years of my life up. I want to rise up out of these ashes and do something with
myself. So I came up with the phoenix idea. I had these five or six guys that I still talked to
on the inside. So I started up the newsletter and just started working on putting the pieces
together. You know, I don't know anything about business. I don't know anything about any of it.
So it's, it's taken a lot longer than it would for somebody else. But I've been out for two years,
June 26th, and I've been working on this since I've been out. It's the longest project that I've
ever worked on. It's the hardest that I've ever worked on anything.
And it's not, bro, that's not like what you're talking about doing is not easy.
No. You know what I'm saying? It's not like you're, it's not like you're,
So it's a lot of struggle with very little payoff, you know what I'm saying?
Like, you know, until you reach that finish line.
And even then it'll be a struggle.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm like, I've got a lot going on right now.
So I'm, I'm war out.
But I know that if I push to the end of this, it's going to be, it's going to work.
Right.
It's going to.
There's a huge gap.
I mean, we had a, we had a book of Beckley that was like that thick of reentry
resources.
I sent out like 20 letters
you know how I got back
zero
everything they've got is outdated
everything that they've got is broken
and they really don't care
that I can start
does you guys have the computers
they had these reentry computers
you go to the library
you get on this reentry computer
you could pull up
supposedly resources
none of them are hooked to the internet
yeah so none of them are updated
it's useless
so
what are the people do in there
that really want to try to do something.
If you're good and resourceful, you can find resources,
but it'd be a lot better if they were available to them.
Well, you know, what's interesting now and now because of the COVID and stuff,
like even all the stuff that is you could kind of manipulate to help you in some way,
like getting a resume or something, that none of that's available now.
No, no.
So now you're in even a worse position to get out of prison.
Now you're really screwed.
And you get, and then the halfway house, like, okay, how much time do I get in halfway house?
People are like, oh, it's great.
you get to work and live there for free.
They're taking 30% of what I make.
Yep.
They're, plus you're paying your taxes.
So you end up, you're basically working for less than half.
Yeah, because they take that 30% off.
You're gross.
Right.
Right.
So I'm working for less than half.
So if I'm making, you know, whatever, you're making $15 an hour.
You're working for a lot.
Now you're working for about $6 an hour, seven bucks an hour if you're lucky.
And so, you know, you're trying to save that.
You're trying to drive the, like, even after I got a vehicle, they wouldn't let me park it
in the parking lot.
That took another two weeks.
So I had to have my buddy drive, keep my vehicle at his, at his gym for a couple weeks.
Like a vehicle sit in the parking lot for two weeks.
Do you think that's not an opportunity for somebody to steal the vehicle?
I don't, I have PIP.
I don't have liability.
My car gets stolen.
I'm done.
It's not finance.
I couldn't get financing because I wasn't allowed to get financing because I had to get
permission to get financing.
And they said, no, you can't get financing.
You're in the halfway house.
We're not allowing you to get financing.
How am I supposed to buy a vehicle?
Ask your family.
My family's not helping me.
They don't have money to help their convict brother who just got out of prison and
lives in a halfway house.
Like who would help me?
Right.
You know, like where are you going to stay?
You can stay with your mother.
My mother lives in a retirement community.
I can't stay with my mother.
Like there are, you know what I'm saying?
Like there was, I was in a really bad spot.
I got lucky that an ex-girlfriend took pity on me and said,
you can live in my spare room
and then when I was like I can't do that
I'm not going to do that to you I'm not going to do that to you
she was like no no you'd be helping me
you'd be helping me as like stop
like I'm not helping you
like I'm paying you like 600 bucks
a month and you're
throwing in food I'm going to eat you out of
that 600 I'm going to eat you out of that 600
I'm fucking tea it right
you know it got listen it got so bad she
she finally came to me after a month or two and she's like
listen I wasn't anticipating coffee
you drink a lot of coffee
And I was like, oh, man, I was like, well, how much?
I'll pay it, I'll pay it.
But it was the same thing.
When my car broke down on probation, my car broke down, I live like four miles to a bus stop.
I'm not saying I can't walk that in a mind.
I could take an hour and walk that.
I could get dropped off there and walk back.
That's like two couple hours.
Assuming the buses run on time, I could drive the bus for another hour and a half to where I worked.
That's fine.
I could spend an extra five hours a day so that I could go work eight hours.
I could do that.
You're right.
It's not impossible.
But I'll tell you what it doesn't do.
It doesn't make me not want to commit fraud.
So the fact is, when my vehicle broke down and I went to my probation officer and I had
$1,000 that I could get a new vehicle for, she said you can't finance anything.
And I was like, why?
She said, well, you have a financial crime, and we don't feel comfortable letting you finance anything.
And I was like, I said, I don't have a car.
She's always going to figure something out.
I said, I don't have anything to figure out.
My figuring it out is let me go buy a brand new vehicle, which I can afford because
I have the pay stubs for.
And luckily, I didn't listen to you people.
And I went and got three credit cards when I was in the halfway house, which I, you know, I got secured credit cards because I knew this moment was going to come something.
So luckily, I didn't listen to you, and I can do it, but you have to give me permission.
We argued for two weeks before she finally said,
I'll let you spend $300 a month on a new vehicle.
I said, then I'll have to get a used vehicle.
It's just then you get a used vehicle.
I said, but don't you understand?
If anything goes wrong with the used vehicle, I don't have the money to pay for the repairs.
If I get a new vehicle, I at least get a bumper-to-bumper warranty.
I don't, I'm not trying to buy, get a brand-new Lexus or a Lamborghini or something or a Porsche.
I'm trying to get the cheapest bumper-to-bumper I could get, which was my Jeep.
Right.
And so literally, when I came back, I was allowed to spend 300 bucks.
I spent 375 bucks.
She was furious, furious.
And I was like, and I was just gambling that she wasn't going to violate me for an extra 75 bucks.
But she could have.
She could have.
Absolutely.
So I'm saying, everything is against you.
Yeah.
I mean, you can't get, people don't want to rent to you if you got felonies.
Oh, yeah.
that that list that they put out in prison of all these companies that hire felons yeah they'll hire a felon if it's 7 10 15 years old but they're not hiring you straight out of prison um it's not gonna happen yeah so well look i mean you know it's obvious the government's failed us in a lot of ways right you know you can you know look here's the problem it's that could you make it you could make it but it would take it would take someone who is extremely resourceful yes manipulative
manipulative and someone that is super humble and super appreciative. I mean, you would have to
change your mindset so fundamentally. And the truth is, by the time you get out of prison,
you're probably pretty fucked up. Yeah. I mean, there's definitely some of that. Yeah. Right.
So if you haven't had some kind of a life altering experience inside prison to get you your head
right, you got a long road ahead of you. And probably you're just going to get reincarcerated.
I mean, the way it works now, you almost have to be like the perfect candidate to turn your life around to be able to really do it.
Right.
You know, all those things you said, resourceful, smart, driven, humble, all those things have to be there.
But there's a lot of people that are falling through to cracks just because it's so freaking hard to do.
Not a lot of it, it's, it's, it's, what is recidivism?
That's a massive, that's not, that's not cracks.
That's people falling into a swimming pool.
then there's like it's not like a little there's it it's it's really a few people the people that are
falling through the cracks are the ones that are succeeding because almost nobody succeeds right
if you look at recidivism it's it's it's it's nuts absolutely it is and i've seen people who have
gotten out who seem like they were going to do the right thing they were going to do right thing
and then one or two things go wrong and the next thing you know they're like they're in such a jam
and what do they do they go they rob a bank or they do something like i know guys have robbed banks
while they were in the halfway house.
Yeah.
Within a few months.
Yeah.
I've heard of that as well.
Jess and I knew a guy that literally was telling people in the halfway house that he was going to start.
He was going to do heroin.
He's like, I don't know how long I'll be on supervised release he is because, I mean, I'm going to go back to heroin.
I mean, I just, I love it and I this and I that.
He died a year later.
Year later, we got, she got notified by a mutual friend that said, hey, remember so and so.
Yeah.
Boom.
Here's his obituary.
Mm-hmm.
it's you know he didn't have nobody ever talked to him right he got in trouble for like stealing
using company credit card he ended up getting like 14 months or something ridiculous didn't go to art
app didn't get this didn't get that got three months a halfway house put him back home he's back on
fucking heroin boom he's dead yep i'm not saying that's the bop's fault or anybody's fault but his
own but i'm saying you could have certainly you oh and by the way this guy he was um he was an engineer
So he made over $100,000 a year.
He had a, it's not like he was a guy that that didn't contribute a lot to society.
This was an upstanding guy.
Yeah.
I've met guys from NASA.
I've met lawyers.
I've met doctors.
I've met all kinds of super smart guys that end up in federal prison because they just,
they did something slightly stupid that in another country would have probably just gotten your probation.
Yeah.
Said they get five years, 10 years.
They get back out.
everybody's left them it's over they're rebuilding their whole life yeah got to rebuild your
whole life i mean and it's true it's i think what i meant was you you've got a there's a good portion
of them now i think that they they don't know any other way yeah you know so you have to start at a
fundamental level of retraining them how to live yeah and i think i i never want to leave anybody
behind but certainly there's some people in there that are trying that are trying a little harder than
You know what I mean?
They're really trying to do something with themselves while they're in there.
And then you've got others that they jump in there and they jump straight into the dope game in there.
Yeah.
Because a lot of people that haven't been in prison, they don't understand.
It's just like in society in there.
It's just like it is out here.
You can't have booze unless you can get it smuggled in, you know.
Yeah.
Those kind of things.
But it's just a regular society.
So people jump into it there.
They never leave that.
They're not ready to move on from that mindset, I guess.
what I'm getting at. So, but the people that are, they're still hard-pressed for resources.
They're hard-pressed for, there is no planning going into them getting out.
Yeah. Like you said, the halfway house doesn't really do anything.
Yeah. The advice of the halfway house and probation officer, my probation officer, my advice
to, you know, reacclimating myself to society was you're smart guy. You'll figure it out.
You'll figure it out. You'll figure it out.
Like, okay. Yeah, and I'll admit, I'm probably smarter than the average bear. But what about the
average bear what about the average bear you're saying like what do you know like and luckily for me
i didn't i don't think much about that because i'm solely thinking about myself but now that things are
going okay now it's like well no wonder the average guy keeps coming back and that's why you're saying
figure it out yeah that's that's exactly what it is um my probation officer was awesome uh she came out
the first time she told me she said look i'm not here to try to set you up i'm not going to try to
surprise you and trap you unless you give me a reason to. I want to see you succeed. And
by every count, her and I had a great relationship all the way through it. So I think the,
and I've dealt with state probation officers too. And and there seemed to be a little bit of a
difference there, you know, to me. Um, but so anyway, while I was in our DAP and I was able to help
people, I was actually a senior guide through the last three months. And then they asked me to
stay over as a mentor and teach classes. So I stayed over and taught classes. So I stayed over and taught
And that was just what I had a passion for. You know, I always had a problem with a regular job before in a corporation or something trying to make somebody else rich. Here's something I can do and actually contribute to society and help. So let me look at going that path. I got out. I got a job at some plastic injection molding and whatnot. Worked on getting my peer support specialist. Did the work. Went and intern for Sunrise Community for Recovery and Wellness, which is where I work now.
and did some volunteer work for them and got an opportunity to go to work full-time for them.
And I'll tell you what, the difference that it made when I went from that corporate, you know, whatever job to this job was monumental.
I mean, it was, you're not going to make somebody rich now.
You're going to try to help people.
Right.
And that just made me happy in a way that I'd never, never had before.
And that fueled me just pushing harder on Phoenix because I want to be able to help the guys in there.
and I know enough about how the system works to possibly be able to really do that.
So I brainstormed with a bunch of people.
I've talked to a lot of people on Facebook and connected with groups, you know,
from people from FAM and a couple of the other groups that are out there.
And I've got a newsletter that goes in to the federal prison.
But the project that I'm really excited about is Sunrise is the company that I work for.
they're a peer-led organization
which means that it's all
peer support specialists that run it.
It's all people with this lived experience.
So the person who's struggling,
they're able to relate to that person
because they've kind of been there.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, it's not somebody with a doctorate degree
that's never been struggled for anything
telling them what's what
and they're not going to believe them.
So you get a better chance to connect with them.
There are these peer-led organizations
all over the country.
So what I'm working on doing
is building a database of peer-led organizations and the contacts with the people there in
every city that's got a halfway house right so wherever there's a halfway house i'm in contact
with these guys in prison i can put them in touch with a person with a phone number at this
peer-led organization when they get to the halfway house okay then they've got a a local access
to the resources and everything they've got somebody that they can connect with
then understand because they've been there.
They'll know about jobs.
They'll know about all the resources that are available to them.
Right.
Basically what the halfway house is supposed to be doing, but they don't.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it's plugging them into that network.
And the other big thing that it does is, you know, when you get out of prison, you're like,
okay, what are I going to do now?
A lot of people just fall back to their old friends, their old ways, which puts them right
back in the same thing.
Yeah.
They get out and get introduced to this kind of organization.
It's people that truly care.
they're in recovery too they're going to invite you to go do things they're going to replace that
social element as well in a lot of cases you know not every time yeah but in a lot of cases
they're going to replace that social community that you had and that's going to make it
getting down that path so much easier right so that's the the big thing that i'm pushing on the
project now but there's so much more i mean i've talked to a lot of life coaches um out there
on facebook there's some good groups for those i had a great response for people who were willing to
volunteer their time to have conversations with inmates that were still in prison and help them
with life coaching and planning what they were going to do when they get out. So we've got that.
I've got a college professor that I know who's willing to help me write some correspondence
courses, not necessarily for a degree, just to be able to get the knowledge of how to do basic
bookkeeping for a business. Right. Because that's one of the things about people that are in prison
as well is they're not really of an employee
mindset. Yeah. They're more wanting to go work for
themselves, at least a lot of them. Yeah. I can't tell you how
many people came to me. Can you help me write this business plan? Right.
You know, yeah, but they just don't have the knowledge to be able to do it.
That's actually a hustle in there. I know guys that we're charging guys like a hundred
were they? A hundred bucks, 200 bucks to write a business plan. I was like,
what are you doing? Everybody's hustling in there, aren't they?
Where are you doing? Everybody, they listen to every business plan that somebody I came.
they'd be man that is a good idea that's a good idea and they go man can you write up a business
plan they yeah man it's like a hundred bucks give me a hundred bucks in commissary or a hundred
you know you do one or two of those a month and it was basically his business plan was the same
basically over and over it was just horrible people are just horrible just praying on people
oh yeah you're in there with a bunch of criminals what you expect so um but i got a ton of
ideas you know for what can be done with this thing but i think the big thing is just
I try to catch people about a year before they get out or so and get them connected with resources in their area and then start helping to develop a plan, you know, but a little bit down the road, really, the way I sum it up the best is I want to revolutionize rehabilitation in prison.
Right.
I want to be able to offer them the resources they need to be able to be successful when they get out.
And you have to, the easiest thing, well, easiest, one of the things would be good is to actually be able to go in like every once a year.
year or something to multiple prisons and kind of give a a presentation or explain like that'd be
the perfect thing to try and get to them so that they know it's available because a staff's not
going to help but you know if they were allow you to come in and have that conversation and the
other thing is you know what I mean guys so luckily in Florida they have what's called the
flow bus and that is the where they allow you to get your driver's license do you know how many
guys I know that we're getting out of prison that are going you're going to the halfway house and
You don't have an ID.
You don't have a driver's license.
And I was like, why didn't you go to the flow bus?
Bro, I did.
I put in for it twice.
And they canceled the last minute this time.
And the other one was full.
And then I owed this much money on back parking tickets.
So I had to pay that off.
Well, that was $800.
And I couldn't get it paid off.
So I couldn't get my driver's license.
I could get an ID.
But it was like, like you would think that they would have something set up.
The federal government would have something set up to say,
Listen, we're quashing this guy's $800.
He's been locked up 12 years.
Drop it.
Like, let's get him a driver's license.
Let's get them that, like, it's all on you.
It's all on you.
And I get it.
I get that it's your fault that you're there and I get that whole thing.
But the truth is that these are guys who have, a lot of these guys have never had a job.
They don't know how to fill out paperwork.
The anxiety is overwhelming.
and the staff doesn't want to help.
And so they get out.
There's no help.
They feel more comfortable going to a drug deal than they do filling out paperwork to try to get a fucking driver's license.
Somebody needs to be able to help in some way.
It leaves them hopeless.
I mean, it leaves them hopeless.
And that's right.
It's just a cycle.
Yeah.
It's like me.
I was hopeless.
I turned to crime to solve my problems.
That's what people are going to continue to do unless you get them some kind of avenue to be able to reenter society.
Right.
You know, and it was tempting for me to.
jump in there and jump into the legal fight of, you know, squash mandatory minimums and
conditions in jail and everything like that. Look, there's a lot smarter people that are doing
that than me. And I'm going to leave that to them. This is a problem that I see that I can do
something about. Right. And that's what I'm, that's, that's my jam. It makes me happy to do that
because I'm able to connect with guys that are where I used to be. They want to get where I am now.
okay if you want to get where I'm now I'll help you yeah now I'm not going to work harder at it than you're going to yeah I was just thinking that a lot of these guys will they'll take advantage they'll be like well you sure they do this for can you basically they want you to give give give give give no or even just take up your time to talk to you yeah because you know when you're inside outside communications a big deal so even just having somebody to talk to would be a big thing to them but I'm working on some some kind of vetting kind of things you know to decide who who really wants to change you
you got to show me, you know, that you're, you're really trying to do this before I'm going to dump a bunch of effort into.
But if you do that, I'll give you everything I got.
Right.
I've got a person that I've helped out in Salt Lake City.
They had their, was it the First Step Act credits, refigured, okay, she was in a halfway house.
And at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, they said, your time has been recalculated.
You have to be out of here by 4 o'clock.
where are we going to go?
They don't give a shit.
We don't care, but you can't be here at 4 o'clock.
Yeah.
So her and I worked a good bit that night, and we got her a hotel room.
Yeah.
So that she'd have somewhere to stay, and then we started working on trying to get her a plan together.
So, you know, if that's the kind of organization I want Phoenix to be.
My newsletter is completely interactive.
I invite everybody that gets the newsletter.
Email me back.
You know, we'll start a dialogue as much as we can, and several people have done that.
that's showing me that you're really trying to do something.
Right.
So, but going back in there or going in there and doing motivational speaking and stuff,
I would love to do that.
I'm waiting on the time limit before I can.
But that's something that I'll have in the works coming up.
So I'm excited about it.
It's, you know, complete completing that book was a big deal.
And I got something completed.
Now I want to get this all the way there and get it completed and be able to change people's lives.