Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast - Most Wanted Cyber Criminal | Brett Johnson

Episode Date: August 27, 2024

Most Wanted Cyber Criminal | Brett Johnson ...

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Starting point is 00:00:30 For a limited time at McDonald's, enjoy the tasty breakfast trio. Your choice of chicken or sausage McMuffin or McGrittles with a hash brown and a small iced coffee for five bucks plus tax. Available until 11 a.m. at participating McDonald's restaurants. Price excludes flavored iced coffee and delivery. I'm in the grocery store one day. It just happened to walk past the magazine aisle. And I see this article about identity theft on the cover. And I'm like, huh?
Starting point is 00:00:55 Might be a good article. I open it up and it's like shadow crew. and I'm like, oh, fuck. Hey, this is Matt Cox, and we are here doing an interview with Brett Johnson. And, yeah, I've already fucked it up. That's fine. All right, so do me a favor. If you like the video, hit the subscribe button, hit the bell so you get notified of videos just like this.
Starting point is 00:01:25 Leave me a comment, and I will respond to the comment. and hopefully Brett will answer some comments to and check them out. Also, Brett has a YouTube channel and what is the name of the YouTube channel? It is the Brett Johnson Show on YouTube. It is the Brett Johnson show. And this is what's one of the things that's kind of interesting is that I was number one on the secret. Well, one I was on the Secret Service's most wanted list, which is odd. But I was also for a period of time for a couple of years, I was number one on the Secret Service's most wanted list.
Starting point is 00:01:51 And Brett Johnson was number one on the most wanted list too. we're going to hear about his story and like I said he's got a he's got a podcast where you he goes mostly cyber crimes and cyber crime security um how to become this better guy because I'm still trying to learn how to be healthy in life so that too okay so that's the same that's the same kind of thing too it's funny because people watch the show and they're always like they're always like they'll always say like oh you're inspiring and and amazing and this and that and like I'm not I'm just trying to I'm just trying to be a decent human being like but for some reason that's inspiring and and you know what that's um i'm glad you said that
Starting point is 00:02:29 because i get a lot of that man and i just don't understand because i'm like hey i'm just trying to go through this damn journey right now yeah yeah um okay so uh so yeah check it out and uh we're gonna start with the uh oh oh patreon hit my patreon up i got a patreon and you know it's like you know Connor and colby and you know these guys aren't free so hit me up And yeah, I appreciate it. And here's the, here we're going to start the interview. One of the things, can I ask you a question real quick before we get into it?
Starting point is 00:03:04 Because this is a question I get all the time. I want to know how you answer it. Well, I've got multiple questions I get all that thing. Come on, shoot them out, man. You know what I'm saying? Like, these are the questions people ask me. And people always look shocked when I answer them. And I always think, oh, that's the wrong answer.
Starting point is 00:03:18 Like, that's not what they expected. So one of those is, do you ever think about committing fraud yeah okay yeah i'm like people ask me that i'm like every single day dude pandemic it was like shit that's some money that you know it's like damn i'll see a real estate commercial where they're buying real estate sight unseen oh and i'm like oh stop it bro stop what are you doing like oh god dear god what are you doing man what's happening well that that criminal mindset never leaves it never leaves it's always there so i am asked that i'm also asked uh would i ever commit a crime again. Right. And they, you know, news or whoever's asking that wants you to say no. And the answer is
Starting point is 00:03:59 not no. It's no for me either. That's right. It's like, you know, I'm recovering. The longer I go without committed to crime, the chances are I'll keep going. But right now, I'm just recovering from all this bullshit. I actually told my probation officer. Well, I've actually told several people. Did you take Ardap? Yes, I took Ardap. Okay. I almost caused a riot at Fort Worth prison taking our tap so i i've told the doctor that that was running the program this and i told my probation officer she was i was like yeah yeah i know i'm gonna bust my ass i'm gonna get a job i'm i'm gonna bust my ass for the next year hopefully pull some shit together get myself on my feet and i kept saying i guess i said a year too many times and she goes well what happens if it takes longer than a
Starting point is 00:04:41 year and i go if it takes longer than a year and she goes yeah i go if it if in a year from now i'm living in someone's spare room i'm taking the bus to work i can barely pay my bills like that And she goes, yeah, I said, I go, I'm going to commit a massive, massive fraud. That's what I was about to say. Then fuck it, balls of the wall at that point. Yeah, if I can't feed myself in a year from now, then I gave it a good shot. Okay, so that's, I mean, that is the answer, right? I mean, unless we've got, you know, I wanted to turn my life around.
Starting point is 00:05:07 But if you don't have that support group, if you don't have a way to make a living, you're, you leave prison with the exact same tools you go in with. So you're going to do what you need to do to survive. Yeah. I mean, that's a fact. Yeah. So, you know, that's what the justice. system and family members and friends and anyone in interviews who they don't understand that they're like oh no i would never commit a crime no no no listen listen listen you would and here's what i told
Starting point is 00:05:31 the doctor by the way was i had said to her i said she says well crime is never an option i'm oh i said listen let's assume that your husband leaves you for her for his secretary let's assume the economy goes south i said which we all know it can let's assume right well at that time it was Let's assume that I said they don't have the budget to hire to hire people like you at $100,000. I said, and you go out and you try and get a job in a bad economy and you can't. You find yourself and your two kids living in your car with no support from anybody. I said, and there is a loaf of bread four feet inside of the supermarket's front door. I said, if you steal that loaf of bread, your kids live another week.
Starting point is 00:06:12 I said, you wouldn't do it? I go, the difference between you and me, I said, is my. The bar for committing crime, for me, it's just lower than yours. Right. I mean, everybody will do it. Everyone will do it. That's a fact. And what, and of course, that's the argument.
Starting point is 00:06:26 And what people don't understand is, okay, yeah, you'll steal that bologna, you'll steal that bread. But, you know, if you're going to steal bologna, shit, why would I eat bologna if I could have steak? Yeah, I don't have to, if I'm willing to do this, I don't have to live in my car anymore. That's exactly right. My kids deserve better. So here's the other question is where, and this always kills me, too, is they're like, well, man, when you were on the run. you must have been like were you scared all the time were you worried was it horrible and i always say and i know this is the wrong one i'm always like bro honestly like the best the best
Starting point is 00:06:58 period of my life was what was being on the run i loved to be on the run have you read shantaram or not no so indian guy i'm i'm sorry australian guy true story but he novelizes it he escapes from an australian maximum security prison or no i'm sorry new zealand maximum security prison makes his way to india and starts running black markets for medical goods, everything else like that. But he talks about that escape and being on the run and how every single day was like the highest day of his life because he's free. He's beat the system again another day, everything else. And so with me, it was I took a road trip.
Starting point is 00:07:35 I did the Route 66, Christ, and I spent a lot of time in Vegas, a lot of time out in L.A. But every single day, I mean, it was very lonely. But at the same time, it was like, shit, I'm beating the same. system every day. Yeah. It's just you and your wits against everything. There's no there's nobody. Something goes wrong. There's nobody I can call. That's it. So I've got no help. I have to figure out how to do every single thing by myself. And see, but that's the thing, right? I mean, the we, when I, that criminal mindset, we are used to doing things on our own. And we have the will to do it.
Starting point is 00:08:09 Right. And a lot of it, I was, I gave an interview just yesterday. I forgot who I was talking to, but it's just that sheer force of will that sees a lot of this stuff through. yeah um okay so so let's let's rewind here where were you where were you born oh dude i'm from i'm from hazard kentucky so if you've seen the news lately all those floods uh that's the epicenter of all the floods and that's where i was born i come from from hazard um it's cold country my dad was a helicopter pilot in the u.s army captain so i grew up overseas in germany throughout the 50 states things like that my dad was forced out of the military they did a downsizing he was forced out around 78 79 becomes a coal miner and at that point in time
Starting point is 00:08:53 you were paid pretty well except they were on strike all the time so it was feast and famine frequently my mom so my mom was just kind of a fuck addicted opiates she cheated on my dad constantly this is a woman i talked about in my presentations but no shit man she would bring men home in front of him he would sit there and cry beg her not to do it and by god should do it anyway have these conversations with him you know hey i'm leaving you for him and she'd get be gone a couple weeks come back and he'd take her back i mean this was my dad he was he was a good guy but you know if you want to call him a cuck you can call him that but he was overwhelmingly in love with this woman yeah and and and he grew up and they he grew up in a really good family a really
Starting point is 00:09:41 good family when he went to tell his mom he tells me the story today when he went to those mom that he was about to marry my mom, she literally passes out. And don't do it, Ray, don't do it. Not only that, but when he goes to tell my mom's dad, Paul, that he's going to marry her, Paul sits him down. He's like, Ray Jean, if you knew what I knew, you'd take off running and you wouldn't look back. And he wouldn't listen. So he marries her. She was definitely the criminal in the family. This is a woman. She stills a Caterpillar D9. bulldozer at one point she uh she takes a slip and phone a store at another she this is a woman that used to go to the drug store she'd get the empty uh capsules and fill them up with bullshit to try
Starting point is 00:10:26 to sell them as speed and amphetamines or everything else is i mean anything and everything to try to get money um my life my first crime i was 10 my mom had left my dad let's backtrack so my dad my dad was a good guy because i've not told this story before but my dad was a good guy he never really He never really committed any crime on his own. If my mom wanted to commit a crime, he had co-sign on to it. So, yeah, let's try that bullshit. The two times that he tries to really go in to commit a crime, the first time was, we won't do it the first time.
Starting point is 00:10:58 The second time, he's watching 60 minutes one night, and they've got a show about the Miami drug trade. You know, they're showing the stacks of cash, the tables of Coke and everything else. And this man is just focused on that damn segment. And we're all sitting there kind of watching it like, what the hell, dad? And my mom's looking at my dad like, Ray, are you okay?
Starting point is 00:11:15 So he gets through watching the segment, turns around, looks at her, and he's like, I think I need to go to Miami and be a police officer. And she was like, maybe you do. And his plan was to get down to Miami, become a cop, happen upon some drug deal someplace, keep the cash, they keep the drugs, retire. And my point was, won't they just shoot your ass? And he was like, ah, no, it won't happen. So they sell everything they've got, round up like, I know, $6,000,
Starting point is 00:11:44 rent a U-Ha. head south on I-75, end up in Miami, the night, the 1980 riots broke out in Miami, that same night. So, city was exploding everything else. My mom's like, holy shit, we get in a day's in right across the street from all these homeless people. She's like, kids don't go outside. So my dad goes to cop school the first day, he comes back and he's like, I think it's going to be all right. Second day he comes back. He's like, shit, we got to get out of here. So it turns out the Miami-dayed cops, the real ones, had burst into the training session. arrested like six people with outstanding warrants and they all had the same
Starting point is 00:12:19 idea of happening upon a drug deal and keeping the cash right so from there we had backed up I-75 they're running out of money and they decide on Panama City Florida because when they were kids they had spent spring break there so go there my dad the only job he could get was has a 7-11 store clerk making $140 a week my mom was an LPN she gets a job in a nursing home keeps the job long enough to see my dad off to work so she can start cheating on his ass again and we slowly go broke that then that's a lot of the motivation for me over the years i mean when we're in panama city when i was a kid we would be without power without water we would literally be out in the
Starting point is 00:12:59 backyard of the house we were renting catching water in buckets so we could flush the toilet brush her teeth shit like that how old were you at this point eight nine so my mom leaves my dad i was 10 Denise my sister was nine move back from move move back to hazard kentucky and uh at that point my mom was was just a fuck dude i mean just an abusive parent was what she was uh she would beat us but that wasn't the worst but the worst part was the mental and the emotional stuff you know she had this is a woman to tell us i gave up my life for you and i'm going to leave one day and never come back and you'll find me dead someplace you know just constantly like this um so what happens is she moves us back
Starting point is 00:13:38 to hazard kentucky we're living in an apartment underneath of her parents and the They were absolutely insane, too. This is her dad. We couldn't eat upstairs. We didn't have any food. Couldn't eat upstairs because they would always, you know, tease us and talk about how poor we were. He would make sure that when we bathe, we were allowed a bath a week, inch and a half, two inches of water. No more than that.
Starting point is 00:14:01 If he found that anymore, he'd raise absolute total hell, right? So we were living in that environment. My mom out partying all the time. Sometimes she'd take us with her, leave us in the car. We'd wait in the living room as she went in the bedroom and got it on with somebody. Most of the time, she just left this at home. And what happens is the crime, first crime ever committed. Home for a few days, no food in the house.
Starting point is 00:14:23 I'm the kid that used to, you know, I'd be scared mom wasn't coming home. That's the way I took it all. You know, she said it. She's not going to be back. So I'd post up at the window or walk out in the driveway. Denise, nine years old, angry as shit. You know, she didn't worry about that. And to this day, Denise still has those angry issues.
Starting point is 00:14:38 But my first crime, no food in the house. Denise walks in one day, got a pack of pork chops in her hands. hand i'm like where'd you get that she's like i stole it i was like show me how you did that so she takes me over to a mp shows me how she's stealing food and i'm like good idea and we get to where we're wanting a sandwich man and um denise had been stuffing the the food down her pants that's how we're getting the food out of there kmart across the way and you can't you can't put a loaf of bread down your pants i looked at my sister i was like let me see what i can do walked into kmart 10 10 10 years old, walked into Kmart, got a hoodie off the rack, took the tags off of it, put it on, wore it out, got out. And I was like, shit. So stuff the loaf of bread down the sleeve, walk out A&P with it. Kmart, of course, start stealing toys and games and books, clothes, everything else. Mom comes home, sees the shit. Where did you get this? I stand up. We found it. She's like, you didn't find this. Denise stands up. We stole it. My mom looks at my sister, show me how you did that. So she starts running us as little shoplifters, calls her mom.
Starting point is 00:15:39 So it's this intergenerational shoplifting ring of all of a sudden. We start taking these road trips. They go to JC Pennies until clothes and jewelry bullshit like that. I was the book guy, so I'd always stop at the bookstore and still a load of books and take them back and devour them. But first crime I committed right there. And usually at that point in the present, and you know this. I'm sure you know this shit too. I don't know how old you were when you started crime.
Starting point is 00:16:02 I was 10. And, you know, when you're a kid, you can't help what the adults in your stuff. circle do you're going to do the shit they do yeah but when i became that adult you know i chose to do that yeah but i had that path laid for me my sister other than that shoplifting she's fine i mean well anger issues out the ass but uh denise is a parent she's a she's a teacher she works hard every day doesn't break the law anything else i was the guy that just kept on going and um so that's the first crime i committed right there and i found out quickly that not only my mom but everyone on that side of the family were criminals.
Starting point is 00:16:40 It's a whole whole ring of comment. So I grew up, man, doing insurance fraud, you know, faking accidents, burning cars for cash, burning homes, faking accidents as well, trafficking drugs, growing pot, illegally strip mining coal. I was on the Rolex Friedman show. He got a kick out of that bullshit. But document forgery. I grew up knowing how to do that until I branched off on my own. I faked a car accident in 94-96, got the money to get married, moved from Hazard, Kentucky to Lexington, to go to UK.
Starting point is 00:17:14 I was an English major and theater major. Do you have a job during any of this time? It's just one lick after one licks carrying it on to the next one. So that's a good question. The first job I had, my stepfather, my mom gets remarried, my stepfather, he was a coal miner. She talks him into quitting his job and going into the coal business. And he was, that's where the illegal strip mining comes in. He couldn't afford to get the permits, the two acre permits.
Starting point is 00:17:42 So he does what's called wildcatting. That's where you just go in and take the coal out and you don't worry about reclaiming the land or anything else. And that's how you make money. A lot of people do that in that area. So he goes broke doing that. And we ended up living in a 40 foot trailer, me, my sister, my stepdad, my mom, and a work hand, we're in this 40 foot trailer for 18 months, living off literally deer meat, cornmeal. And I remember saying to my sister, I'll never do this shit again.
Starting point is 00:18:06 another motivator all of a sudden. But what happens is, is, I forgot your damn question. No, I was asking if you had a job during this whole thing. So the first job I got is he finally rebuilds himself, starts logging. So he hired me. We didn't have any money. He's like, I'll pay you $20 a day to go out and log with me. So I logged 10 hours a day, $2 an hour, was the first job.
Starting point is 00:18:31 The first company I worked for was Domino's, Domino's Pizza, became a manager and ripped them off for probably $30,000 in a year until they found out about it. I mean, I was living pretty well and everyone got pizzas. So that was the first job. The second job was I worked at Jay Peterman, you know, like from Seinfeld. Yeah, yeah. I worked the real Jay Peterman company for a while, ripped them off. Then I moved over to, I was at a deli assistant manager at Kroger for a while, didn't rip them off because that was a corporation.
Starting point is 00:19:05 They'd find that out. I did eat well from the deli. Then I went over to, there was a place called the Lexington Diner's Club, gave you this discount. They sold telemarketing, this discount card for restaurants. You'd go in and you buy one meal. They'd give you another free. I ended up stealing. They sold those cards for $60 a piece.
Starting point is 00:19:24 So one night I just did a B&E went in and stole like 300 of these cards and set up my own telemarketing shop selling them until they found out about it. And I got charged for that. So that was another one. I worked for the, for the Shriner Circus for a while. They ran the Shriner Circus. This company ran Shriner Circus donations and Kowana's donations. So I set up my own Kowana's charity and would do telemarketing to get the donations to go in my pocket.
Starting point is 00:19:54 Got caught, did three months on that. After that is when I find the internet. So that was all the little scams going up to that. So I'm, you know, I'm online every day. found eBay and I was like shit I like eBay didn't know how to make money on eBay so I used to watch inside edition idiot Bill O'Reilly he was the host of inside back then and they were doing a show that night on Beanie Babies profiling peanut the royal blue elephant I'm sitting there watching like 1500 shit I didn't find me a peanut and I was I was really naive I was like well you know I'm in Kentucky got all these little rural stores and everything I just go around to all these stores and surely there's one in the bin so six hours. of that the next day. I'm like, no, there's none in the bin. Their asses are on eBay for $1,500. So what I did was they had the gray beanie baby elephant, the exact same elephant, just a different color, had that thing for $8. And I'm like, buy the gray beanie baby elephant
Starting point is 00:20:51 for $8. Stop by a Kroger on the way home, pick up a pack of blue writ dye, go home, try to dye the little guy. Turns out they're made out of polyester. Don't hold dye. You literally get them out and you see all the, all the ink trading off the damn thing. So here I am. Tried to dry it with a blow dryer so the ink stays. And it looks like he's got the mange when you get through with it. And what I did was found a picture of a real one. Posted it on eBay. Woman wins the bid.
Starting point is 00:21:17 As soon as she wins a bid, I'm like, send her a message. Because I want to put her on the defense of not me. So I sent her a message. I was like, hey, congratulations on winning the bid. We'll get this right out to you. The problem is that we've never done any business before. I don't know if I can trust you. What I need you to do, go down to the U.S. Postal Service, pick up a couple money orders
Starting point is 00:21:36 for $1,500. Send those to me. Once I get those, I'll send you your animal. She believed that. Sends me the money orders. I cash them out. I send this creature in the mail. Immediately get a phone call. I didn't order this. My exact response was, lady, you ordered a blue elephant. I sent you a blueish elephant. And right there is that for me, that was the first lesson of cybercrime right there. Delay a victim long enough. You just keep putting them off. A lot of them because they don't know who to report to anything else they get exasperated throw their hands in there walk away none of them complained law enforcement right so first crime i committed got away with it kept going got to where i was another inside edition they were selling autographed baseballs of sammy sosa
Starting point is 00:22:20 mark mcguire so i was watching that and i was like shit i can do autographed baseballs go down the academy the next day by a case of baseballs stop by that same croger pick up a sharpie go home start trying to sign it and i was like shit that doesn't look anything like their signatures So then I was like, well, okay, so they're signing it at the field certificate of authenticity. So I printed my own certificate of authenticity. So they sold them all $60 apiece about three weeks later, knock at the door. Bam, bam, bam, bam. You know that cop knock?
Starting point is 00:22:49 Bam, bam. I was like, I was married at the time. Honey, it's for you. Yeah, my wife, she's just looking at me because she knows what that knock is too. You know, you've never heard it before, but you know right there. And I'm like, okay. Or they hang out with you long enough. They get to know.
Starting point is 00:23:04 They get to know. at that place i opened the door and the cop's name he was sergeant pat tingle from the fayette county sheriff's office i opened the door he's there with a detective he's like are you brett johnson i'm like yeah he's like can we come in and talk to you about some baseballs i was like sure come on in so my wife susan she's just looking at me she stands up by this point she doesn't even look at them she's just looking dead at me so they're like uh autograph baseballs i'm like yeah and they're like sammy sosa and mark mcguire not yep where'd you get them bought them off ebay with certificates of all authenticity. Yep. Off eBay. Yep. Mr. Johnson, we've got a sample of their signatures down at the
Starting point is 00:23:42 office and it doesn't look anything like them. I was like, huh, that's weird. They come with certificates of authenticity. I was going to say, I have a certificate. They're like, Mr. Johnson, we think you printed those off. And I was like, no, sir. And Mr. Johnson, we think you signed those baseballs. I was like, nope, not me. So then they're like, you're going to send these people their money back or we're going to put you in jail. Do you understand? I was like, I understand that. So they leave. my wife Susan whole time she's looking dead at me finally i look over and i was like what and she's like you son of a bitch that's why you bought all those goddamn baseballs and i'm like yeah so that was that was one there was another where a microsoft front page they were giving out free uh trial
Starting point is 00:24:22 versions of front page 98 so i had the crack that would turn it into the full version so i posted on ebay i had you know the full version of like 30 bucks and uh there was a kinko's down the street so one night two p m i walk in and look at the guy behind the counter. I was like, do you mind if I take a few of these trial versions? He's like, dude, you can take all of them. If you want to. I was like, yeah. He was like, yes, I just pick up the entire stand, walk out of the door with it. Go up, post them on eBay, sell them all for $30 a piece. That gets a knock at the door. Same deputy. Same guy. He came like four times, man. He would be like, Brent, come on now.
Starting point is 00:25:01 But what was happening is they were all, everyone I sold the, uh, the, uh, the stuff to, they were all out of state. Yeah. And they weren't going to come to Kentucky to file charges. And will, is he like who, like at that point, you know, who the FBI, it's not like they're really used to this quite yet. Right. He wants Khan Bank of America out of $250,000 using nothing but a fake ID and his charm. He is the most interesting man in the world.
Starting point is 00:25:30 I don't typically commit crime, but when I do, it's bank fraud. stay greedy my friends support the channel join matthew cox's patreon so those were the first little scams and i you know i kept going got better at it finally i start selling pirated software pirated software leads into mod chips first into gaming systems so you can play the pirated disc then i started putting mod chips into cable boxes so you can watch all the pay-per-view all the porn all that bullshit then finally started programming satellite dsssscars so those 18 inch rca systems you pull the card out of it program it turn on all the channels started doing that Canadian judge right as I start doing that Connor's shaking his head he's always disappointed it like whenever I tell stories he
Starting point is 00:26:16 always halfway through he starts going like what we like shit what are you doing so a Canadian judge ruled that this was like 97 98 Canadian judge rules that it's legal for Canadian citizens to pirate RCA signals and his exact language in court was RCA doesn't sell the systems here so it's legal for my citizens to take those signals. So overnight in the United States, a little industry pops up. You go down to Best Buy, buy the system for $100, take it out in the parking lot, open the system up, pull the system out, pull the card out, throw the system away, program the card, ship its ass to Canada, $500 a pop. Started doing that, making a lot of money, had so many orders, couldn't fill them all, quickly. And I mean, by God, quickly thought to myself, why do I need to fill any of the orders?
Starting point is 00:27:00 They're in Canada. I'm down here. Who are they going to complain to? So I didn't fill any of the orders, stole even more money. I was stealing like $4,000 a week at that point, making a pretty good living and was getting worried about things. I was like, man, I'm going to be looked at for money laundering. So I got it in my head. I was like, what I need is I need a fake driver's license. I'll use that driver's license to open up a bank account, laundered the money through there, cash out of the ATM. No one will know me.
Starting point is 00:27:28 I'm at UK. I have no idea where to go to fake ID. So I get online, look around, think I find a guy, send the son of a bitch, $200, send him my picture. He rips me off. You said you're a UK, what? University of Kentucky. Oh, okay. Okay.
Starting point is 00:27:43 So dude rips me off, and I got really pissed. Fuckers. Scam artists. Scam me. So I got really upset and started to look around. Well, back then, the only real avenue you had for online crime was IRC, Internet relay chat. rolling chat board no idea who you're talking to if you can trust them if they've got a product or service if they've got it if it works or if they're just going to rip you off because those channels were loaded full of fucking scammers so what happens is i first find the only site that was out there was called counterfeit library and it was a tutorial site on degrees and had some some bullshit identity stuff on there you know it's just not really good what year is this this would have been 97 late 97 early 9000 So find this site. They had a forum that literally no one was using. I was like the third person that was registered on the forum.
Starting point is 00:28:38 So I start going on there and the only thing I'm doing is just bitching every single day about getting ripped off and how I need this. Well, about the same time that I register, two other guys come on the scene. One is a screen name Mr. X out of Los Angeles. The other one's screen name is Beelzebub out of Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan. So we start bullshitting around every day. And I, you know, I'm talking about my eBay fraud that I'm doing everything else. like that. And one day, Beelzebub, he gets me on ICQ. That's how we used to talk all the time was ICU. He gets me on ICQ and he's like, you know, I can make you a driver's license. I'm like,
Starting point is 00:29:12 well, shit, dude, do it. And he was like, no, but I'm going to charge you. I'm like, yeah, you're going to charge me. He's like, no, I'm going to charge you because if you're going to do this kind of stuff, you've got to learn to trust people if you're going to be in this business. I'm like, well, by that point, I'd already established a pretty good rapport with the people who owned counterfeit library. They knew me. I was email them. They were emailing back and forth all the time. So I thought to myself, I was like, well, shit, he's going to rip me off. I can at least get his ass booted off this site. So I was like, bet. Let's let's go. So I sent him a picture, sent him $200. Two weeks later, in the mail, I get this Ohio driver's license from a guy named in the name
Starting point is 00:29:49 of Steven Schwecky. Turns out he's a real dude, works to this day at ADP payroll. So I saw that damn thing. Now, looking back at it, that driver's license was not great quality, but I didn't know that. To me, it was the prettiest thing in the freaking world. So here I am. I'm running checks through check cashing places, setting up accounts, opening drop addresses at mailboxes, et cetera, all this other bullshit. So start using it extensively. And what happened was Belsabub, he made driver's licenses. Mr. X made a very passable social security card, which is very easy to do. And then I didn't really have any skill at all except eBay fraud. So Beelzebub said, hey, why don't you become the reviewer on this site?
Starting point is 00:30:34 That way, any product or service that comes in, you get to look at it, get to see how it's used, learn everything that you need to do. And you're not selling anything, so you're more trusted than somebody like me that would review people. And I was like, let's try that. Well, that is really like the field of dreams for cybercrime. If you build it, they will come. And they did. because the only avenue you had, other than that, was IRC. No one wanted to be on that bullshit.
Starting point is 00:31:01 So they started to come on Counterfeit Library. Counterfeit Library, so the genesis of modern cybercrime, three sites. Counterfeit Library, Carter Planet, Shadow Crew. I ran both Counterfeit Library and Shadow Crew. Dmitri Golobov, Ukrainian National, builds Carter Planet. And the way that happened was he saw what was happening with Counterfeit Library. He liked that. He was a spammer at that point in time, getting all these credit card details. And he thinks to himself, you know, I wonder if people would buy stolen credit cards. Turns out they will. So the dude picks up the phone, he's in Odessa. He picks up the phone, calls his buddies, they call theirs. They have a physical conference in Odessa. 150 of these cyber criminals show up and they launched the idea of Carter Planet. And that's the genesis of all modern credit theft that we see today. So counterfeit library over the next couple years transitions over to Shadow Crew.
Starting point is 00:32:00 The people who started Shadow Crew, Seth Sanders built Shadow Crew. Me and Kim Taylor, I was the head of Shadow Crew, Kim Taylor was a second in charge. Seth was the third, but Seth was just an ID guy. He never really liked the credit game at all. So he ends up kind of dropping out over the years. The first two guys that started with me. Lucky him. Yeah, lucky him.
Starting point is 00:32:19 The first two guys that started with me, Biel's above Mr. X, X gets picked up. up in Las Vegas, cashing out cards. Beelzebub was hooked up with Mark Engel up in Canada, big-time pot grower, who then snitches on everybody. So Beelzebub goes back to growing pot in there. And at the end of the day, I'm the only guy left standing. So at one point in those forums, every single business transaction that took place went through me.
Starting point is 00:32:45 I was the trust mechanism. And what I said was is, hey, if I vouch for someone, if I give someone a review, if you get ripped off, I'll cover you. I'll make sure that you're reimbursed or you get a like product that you can use. So that built trust within those environments. What happens from there is we get too big. By the time we actually transitioned over to Shadow Crew, I can't do it myself.
Starting point is 00:33:08 So I sit down and over the space of, you know, a week, I come up with this review system that you still see in place today. So today, you know, we've got reviews, vouches, escrows, things like that. So are you actually making money doing this? It's just something that's just, you're just loving doing it. you enjoy it certainly you love doing it i was i was online uh anywhere from 14 to 18 hours a day i made or i said made i stole anywhere from 12 to 24 000 a month until the credit card scene hits once the credit card scene hits i'm stealing profiting 30 to 40 000 a month so i'm doing pretty well um credit so so so so counterfeit library starts out as an identity theft site
Starting point is 00:33:51 identity theft, fake driver's licenses, eBay fraud, PayPal fraud, that. Once Dmitri Golobov comes on the scene, I'm the guy that brought the Ukrainians in because they didn't have a way to cash out in their area. So once credit hits that scene, we transition almost overnight from that identity theft site over to a credit fraud site. And it blows up big. And that's where we get in a lot of trouble and finally get caught. So what happens is we had this thing called the, they call it the CVV-V-1 hack.
Starting point is 00:34:21 a hack but that's what it's called we were spamming all these details and back then when you launched a fishing attack you could have 20 fields you know you could ask everything in the friggin world and they would answer it so we would get complete identity profiles just from one fishing attack because people weren't used to it at that time they'd never seen a brand new thing right they have no clue what happened yeah you sent them an email it looks like it comes from bank of america and they think oh my bank yeah what's your account number social dL mother's made you'd get everything right there so we were getting card numbers and pins as well. And we were using those card numbers to commit C&P fraud. So just online credit fraud.
Starting point is 00:34:57 Right. For you to encode that on a counterfeit card, you have to have complete track to data. So on the back of that credit debit card, the mag stripe there, there are three data tracks. First data tracks, the customer's name, second data track, the card number, 16 digit algorithm outside of it. Third data track, indiscriminate data, no one uses it. What's sold is that second track. All right. Now back then, we didn't have that. algorithm we weren't doing skimming we were just doing fishing is what we were doing what we found out though like I said in order for you to encode that and take it to an ATM and cash out you've got to have complete track to back then
Starting point is 00:35:34 none of the banks had implemented the hash which means you've got the card number you've got the pin you can take the card number forward slash and any 16 digits out beside of it it would encode you could take it to an ATM start pulling cash out we started doing that So up until that point, a Carter. When was the, what year was this? This would have been up through. So that CVV hack went on from 2001 through 0708.
Starting point is 00:36:07 Jeez. It was when it started to really die down. So 2001, none of the banks had implemented that hash. So an online Carter was profiting, a good one, was profiting 30 to 40K. And that's working your ass off, okay? 30 to 40K a month is what you'd profit. that point. Once that moves over into cashing out at ATMs, that's 30 to 40,000 a day. That's just as fast as you can get the money out. As fast as you can pull the cash out. So you'd
Starting point is 00:36:31 literally map out a route of ATMs, stand there until you feel bad and move on to the next one. Well, my forum techie, fucking genius that he was at the time. And he's it. And he was. He was a really bright guy. Albert Gonzalez, he starts, he gets involved in this. And we hired the guy as our forum techie he goes into credit card sales under the screen named scarface does all this other bullshit so he's in new jersey one day broad daylight doing the cbb1 cash out broad daylight standing at an atm 40 minutes 40 minutes standing there feeding one counterfeit card in pulling 20 dollar bills out stuffing them in his backpack 40 minutes of that this is in the document yeah yeah so just so happens a couple of cops notice the kid one of them's like odd
Starting point is 00:37:20 Let me go over and ask him what he's doing. So he goes over, Albert falls apart, flips goes to work for the Secret Service. Now, the thing is, back then, law enforcement suffered from what I like to call FIS, fucking idiot syndrome. All right. They didn't know anything about cybercrime at all. Didn't know how to track you to anything else like that. So we would see, on the server side for Shadow Crew, we would see IPs coming in from DO. Book Club on Monday.
Starting point is 00:37:50 Jim on Tuesday Date night on Wednesday Out on the town on Thursday Quiet night in on Friday It's good to have a routine And it's good for your eyes too Because with regular comprehensive eye exams at Specsavers You'll know just how healthy they are
Starting point is 00:38:13 Visit Spexsavers.cavers.cai to book your next eye exam I exams provided by independent optometrists The Pentagon FBI secret. We'd see all these IPs. So we knew what time it was. At the same time, you'd see local and state forums, law enforcement forums that would mention shadow crew explicitly. Not only that, but we had this kid named Enhance.
Starting point is 00:38:34 So Enhance is the guy back in 2001 that publishes Paris Hilton's phone contact list. I don't know if you remember that bullshit. Yeah, yeah. So that's this kid. He not only did that, but he intercepted text messages. of the United States Secret Service investigating ShadowCrew. So all this was out, and I'm sitting there going, huh, this does not end very well.
Starting point is 00:38:58 Now, Albert gets picked up. I had happened upon this thing called tax return identity theft right before that. It'd been 2002. The drop. The drop. So 2002, I start stealing $160,000 a week, 10 months out of the year, committing tax return identity theft, basically filing taxes on dead people having everything deposited,
Starting point is 00:39:18 to a prepaid debit card. Did that manually, would file a return every six minutes, do that for three days of the week, fourth day plot a map of ATMs, next couple of days, cash out the cards. So this is before there's any, so this is at the infancy of that scan, which right, right, right.
Starting point is 00:39:36 Right, right to get it blown up now, right? Wide open, no security in place whatsoever. As a matter of fact, it took the IRS, that was 2002. The IRS actually starts putting security in place, 2011. So it took them nine years to start looking at IP ranges, velocity of attack, all this other bullshit. So it takes them nine years to do that.
Starting point is 00:39:59 I started doing that. Albert, and because I saw the writing on the wall, I was the head of Shadow Crew. I'm sitting there going, and I, whether it was real or not, I was sitting there going, okay, I'm worried about Rico. I'm worried about I'm going to be charged with everything that everyone under me is doing. So I'm like, I quit. Yeah. Deservedly, by the way. it's not like i did try and get me they're going to try and pin that on me no no they're going to that's why guys like you are exactly what well into a degree of me are exactly why they they that law
Starting point is 00:40:31 that's why that's there the uh um cece or you know uh yeah continued and they're going to give you 25 or 30 years yeah they're going to do that so i'm like i quit so i stepped aside what keeps me from being arrested on the shadow crew bust so shadow crew bus so shadow crew makes the front cover of Forbes, August 2004, headline, who's still in your identity? October 26, 2004, U.S. Secret Service, 33 people, six countries, six hours. I'm the only guy publicly mentioned as getting away. A few other guys got away just weren't talked about at that point, right? What keeps me from being caught is I stepped away from Shadow Crew right before Albert
Starting point is 00:41:11 Gonzalez comes back in, and here's what that story, what actually happened was, he goes to work for the Secret Service. As I said, Secret Service had no clue about how to track these guys. So they literally looked at him. How would you catch these guys? And he was like, well, have you thought about a VPN? And they're like, what's a VPN? So he has to explain to him what a VPN is. And they're like, good idea. So I quit. He comes back in, takes over Shadow Crew, bans anyone who asks any questions. So that no paranoia is out there, bans everyone and says, hey, in order to be safe, we need all traffic to go through this VPN that I've set up. That way, no one can monitor us.
Starting point is 00:41:50 Well, the Secret Service owns a VPN. They capture like $7 million worth of traffic coming through, and that's where the bust comes from. So the bust is October 26, 2004. I'm picked up February 8, 2005. Can I let me interject here. So when you're watching these guys get cracked in the head, and there's an article here, a newspaper article here and newspaper article here like you're seeing all this kind of circling around you are like how are you feeling at that point are you thinking i'm good i'm going to be
Starting point is 00:42:23 good no okay no oh no so so what happens is i'm in charleston south carolina and i'm going through i'm going through the shit on my own on a personal life i was married for nine years my wife i lied to her all nine i mean took her three years to find out i was a crook the next six years were literally this story right here i'm going to stop i will stop trying to wrangle you in like if i could just get this guy just a little while longer dear until finally it became me looking at her and saying hey you like spending money don't you i use that one yeah yeah where do you think this money comes from you knew what you were getting into so she leaves me and uh so my my mindset mix my dad and mix my mom my mom criminal mindset my dad that fear of the loved ones
Starting point is 00:43:12 leaving so my first wife susan leaves i go through this depression get suicidal everything else roaming around the house in charleston south carolina had a house on the river everything so roaming around the house realize i'm getting suicidal figure hell i need to do something about that pick up the phone book call psychologist cry to the psychologist on the on the phone i broke down completely she's like come in today so i go in tell her everything she's like for four months tell her everything for four months i'm like do you have to report anything that i might tell you as long as you're not actively breaking the law i'm like okay so tell her everything she's like for four months she's preaching about how i need to go into real estate and not crime and i'm like is there a difference
Starting point is 00:43:53 between the two so what happens is i don't start drinking until i'm 34 i was 34 at that point i don't i didn't never drank until that point so i started drinking had never been to a strip club one night I get lonely I get horny and I'm like shit why not so I go to strip club and I'm literally that guy I am that guy dude that falls in love with the first one that he sees I walk in she walks by I'm like that's the one I need move this chick in with me yeah yeah it's it's nuts move this move this chick in with me after I move her in with me find out she's addicted to coke not only and you know now you now I know all this bullshit Not only is she addicted to Coke, but she's prostituting herself to support her habits.
Starting point is 00:44:41 And, you know, I laugh about it. But the truth of the matter is, I love the shit out of that woman. I did. I absolutely adored that woman. And I get it in my head. I was like, you know, if I can fix her, we'll be together. You know, keep feeding myself these tails. So I used to take road trips for a lot of the fraud.
Starting point is 00:44:59 It gets to the point where she stops Coke, quits her job, and she gets this, you know, just dependent codependent personality don't leave me attitude so i can't take a road trip anymore i slowly i've got all my money overseas go broke all right so where i find out about shadow crew i'm in the grocery store one day happened just happened to walk past the magazine aisle and i i see this article about identity theft on the cover and i'm like huh might be a good article so i open it up and it's like shadow crew and i'm like oh fuck so go sign on to Shadow Crew at that point, under a different name. And the response on Shadow Crew was it was initially this, fuck yeah, we've made it, followed
Starting point is 00:45:44 almost immediately by a, oh, this ain't good. Yeah. So that was the response. Of course, four months later, two months later, Shadow Crew gets popped. Okay. So the day that Shadow Crew gets popped, by that point, I'm monitoring Shadow Crews. I know something's going to go. All right.
Starting point is 00:46:02 So I'm monitoring Shadow Crew almost every day. go to sign in and of course the secret service has altered the face of the website saying you know you're no longer in the shadows they've got to change the screen on it uh you could still access the site at that point and there were a couple of other sites by that point had that had been set up so i'm going over these other sites to see what the news is and no one really knew at that point what had happened of course john ashcroft the um the head legal guy in the u.s at that point attorney general at that point he comes on on CNN and he's talking about Shadow Cruz. I'm sitting there watching all day and I'm like, shit. God, I'm just a fucking old. Just the country boy. I'm from Kentucky.
Starting point is 00:46:44 Yeah. Wow. I'm the only guy that was publicly mentioned as getting away. The other guys. Not you, but you're like your screen name, right? The screen name. Okay, okay. Gollum is the only one that got away from that.
Starting point is 00:46:56 Okay. What no one else knew, there were other guys that got out. For example, the Secret Service literally in the They timed everything for like a Sunday at 7 p.m. Eastern is when the bus happened because that's when most people were online at that. But they wanted to get everyone at the same time. Some of the guys that got away, one of them was named Tron. And this kid was over in the Ukraine. And he was very effective about getting into Bank of America.
Starting point is 00:47:20 Very effective. So they were in the air to arrest him. They called the local PD in the Ukraine saying, hey, we got a warrant. We're coming down to arrest him. Local PD is like, oh yeah, come on down and get him. So they get in the car before the Secret Service gets there. They get in the car, go to this kid and say, hey, they're coming to get you. We're going back to the station.
Starting point is 00:47:40 And the kid takes off on the run and gets his ass down in South America. And he's a few years getting caught at that point. But there were different guys who got away that weren't mentioned. I was the only guy. They picked me up four months later, February 8th of 05, Charleston, South Carolina. FBI picks me up Charleston PD. Within 45 minutes, Secret Service comes in, takes over the investigation. What happened was as I was being interviewed, 45 minutes in the interview, door opens up, two agents pop in, just sit down and they're like, you know, we're U.S. Secret Service.
Starting point is 00:48:12 We'd like to talk to you about some credit cards. And I'm like, fuck. So they let me sit in the county jail for a week. Okay, wait a second. Sorry. I maybe I missed something. How do they get to you, though? Exactly.
Starting point is 00:48:24 Did you just explain that? No, no, I did. Okay. So what happens is I go through, I was like, word. you, one of the guys that went through the VPN that was set up by, oh, I was, I was in love with a stripper. Right. All right.
Starting point is 00:48:37 I go through all my stateside cash. Like I hear you. Yeah. You know what I'm saying? You're not wrong. I'm not wrong. Okay. So, go through all my state side cash, can't get over to Latvia to get the rest of it.
Starting point is 00:48:49 So when, when Shadow Crew is busted, the way tax season ran, it ran from January 15th through October 15th. The bust is October 26. So I'm not filing taxes to get any more money. I can't run credit cards because the forums just got shut down. I don't know who to trust anymore. So what I'm left with is running counterfeit cashier's checks. Bam, bam, bam, bam. Looking for COD orders, cashing out bullion, stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:49:15 Of course, that's the go-to move. Of course. And it's stupid as fuck, all right? Because I used to preach that. I was like, don't do this shit. You're going to go to prison. So what happens is they identify that some guy in Charleston, South Carolina, is doing this. They reference the forums.
Starting point is 00:49:29 are like, oh, it's this guy. So they set up a controlled delivery. They knew I was cashing out Tiffany Diamonds at that point. So they set up a controlled delivery for these, like, like, it's like a $30,000 order for Tiffany, uh, engagement ring. Not engagement, wedding bands of all things. But, um, FBI does that with controlled delivery. Charleston PD does that. Secret service had been notified.
Starting point is 00:49:53 I was going to be picked up. So they were all ready to go. So they picked me up on this controlled delivery. What happens is UPS driver pulls in. I had a drop address. UPS driver pulls in. I pop out of the car, walk up, and I was like, you got a package for me, don't you? And like, yeah, you got an ID? I was like, yeah, show him my ID, give them a counterfeit cashier's check for 30K, turn around 30 people in the fucking parking lot, all cops. I'm like, oh, so get popped there. I got popped February 8th,
Starting point is 00:50:20 three weeks before I was scheduled to be married. My stripper girlfriend had no idea what I did for a living. So she finds out at that point, they let me sit in a county jail for a week. Two agents fly in from New Jersey because that's where Albert was arrested. The centralized location for all cyber crime investigations was out of New Jersey at that point. So two agents flying from New Jersey pulled me out of a cell and they're like, we got your laptop. I'm like, yeah, you got anything on your laptop? Yeah, well, you're going to be charged for it. I figured, and then they looked at me. They're like, anything you can do for us. And my exact response was, you let me get back with Elizabeth.
Starting point is 00:50:59 I'll do whatever you want me to do. So then they're like, we're going to get you out. I'm like, good. They let me sit there 90 days to get a taste of everything. Yeah. Yeah. Got to get a taste of. So they popped me out after 90 days.
Starting point is 00:51:11 First person I call, by this point, my sister has disowned me and everything. First person I call is Elizabeth. And I'm out. And she's like, I'll be there. So this chick, midnight, I'm standing in the parking lot of the Charleston County detent. mansion center. This chick pulls up in a limousine. No shit. She had a friend on a limousine company. She pulls up in a limousine. Me and the agent are watching this. Trunk pops open. She gets out, walks around to the trunk, gets out these two plastic storage containers that have
Starting point is 00:51:42 my clothes in them, comes over, drops the clothes in front of me, hugs me, call me later, gets in the car, drives away. I'm sitting there crying. Oh, yeah. I thought she's like there. like, come on in, baby. I'm sitting there crying. Agent looks at me. He's like, is that your fiancé? And I'm like, yeah. He was like, man, I am so sorry.
Starting point is 00:52:04 I'm like, yeah. So I had $30 to my name. The agent has to pay for my hotel room that night and pay for my food that night. So he checks me in. Soon as he leaves, I've got $30. I'm like, time to start. So walk my ass to Walmart, buy a prepaid debit card that night so I can get back. into tax return identity theft and uh long story short is i continue well so the 90 days the 90 days
Starting point is 00:52:33 wasn't a good enough case not okay so i call elizabeth i beg her to get back with me she does start breaking the law break the law from 10 for the next 10 months from inside secret service offices with them in the room with me so yeah until they find out about it at that point they revoke the bond judge reinstates the bond i go on a cross-country crime sprees still six hundred thousand dollars in four months make the united states most wanted list go to disney world to get caught get arrested escape from prison get caught again serve out my time so how is it escape from prison is that a camp you went to a camp it was a camp you know i'd like to be a helicopter a gunfight that kind of shit but it's always a camp right yeah so my dad had yeah because
Starting point is 00:53:22 I've been in mediums and lows, and you're just not getting out. Like, it's like, unless it's a helicopter. Well, you know, you say that, man. They sent me to Big Spring Prison after that. And the week before I got there, these three friggin idiots, they had, I guess they'd got some dental flaws or whatever the fuck they had got. And they had cut the bars from the culverts that led out of the prison, had climbed through the culverts, got outside of the fence, and they were supposed to have a ride, didn't have a ride.
Starting point is 00:53:49 They're like, well, we need to go back in and call. they get caught coming in yeah yeah caught coming back in so you can get out but the way i escaped my dad i hadn't seen the man hadn't had a conversation with him like 20 years he shows up at my sentencing stands up in front of the judge i want to make sure brett gets a good start he can come and live with me when he gets out everything else how much time did you get uh initially 75 months okay okay so get jesus that thing my my guidelines were 60 to 75 and I had told everyone in the pod and I made it known that if I got any more than 60 I was not staying so they have said they so the counselors and
Starting point is 00:54:35 everyone in SIS everybody already knows this he's not staying no so what happens is they of sentencing Dean Eichelberger was the was a prosecutor he stands up and this dude is screaming at this point he's like Johnson has manipulated the secret service the prosecutor And today, your honor. We want the upper limits of the guidelines. I'm sitting there going. So judge looks at me and she's like, I agree, 75 months. Well, I'd never used drugs before.
Starting point is 00:55:03 I got arrested in Orlando. Guy in Orlando takes me in under his wing. He's like, you know, the only time you get off is the RDAF part out. And I was like, I don't have a drug problem. He's like, well, you can't you? And I was like, I can find a drug problem. So they give me diesel therapy on the way back, stop at all these county jails. every count of jail. I'm like, cocaine and alcohol. Get back to Columbia, South Carolina. I get a
Starting point is 00:55:26 psychological evaluation order. Psychologist comes in. Four hour evaluation about halfway through. He's like, use any type of drugs? I'm like, yeah, what do you use? Cocaine? Smoker, snort? How much? An eight ball day? He looks at me. It's like, that's a lot. And I was like, yeah, you got any trouble out of that? Yeah, I can't get an erection. And he looks at me. And I looked at him. And I got that shit from watching boogie nights that money shot at the end where mark walberg just can't stand to attention i'm like that's got to be right so i'm looking at the psychologist and finally we're both side of it i'm like is that right right he looks at me he's like it could happen is it still happening i was like no but not that i want it to be all right right now so that makes it into my pre-sentence
Starting point is 00:56:12 report so the judge she gives me 75 months i looked at to my lawyer. I was like, can you get the drug program for me? So he's like, I don't know. I'll ask. So he stands up, Your Honor, where you order the drug program for Mr. Johnson? She's like, she's like, no, but I'll recommend he gets evaluated. I looked at my lawyer. I was like, what does that mean? Well, you're probably not going to get it. And my exact words were like, how soon can you get me to the camp? And he's like, if you don't appeal, I can get you there pretty quick. Exact words. Fuck the appeal. Get me to the camp. I'll take it from there. He looks at me like I'm the biggest idiot in the world.
Starting point is 00:56:48 Six weeks later, I'm at Ashland, Kentucky. I had had family and friends research camps that weren't supposed to have a fence. Get to Ashland, 14 foot fence, a razor wire on top. And I'm like, shit. Go in through process and look at the guard. And I'm like, any jobs outside of the fence? And he's like, well, you can work in the national forest. And I'm like, no, I'll die out there.
Starting point is 00:57:08 He's like, well, you can do landscaping. And I'm like, I can run a weed eater. So I go into about a week later, you know, once you're, you're probably, you're process through and go through all that bullshit, walking to the guards office. Behind his desk, the entire walls, this aerial photo, the compound blown up with the outlying area. So I can literally sit there, plot the escape as I'm talking to him. My dad starts to visit about the third visit in. He's like, you know, I've been reading about you online. I'm like, yeah. He's like, yeah. He's like, that's a lot of money you've made. I'm like, yeah. He's like, you think you can teach somebody how to do
Starting point is 00:57:42 that. And when I used to tell that story, I started outlying. said that you know i thought my dad was back in my life and he wasn't the truth of the matter was my dad hadn't talked to me in 20 some years he and i really believe that he saw me through the frame of my mom that criminal mindset and i think that's the only way he thought he could talk to me like that and i manipulated the man and helped me escape he had four thousand dollars cash to his name got that got an iD a change of clothes and a cell phone and um ran off was there at the camp for weeks left U.S. Marshals, they canvass a three-state area, find me hold up in a hotel, and I get another, so sentencing on that, spent eight months in solitary, a day of sentencing,
Starting point is 00:58:27 go in, secret service is there, prosecutor's there, prosecutor stands up, and he's like, Your Honor, you should consider that when Mr. Johnson was arrested, he was arrested with a laptop, prepaid debit cards, he stole that identity information, looks like he was involved in this stuff yet again. Judge looks at him. says no if you're going to charge him with it you should have charged him with it because it comes come to find out they came in the room took the shit without a warrant just scarfed it all up didn't weren't able to use that as evidence so the judge says no because the escape happens so quickly after the initial sentencing they use the exact same PSR so the judge starts going through
Starting point is 00:59:07 the PSR looks at me and he's like mr. Johnson it appears that before you got involved with all these drugs you were pretty good citizen I was like Yes, your honor. Yes, I was. Yes, sir. So then he looks at me, he's like, so what I'm going to do? You need ARDAP. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:59:22 You need RDAP. I do need RDA. What he does is he's like, I'm going to give you 15 months on the escape. I'm like, okay. And I'm going to order the drug program for you. I'm like, all right. So 15 months extra, but RDAP gives you what? 18 months without six months halfway out.
Starting point is 00:59:39 So I ended up by escaping prison. I got out of prison three months earlier than I would have without the escape. He once got plastic surgery because he didn't like the photo on his wanted poster. His legend precedes him. The way indictments precede arrests. He is the most interesting man in the world. I don't typically commit crime, but when I do, it's bank fraud. Stay greedy, my friends.
Starting point is 01:00:08 Support the channel. Join Matthew Cox's Patreon. So that's what happens. Like I said, I did eight-month solitary confinement until they sent me to Big Spring Prison. Big Spring Prison is out in West Texas. It's a disciplinary, medium-low, converted Air Force compound. So hot, no shit, Matt. So hot that warnings would come on the radio telling you that you couldn't drive on certain streets because the asphalt was melted.
Starting point is 01:00:36 It got that hot there. Went in and, you know, at a camp, it's completely different, completely different. And when I got there, that's when you were. realize that guards don't run things. Yeah. The inmates run the shit that's going on there. So I met as I get processed out going up to the barracks, Treasurer of Aryan Brotherhood.
Starting point is 01:00:55 He's standing there. I'm the first white guy walks up and he's like, hey, how many more white guys came in? I'm like, shit, I don't know, four or five. Next question. What are you in here for? My answer, computer crime. Big smile on my face. He looks at me like, thinking, I thought you were a show.
Starting point is 01:01:10 Yeah. Yeah. So he goes against his buddies because they thought I was a child. molester they circle redwood you say you're in here for so i'm sitting there trying to tell them this shit and they're and end of the day they're like sounds good it's gonna see something yeah you need to see something well by that point nobody's letting you travel with bullshit right all right so first 30 days everyone thinks i'm this trial molester until wired wired magazine hits the compound i'm in the magazine right it's about max butler all those other bullshit i'm in the magazine
Starting point is 01:01:39 i'm like shit i've read the article there you got there you're locked up i'm like shit i'm good to go Until I get to that one line that says Brett Johnson, comma, secret service informant. So those magazines hit the compound at 4 o'clock mail call. Chal call, they're already talking about it in the hall. So next morning, the entire compound gets shut down. Brett Johnson, Warden's office. So I go in, they've got SIS there. Is this at a medium?
Starting point is 01:02:05 This is at Big Spring Disciplinary. So it's a medium, low discipline is what it is. So Warden brings me in. First question is out of his mouth, SIS. counselors are there first questions did you give an interview to Wired magazine I'm like yes sir it's like when at Oklahoma detention without going through the the public what do they call the public information officer exactly how did you do that in 15 minute increments sir yeah so he was like he was like don't you know
Starting point is 01:02:35 they'll fucking kill you in here I was like maybe so then he's like do you feel safe and you know I knew by that point you tell him No, they're going to throw you back in the hole until they transfer your ass. So I'm like, completely safe. So he looks at me as like, he's like, if anything happens, anyone says anything to you, you need to come and tell us. I was like, got you. They do a locker search, try to get all the magazines off the compound.
Starting point is 01:02:59 A couple days later, I walk into the barracks. There's Nick Sander for the treasurer. He's got the magazine reading it. I'm like, fuck. So I walked up to him. I'm like, hey, Nick, what's you doing? I just doing some reading. Anything interesting?
Starting point is 01:03:12 It's getting there. Let me save you the trouble. Take the magazine, point the line out to him. He looks at me. He's like, man, I already knew. I was like, are we going to have a problem? He's like, did you snitch on anybody that's on this compound? I was like, no.
Starting point is 01:03:25 Until someone gets here, you told on, we're going to be okay. I was like, all right. But I had a couple jobs I had to do. So the first job I got, you know, you have to work in feds. So I got a job in education teaching a lit class. All the a area and sign up for the lit class. And we taught fraud every Wednesday, 6, 8, 30 p.m. So that was the first.
Starting point is 01:03:44 first job and then I was you could call me the liaison between the white chomos and the the arian so I would be the guy that as they come off the bus you know as well as I do you know who they are as they come off the bus I would be the guy that had that conversation hey don't know if you're in here on some sort of fucked up charge but if you are it's best you tell me because if you associate with these guys later on they will fucking kill you yeah they're just going to swing on you that's right so And most of the time it would be, man, I just want to do my time. And you knew, you knew at that point. Okay, you're not allowed in the TV room.
Starting point is 01:04:20 You're not allowed to talk to anybody. You talk to your own kind. Somebody wants to extort you. That's the way this shit goes. You're on your own. You're on your own. And I understand. And that's how I got out.
Starting point is 01:04:32 You know, it's funny. I used to get the guys that all the shows, when they would just ask them what they're there for, fraud. Yeah. Which used to irritate me because I was. I would be like, you know, you can't pick another fucking, you can't pick another crime. It's got to be fraud. And then, of course, then, so what would happen is some guy would come in the unit, some white, it would be some, you know, white guy fucked up looking white dude.
Starting point is 01:04:55 He'd say, oh, I'm here for a credit card fraud. And then they'd come to, then the guys would come to me, they go, Cox. And I go, yeah, they go, go, go, go talk to this guy. And I go, why? He says he's here for fraud. He don't look right to me. And I'd look over at him. And I'd go, yeah.
Starting point is 01:05:08 I'd walk over and I'd go, hey, bro, what's going on? I heard you're here for fraud. And he's like, yeah, I'm here for fraud. And I go, okay. Like, what kind of fraud? Credit card fraud? I go, well, they charge you with credit card fraud? Yeah, they charge me with credit card fraud.
Starting point is 01:05:20 That's the charge, right? Yeah, well, there's no credit card. And I was like, okay, well, what did you do? And they go, you know, I took money out of credit cards. Well, did you work at a bank? Did you like, how did the fraud work? I'm here for fraud too. And they go, well, it's not like a learning experience.
Starting point is 01:05:35 And I go, okay, he's a choke. And then I just walk off and it's like. So you had that basic same job. Yeah. Oh, well, because you're a fraudster. And I taught the real estate class for 10 years. Now, at the medium. Now, when you taught the real estate class.
Starting point is 01:05:51 So at the medium, when I was at the medium, you could say anything. You could say, look, here's how, you know, so you get the money, the down payment. So what you do is this, this, the guy gives you money back. Start a company and you get the money back here. Like, I'd break it down for exactly how to get your down payment back, how to do everything. Get to camp, can't pull that bullshit. No. You can once.
Starting point is 01:06:08 Right. Then you get the talk. That's it. Are you telling people how to do things fraudulently? No, someone said that? That's crazy. Who would do that? I'm in here for fraud.
Starting point is 01:06:19 I would never. So then I realized like, fuck, I'm going to have to really fine-tune my class here. And so I did that, taught GED also. You know, game theory, public speaking, and then the lit class. Right. So you do the things that the sharp guys do, that give you credibility, that make you an important person of value. That's what it is. And then nobody bothers you. If you have value, you're absolutely right. If you have value in that system, you're okay. If you don't, you do
Starting point is 01:06:50 pretty much anything. Like, yeah. Well, because what happened with me was I was in the medium and the St. Petersburg Times came out. Now, now keep in mind, the St. Pete, I had already been on Dateline. But when I was on Dateline, I had just been arrested. Okay. So I haven't talked, even done anything yet. I was interviewed later, but I'm not cooper. I'm not doing anything when I get first grabbed. But then what happens is once I get sentenced, get to the medium. I'm at the medium. And suddenly St. Petersburg Times comes out, front page article where I've been talking with
Starting point is 01:07:24 a reporter about a politician that I had bribed. That's what to do. In it, and in it, it talks about how I cooperated with the FBI and the Secret Service for like seven or eight days. This is my lawyer saying that, oh, he cooperated more than anybody I've ever had 15 years. I'm like, wow, don't hold back. He just sang and saying he wanted to work some more with him. Desperately, straight to the fucking shoe for 45 days.
Starting point is 01:07:53 I'm telling him, look, I'm fine. I'm fine. Put me back out of mine. Because they're not going to do anything to you. No, no. The worst that happened was I had a guy come up to me and say, one of the white guys, comes up to me, he goes, hey, Cox. I'm like, yeah, what's up?
Starting point is 01:08:06 And he goes, look, who's the guy's name was Bubba? Bubba was the guy who ran. He was a shot caller. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You know, so he goes, he was, Bubba wanted to let you know, wanted me to tell you, you can't walk the yard.
Starting point is 01:08:16 And I went, what? You can't walk the yard. I went. And I thought, and I already kind of come to my conclusion. Like I was like, either I'm going to, one, there was two, multiple things.
Starting point is 01:08:27 One, shut my, because I got a slick mouth. Right. So I'm going to shut my mouth. Right. I'm not going to shut up. Right. So you shut your mouth for 20 years.
Starting point is 01:08:34 Or you just run your mouth and say smart as shit. And you're going to get slapped every once. I'm five foot six. I'm not beating the shit out of some six foot tall biker. So you're going to get slapped every once in a while, but you're going to have a good time. Right.
Starting point is 01:08:46 And two, you're either going to beat, you know, guys are going to beat you up or you're going to spend all your time in the fucking shoes. So you know what? I'm just going to get beat up everyone's while. So I looked at him and I said, well, listen, bro, I'm going to be out at the yard tonight after chow. So if Bubba wants to talk about it, he can talk about it then. And I walk off trembling. Sure. Sure you do.
Starting point is 01:09:02 I go get my cousin, who happened to be there. And we get a couple other guys. And we go and we walk the track for about an hour. and they see me but nothing happens but they say nothing right and that was like there was one other small episode where he told a guy that was talking to me in line that guy's a confidential informant he didn't even call me a rap which i appreciated that was nice you know didn't say snitch i was called the rat said confidential event i thought that was very that was you know it was very um you know nice and told the guy you know you keep talking to him you ever need our help first you're not going to
Starting point is 01:09:35 need his help but you ever need his help you won't you can't rely on us so the guy who goes okay blah and right walked like 10 people back and i'm like that was pretty much it like i never really had a problem you get my mind comments but that's it yeah my problem uh with arians there was this one kid who was who was trouble with them anyway his name was adam and he was the only one he'd catch me in a crowd and he just start running his fucking mouth you know trying to get somebody to get me and so one day we're all in the unit together and we used to you know we'd bullshit together i'd bullshit around with the Ariens. And Adam was running his mouth and I looked at him. I was like, Adam, I want you to know I'm getting scared of you. And he looks at me. He's like, good. And I was
Starting point is 01:10:12 like, well, the way this is going to work out is you're going to be asleep one night. I'm going to stab a pencil in your eye. And he looks at me and he's like, tell you the truth, man. So the next day they make his ass check in. He's causing problems. They don't want problems. You get in a routine and your time's going good and you know, they didn't want any problems. Yes. So and and the head guy there, His name was Farmer, big fucking Nebraska boy. I mean, huge dude. And I still remember, man, this guy he was talking about, I'm sure you saw it to. You'd take the domino, right, and you'd shave the domino down.
Starting point is 01:10:47 Are you serious? You know, look, you know, Bozziak knows. And we talked about that at the end of the day. And they fucking cut the penis, shove the domino in there. Pack it with ointment. And they wheel up. So that was the first thing the dude did. And we're like, shit.
Starting point is 01:11:02 doing that so he comes in one day he had been talking about getting a tattoo and he wanted the punisher symbol right on the head of it so we're like you're not going to do that dude no one's going pretty close yeah we're like no one's going to do that so he comes in one day and he's like got it done they were like no and he's like anybody want to see and all of us at the same time fuck yeah we want to see we're we're gathered around he drops it as like that is the punisher symbol So, yeah. Oh, man. You know, and that's the thing.
Starting point is 01:11:36 I mean, it's, you're right. You can, you can, you can, you can shut your mouth or you, and, you know, I talk a lot too. You can shut your mouth or you can just be you. And as long as you got, you got value, not every day is horrible. Yeah. I found, I found happiness and had fun every frigging day while being scared to death sometimes. Yeah. How, no, I get it.
Starting point is 01:11:57 Um, how much time did you do? Total. Seven and a half. Seven and a half year. You did what, 20? No, I did 13. 13. I did 13. That's the hell of the taste. Yeah. But I got 26 and four months. So you know, it wasn't game time. No, no. It was not. It was, yeah. Did you go initially to a max or medium or? No. So, you know, first of all, I went in with camp points. Right. Even though I was on the run, like I never got an escape or anything. So I was on the run. I got, I had like two, I had like two points. Okay. You know, I should have gone straight to a camp. But you got 26 years. You know, unless you're under 20, you. you got to go to a medium go to a medium i'm there three years because you have to do 23 then i go
Starting point is 01:12:38 then i go to the low okay um but i cooperated the problem is in the cooperation it was at the the beginning of the financial crisis so they were like look these crimes are three or five years old we've got him for the for the stuff he did and these other people like fuck we got banks that are going under for you know 800 million or half a billion dollars like these are bigger crimes And so they just never really went back and grabbed these people that I had cooperated against. Well, so now I'm screwed, right? Like, I've been locked up. Then what it ended up happening was that I had been asked to do Dateline NBC.
Starting point is 01:13:19 I'd been to be interviewed. I was interviewed. They said they'd consider it substantial assistance. Well, the U.S. attorney said, we did consider it. It's not. So, oh, no, it gets worse. It gets worse. But then American Greed comes to me.
Starting point is 01:13:36 They come to my lawyer, code, the U.S. attorney, U.S. attorney says, look, I want him to be interviewed. I will definitely consider this substantial assistance. Great. I do it. I'm brought into the warden's office for two days of interviews. They have me on there. They run the program. We go back.
Starting point is 01:13:51 We say, okay, you said you'd consider substantial assistance. She goes, I know we did. It's just not enough. I'm sorry. Then I have this guy that runs the national mortgage. brokers like education program in the United States. And all mortgage brokers have to do three hours of ethics and fraud. So he comes to me, he says, you actually owned a mortgage company. You were a FHA lender. You were the, like you're the only person that's hit every
Starting point is 01:14:14 crime on the mortgage spectrum. And you were a broker and a loan officer. I mean, you owned a company, mortgage company. Could you help me write this course? I said, yeah, he flies. I say, you've got to get, go to the U.S. attorney, flies to Atlanta, gets on paper. I do the course. They start using the course. We go back to them and we say, you said you consider it substantial assistance. She goes, it's just, it's just not enough.
Starting point is 01:14:40 I know. So finally I have, I end up getting a guy who files a 2255 for me. And we go back and forth, back and forth. And eventually the government offers me one level off my sentence. But they will allow me to go in front of the judge and argue for more. Okay. They fly me up there.
Starting point is 01:14:58 I argue for more. I get three levels off. That ends up being seven years. Now, do you plea out or go to trial? I plead, I'm super guilty. So did you get the three points of that for the plea? Yeah, yeah, I did. Still didn't it, what, 26 years.
Starting point is 01:15:09 Jesus, man. So I get seven years off my sentence. Then I come back. I'm at the low. I come back. I'm walking around the compound. There's a guy on the compound who did a $57 million Ponzi scheme. And he likes me.
Starting point is 01:15:23 He's cooperating. Of course he does. Like, I'm openly telling people, they're like, hey, Coxel, how much time you got? I'm like, well, I got 26 years. but somebody might fuck up and tell me where there's body buried and I'll be out of here next week. Right. And they would go, they'd look at me and say, damn, it's like that. Cox. I go, it's exactly like, we're not friends. I don't care what happens to any of these fuckers. Exactly. Jesus. We're not breaking bread when we get out. And now I'm at the low. You know what I'm saying? Like, you could be pretty cocky at the low. You could run your mouth. So, so I'm walking around with this guy. And just a, just a vicious character all the way around really reminded me my dad. he liked me he was cooperating as some other guys we're walking around one day and he's telling me
Starting point is 01:16:03 man they're not going to give me anything for my cooperation I go why do you say that you know you might testify who knows and he goes yeah I know I just don't think so because they think I hid Ponzi scheme money and I go well you didn't so don't worry about it right and months and months go by he mentions it a couple times so finally one day I look at him and I go I go bro I said you keep mentioning that you hit that they think you hit Ponzi scheme money I said if you didn't they won't find it so don't worry about it. But he did. And he looked at me and he goes, he was, can I trust you? And I went, I said, I said, probably not.
Starting point is 01:16:34 And he started laughing and he goes, I did put some money away. And I thought, you're fucking up. So he ends up telling me a little bit of the money. But this guy got, like, my brother got like $30,000. My ex-wife, or soon-to-be ex-wife got like $150. I'm afraid they're going to turn it in. And I, you know, because my ex-wife found out I was having an affair, you know, blah, my brother's just scared.
Starting point is 01:16:55 They do tend to frown on that. Yeah. So what ends up happening is, I don't actually say anything. I'm actually disappointed in myself because I waited months, months, for I happen to be talking to my lawyer. And everybody's like, dang, gross, you really struggled. No, my struggle was I didn't say anything because I thought they didn't want to give me anything the first time. Right, right. Why would I tell?
Starting point is 01:17:15 It's not going to work, be worth it. Yeah. And so it just happened. I was talking to my lawyer. She said, hey, everything going on, what's going on? I was like nothing. And she happened to say, this is a woman who never wanted to help me. She was a weird thing.
Starting point is 01:17:26 She goes, she said, anything going on in there? And I went, like, you didn't give a fuck when you were representing you. I was like, no, not really. She has nothing that you want to talk about. I thought, it was just weird. And I went, well, you know what? There's a guy in here named Ron Wilson. And I tell her, a week later, I get called into SIS.
Starting point is 01:17:46 They put me on phone with a secret service agent. I get him on my email. I start telling him what's going on with Wilson. he starts asking me and ask them this, ask them this, ask them this. No shit. Oh yeah, this goes on for six months. And he's asking me questions, some of the questions I'm going back like, bro, you want to get me killed? Yeah. Like I can't ask, how am I going to bring that up? Right. And I've never even heard of this person. So anyway, I work with him. Eventually, they file for, you know, they re-indite Wilson. They indict the brother, the sister. They get one, they both basically get, they get probation. Right.
Starting point is 01:18:18 He gets six more months. And I think that, but they recover half a million dollars. Okay. And I think they're never going to give me nothing for that. So I end up, they never do. They say, we don't, they even said, we don't even know what Mr. Cox is talking about. We didn't know, we don't have no idea that he's even working with you as attorney. I mean, working with the Secret Service.
Starting point is 01:18:35 Anyway, the point is, I had an actual email from them. So I sent them the email. I had multiple emails. So I sent him the email. I hired that, the same guy, this guy lawyer, uh,
Starting point is 01:18:46 representing me again. He's in prison with me, was in prison. I end up getting my sentence. He gets my sentence to reduce again, five more. years. By the time that hits, I'm gone like a year and a half later. I walk out of prison. I mean, and listen, it was, and when that one hit, too, same thing. Listen, everybody knows
Starting point is 01:19:04 I'm cooperating. Everybody. And I'm just, you know, you're either, it's just, to me, it is what it is. I mean, I get into, I get guys that are like, oh, you fucking snitch. Well, you be a stand-up guy and do 20 fucking six years. You're not going to do that. Oh, I never said nothing. I never said, I understand that you got a DUI and you did fucking 10 days or I understand you got fucked up and you went to jail for 18 months, okay, but you weren't looking at 26 fucking years and you don't fucking know me.
Starting point is 01:19:28 And first of all, I never thought I could get 26 years. That's insane. It is. It's crazy. And you plan out at 26. Right. But it's the same thing. It's like, look, bro, I'm filling out paperwork.
Starting point is 01:19:40 I didn't break into someone's house. I didn't, I'm not carjacking people. Meanwhile, you got the child porn guy doing 10. If that. You got the child porn guy doing 10. Oh, absolutely. Absolutely. You've got, to me, bank robbers that are zip-tying people and taking over banks and getting away with granted, no money, but you're terrifying people. And they're getting six years, seven years. So you got out when? I got in July, July 2019. All right. So now when I got out, I was in three years probation, couldn't touch a computer. Yeah, had job offers from Deloitte, from no before payment processors. Actually had offers. And what?
Starting point is 01:20:19 wasn't allowed to take them, got to where I was trying for fast food. Well, that cash register, that's a computer. No. Next thing was, what about a waiter's position? Computer and credit cards? Fuck no. So couldn't get a job. So what kind of trouble did you have trying to get a job? And I'll tell you what happened to me after that. I mean, my judgment commitment, you know, says that I cannot work or consult in any in finance, real estate, development, or construction for some reason. So you can't even consult? No.
Starting point is 01:20:56 I had to take, for one year, I had to take a behavior modification class where you meet with a psychiatrist once, you know, once one hour a week. Right. Of course, I have the financial where I have to fill out the form, but I also have to fill out the form, but I also have to fill a lot of paperwork every month to tell them how much money came in to come up with my restitution. I still owe like $6 million. I'm good for it. Yeah, I know you are.
Starting point is 01:21:20 Have they charged that off? We're just going to take your tax returns for the rest of your life? Oh, yeah. Me too. They're going to take them forever. But I other than, you know, obviously I have to do the piss test and I can't travel or do anything like that. Although I have traveled, I just had to get permission from the court. Okay.
Starting point is 01:21:36 Had to get my passport back. Now, keep in mind, two of my charges are. passport fraud and uh well one was fraudulent application of a passport and one is actually use of a fraudulent so you filed one or someone else's name for renewal or so no i had like 24 passports nice i had two dozen passports i say that i shouldn't say that but still that's pretty fucking nice pretty good right 27 driver's licenses in seven different states so so from the dmv that's that was the next question because we had we had a contact out of knoxville that would shoot us real Tennessee ones real ones real ones real ones
Starting point is 01:22:10 But the problem was is when that guy got popped, they just pulled everyone that he had issued driver's licenses to. And I just went out from there. I just went in. Yeah, we were doing that to a degree. Find a little rural one someplace and going like that. Yeah, I would go, you know, as long as, I mean, as long as, like, I get your information in South Carolina, I can go to Tennessee. Right. Because they didn't have reciprocity.
Starting point is 01:22:31 They don't, yeah, they don't have, they can, they can, they work on a hub system where they can request, immediately they can request like the data, but they can't get the photo. for like 48 hours or 72 hours and it's like okay if he gives me the ID I'm good you know if there's a question they just don't give you the idea they're like I don't know something's not right but it wasn't not right because I would walk in with the real soche the real person to do the real this the real that I registered a vote I got this I got the register to vote I mean that's right that's one of the steps yeah got to do that it's good because these are all real documents so you're sitting there like I'm ready to argue I mean you have a problem I'm ready to argue because I know everything's good. So how did you get 27 passports?
Starting point is 01:23:11 Through the State Department. They don't ask for, everybody always says pre-9-11 or after. Oh no, this is all after. This is after. I remember that. They, everybody always says, oh, they ask for your fingerprints. No, they don't. As a matter of fact, I just got my passport a year ago to go to Amsterdam to do
Starting point is 01:23:26 a show called Inside the Mind of a Con Artist. I got my passport then. No fingerprints? I did get stopped on the way back in. The way we were doing passports was filing for renewals on people who had never been issued. a passport and they were shooting passports out like that yeah these guys had never had password i was getting homeless people so i'd go and i it's so sick look at it not bad not bad
Starting point is 01:23:50 i like where your head not bad you see that's what we like we like that outside of the box thinking i i actually had i made a a statistical survey form and it looked so good and it was a couple pages it was like 17 questions and i would go out to where the homeless people were i made a Salvation Army badge and I walk out there and I'd say hey can I talk to you real quick and they'd look at me like they go oh yeah what's up I go listen I work for the Salvation Army we're trying to figure out where we're going to put our next indigent in our next homeless shelter so you like crackers I got some crackers I came 20 bucks you know I'm not $20 or mad dog what do you want $20 and then would go and borrow like a million million point five in
Starting point is 01:24:36 their name. Yeah. So, you know, maybe not fair trade. But still, they were happy. I had nobody said, I, well, they couldn't have done it themselves. No, no. There you go. And so I would just say, hey, by the way, 20 bucks were trying to figure out, you know, where to put our next homeless facility, just a survey. And they were like, yeah, what's up, man? I say, okay, just quick, real quick, I'd give them, you know, here, let's do this, name, date of birth, so secure number, mothers made name, you know, where you live, or last known address. Where did you live? you ever been a member of the air of the military do you get social security disability have you ever had a u.s. passport have you had any any identifications and if so in which states
Starting point is 01:25:13 yeah so basically you're just fishing in person what high school did you go to because you can get their high school transcripts right so i get their information i then order all their information right get it all in and then i know he's had an id here and here or driver like here and then i just go two states over and i walk right in say listen i just moved i lost my license and the move, I don't know what you need. And then you start, I know what you need. Well, says here, you're a 5'4 black man. I know, but I identify as a black man.
Starting point is 01:25:38 Yes, yeah. With a good pair of shoes. So, yeah, so I would get, they would just go in and they give me the ID. Then you turn around. You immediately go and fill out for your, I would immediately fill out for my, you know, my passport. Go get the passport photos. Walk into the U.S. Post Office where they have a passport control.
Starting point is 01:25:59 You walk in there, you sit down. you do your little boom boom boom they go okay great they sign off they give you your stuff they take your birth certificate they mail it back 10 days later used to be if you paid extra within about six weeks you got it now it's like three months before you get it right but yeah i would get them and i just get them and i've been in and out on the run i went to greece croatia bermuda mexico jamaica uh italy um i just already said greece right so yeah so i've got called stateside yes Yeah, how'd you get caught?
Starting point is 01:26:32 Girlfriend, girlfriend, you know. Stingray. Yeah. Stingray? What? Oh, yeah, yeah, the stingray. Yeah, that's right. Yeah, stingray.
Starting point is 01:26:40 That's what got me. So, yeah, the straight side. Okay, so I guess I'm turning in an interviewer. No, no, wait, but okay, but you were saying, so that, those were the constraints on me. Like, I was ready to work at McDonald's, by the way. I was okay with that. So did you have, did you have trouble getting a job or no? I got lucky.
Starting point is 01:26:59 and a buddy of mine owned a gym and hired me in the halfway house and then by the time I got out of the gym I was being asked to go on different people's podcasts and I'd written a book so I had published the book I'd written like seven books
Starting point is 01:27:17 so I started publishing books self-published you have a publisher well so one of them was one of them was published by a publishing company but I mean I got like a you know of course I was in prison right there's like a $3,500 advance barely make any money on the thing.
Starting point is 01:27:32 I got made more money publishing on Amazon, self-publishing. No kidding. Then I've ever, oh, way more, way more than I ever made on that. You know, but I also had optioned the film rights to some guys I got them in Rolling Stone magazine, optioned film rights.
Starting point is 01:27:47 Nice. Got out optioned a couple more film rights. So I got out. So I have a little bit there coming in. And I had, and I started painting. You saw some, my painting. I like it. For those who don't know his,
Starting point is 01:27:59 his work is outstanding on Patreon. Yeah, exactly. That's where you need to go. So I managed, moved into somebody's spare room, but I wasn't. Like, I had all these job offers, and every time I call my probation officer, it was no, no, no, no. Right, right. And so, yeah, it, I would have been back into real estate very quickly or finance or something, but I'm, I'm restricted from doing that. For how long?
Starting point is 01:28:24 Five years. Five years. And I can't get off probation early because I owe $6 million. Yeah. off that early. Right. Unless you violate, then they may kill it. Yeah. Which is what happened with me. Oh, is that what happened? You violated? Dude, so. Yeah, I'm out. I can't get a job. I'm out in Panama City, Florida. No money. Literally cannot get a friggin' job. No money. I'm bumming money for my dad and my sister. I've got a roommate taking her half the rent,
Starting point is 01:28:50 getting food stamps so I can friggin eat. And, you know, I guess they gave you the same speech. You know, when you get out, find something you care about and a job and you won't recidivate. So shit, I can't get a job. What I cared about had a little cat and had the money to feed my cat. I didn't have money to buy toilet paper, man. So went to the dollar general store, bought the cat some food on the way out, kiosk there, toilet paper. And I'm like, first crime right there. And of course, you know, it dovetails quickly from that point. But my wife now, Michelle, so my turnarounds, my sister had disowned me. She comes back in my life after the escape. The, um, My wife, Michelle, she, I ended up meeting her right after those thefts like that.
Starting point is 01:29:34 Move in with her because I was getting ready to get kicked out of my house. Moved in with her. Finally got a job. And the job, the only job we could get was pushing a lawnmower. That was at 10 hours a day, $400 a week was the pay on that. Pushing a lawnmower, busting my fucking ass. How old were you? Geez, I was 42 at that point, 43, 43 at that point.
Starting point is 01:29:56 10 hours a day pushing manual lawnmower. And busting my ass, I'd come in so tired of a night, literally fall asleep, wake up the next morning, take a shower, hit it again. And I was happy doing it, though. I was doing, you know, I was finally doing something. Yeah. And job ends, you know, grass doesn't grow when it gets cold. I'm in North Florida. Grass isn't growing those four months.
Starting point is 01:30:18 So job ends and that reason I commit crime, you know, I got to show Michelle I'm worth it. I'm like, well, I can bring food in the house, get on the dark web, get credit card details, start putting, food orders in. And of course, again, it dovetails because you're like, okay, food, kids need clothes. Christmas is coming up. She could use some stuff. I get popped. Controlled delivery on a food order. Michelle had no idea what I was doing. Go back to prison. At my sentencing for that, U.S. Marshal's prosecutor probation officer, me and Michelle, Michelle stands up. She's like he's a better dad of my kids than their actual father is. I'm sitting there crying. Prosecutor stands up. We think he's a good guy.
Starting point is 01:30:59 We think it's just a one-time thing. Probation officer, same thing. Judge, one year. Probation officer stands back up, says, your honor, if you'll give Mr. Johnson a year and a day, he can get the good time, get back to his family. Judge amends the sentence to a year and a day, so I do 10 months. They send me, yeah, yeah, I mean. It's a whole different group than I had.
Starting point is 01:31:18 Lucky as fuck. So go back to Texas for 10 months and have this big awakening moment. I'm like, you know, Michelle didn't need me for the shit I could give her. she just needed me for me. Yeah. So do my 10 months, get out. They kill probation because I violated. They kill probation at that point.
Starting point is 01:31:35 I can get a job, get married to Michelle. Can't get a job, though. You know, I'm the guy that steals everything. Yeah. So can't get a job and I'm sitting there, you know, trying to find work at doing anything, can't. And I guess you may be the same way. I know what my triggers are. I know what gets me back into crime.
Starting point is 01:31:52 Right. Back then it was, I know I'll go so far before I do it again. So I looked at Michelle, it's like, let me see what I can do. Signed on to LinkedIn, reached out to this guy named Keith Milarski, FBI out of Pittsburgh. He was involved with all of these arrests back in those days. And I sent him a message. I was like, hey, you did a great job, no hard feelings, a lot of respect for you. I'd like to be legal.
Starting point is 01:32:13 Dude responds within two hours, man. Takes me under his wing, references, everything else. From there, identity theft counsel does the same thing. The C&P group, Card, not presence. They're for online credit card fraud. they hear about me hire me to be a keynote speaker from there Microsoft hears about me hires me to consult with them and that lays enough trust in the industry where today you know I've got my show the Brett Johnson show I speak at Quantico I'm ambassador for AARP this year
Starting point is 01:32:43 Arcos Labs they started this new sea level position called chief criminal officer first one on the planet all this other stuff I'm talking to Ridley Scott all these people about doing the show And I'm, you know, I'm serious. And I want to ask you about this stuff, too. But I, I leave a very blessed life these days. And I don't deserve it, but I'm damn grateful to have it. And the question I have, you know, we, we've laughed a lot about 27 passports, shit like that. But it's, you know, we can laugh about that.
Starting point is 01:33:18 But at the same time, there's, with me, there's been this, this just shift in the mentality. Yeah, I think about breaking law all the time. Yeah. But I'm not going to do that. And where did that shift come with you? Good question. So, well, it's not a good question because, like, I've had such a good interview, you know? Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 01:33:41 And it's been fun, and we've been laughing. And then we get sober. Right. And the problem is, is emotionally, when I start to talk about it or think about it, I tear up. Like, when you're like, when you're like, you know, I cry. like that, listen, cried like a small child at my sentence. And when I think about the person I was and the person I am, although I laugh and I love that time in my life, and I love doing those things, but I think about, like when you went to jail. Right. The one thing I know when
Starting point is 01:34:15 the one thing you never once laid in bed and thought about was, God, I miss that nice car. God, I miss that nice car. You don't think that shit at all. All you have. thought about was i miss michelle i miss my fucking kids i miss my cat i miss like that's it's it all i ever gave a shit don't worry about that material stuff at all absolutely and that's exactly what happened was i went to prison angry pissed off furious didn't deserve this much time these piece of garbage say this and i and i did and i was reasonable i was like you know yeah okay i broke the law but i didn't deserve this much time right and even to this day on like 26 years come on a lot of time it's a lot of time but it's like you don't get to
Starting point is 01:34:58 choose right so you know you're putting yourself at their mercy the moment you do that so you know I think that I started thinking that way met a buddy in mine he got like 30 he actually got 40 years um and you know we started talking um and one of the things he had told me one time was you know you can't go to prison and continue to think in the same manner that led you to prison and leave prison and not expect to come back. Right. And I was, you know, and and that's that's more than just, oh, no, no, but I'm not going to commit crime.
Starting point is 01:35:30 He's like, it's not the crime. It was your thought process. Yeah. So, and you'll eventually commit a crime, you know, if you keep thinking like that. So what happened is, you know, went to prison, wrote a memoir, my memoir. Okay. And when I was writing that memoir, I ended up writing the first draft, which was horrible. I had to rewrite it, read several books about how to write.
Starting point is 01:35:51 Right. And ended up writing this. little tiny book and I wish I could remember it. And the woman was like, look, you need to look into your life. One of the things you need to do is look in your life and figure out what the key moments were that helped create the person that you are today so that it will explain to the reader, it will give the reader reasons what helped craft you. Sure. And I used to hate to think about, to complain about my childhood or anything. You know, I don't want to say that because you meet, I mean, you meet guys that were like chained to fucking, they were locked up in the basement
Starting point is 01:36:20 or their parents beat them almost a death or they you know horrible things that it was like I didn't have that you know my dad's an alcoholic you know and it's like what am I crying about daddy didn't love me enough like but the truth is I rewrote that book and as I wrote that book and really started focusing on that I started realizing that there were definite things that led me to be the person that committed those crimes and then the other thing I focused started realizing was like what a selfish narcissistic prick I am and I say and I fight it today I fight it to this day like guys are like well if you if you know that about yourself you can you know at least you can help change that I'm like I try I mean I like being an asshole sometimes I agree I I and that's the
Starting point is 01:37:09 worst part is it's like you're trying to change someone who just loves himself yeah yeah but but one of the things is like I what really started bothering me was I took art app they're doing any good it did after for me i think it i it did great for me although i had learned most of these lessons by the time i got in it right but i really felt like it it helped me really kind of figure out what my issues were and i remember i didn't notice it so much about everybody that talked to me on the phone i talked to my ex-wife and five minutes in she'd be like okay what's going on yep and i go what you go we've been talking for five minutes you know my kids names you're asking how nick is her her husband you're not just focusing on you
Starting point is 01:37:47 Yeah. You haven't fucking said, you haven't told me what's going on with you. And I've asked twice. And I'm like, I mean, nothing. I'm here. I'm doing whatever. I was just wondering whatever happened with, you know, with Ethan. I know he was sick. She's like, what's going on? So, because the truth is, when I have most conversations, I am typically barely listening. And most of the time, I'm really just waiting for an opportunity so that I can turn the conversations that I can talk about me. Right. And that is such a selfish, fucked up thing. And when I see myself telling myself at the beginning of a conversation, don't do it, don't do it, don't do it. And then 20 minutes later, I realized we've been talking about me for 10 minutes. And I think, you're a fucked up individual. I mean, we are. Right. We are. But, you know, that's the thing, though.
Starting point is 01:38:32 So even today, like, I took this nine-hour drive to come down and talk to you today. Which I appreciate. Which I even asked Tyler over. I was like, he's driving? First of it was he was driving. Secondly, because when he was saying to me, when we were talking, I was like, you're telling me. Johnson's going to come on my pocket he knows I can't pay him right he knows I'm broke right did you tell you didn't ask for any money no no you need to make sure nothing nothing you know
Starting point is 01:38:56 and he yeah I was no and and the reason why I try I do every podcast for free I don't ask for cash on that because it's also a type of therapy for me you know I try to find out something new about myself every single time I wanted to talk to you because we've got that South Carolina relationship right you have that US most wanted thing too so I I was like, this will be a good conversation. I wanted to ask you that question that I just asked you. I took a nine-hour drive, and I do these long-ass drives because I used to walk this track when I was in prison.
Starting point is 01:39:27 And I would think every single day about my life, the people I had fucked over, everything else. And on these drives, I get to do that again. I get to consider everything, work through these issues, everything. It's not surprising me what you were talking about, you know, writing that. That's that therapy again, where you, if you're truthful, Which, like I said, the first time, I wasn't. Right. I wasn't.
Starting point is 01:39:51 And that was a problem. But if you are, I mean, you really sit there and you examine yourself and you get these answers that sometimes you don't want, but by God, they're there. And you can't deny them what's around. And you know what's funny too? Because I've anybody watching this is Washington, like I've probably said this a thousand times, is that, you know, had millions, all the money I needed in the world before prison. I'm on I'm on Zan
Starting point is 01:40:20 I'm not well yeah I've got a prescription for Xanax Paxil I'm miserable I'm unhappy I've got I got a girlfriend and a girl my girlfriend's got a girlfriend
Starting point is 01:40:32 I've got tons of money I got great vehicles I've got I'm traveling nonstop I'm living great I'm not concerned about being on the run and even prior to that when I wasn't on the run I was just committing crime I was just miserable, unhappy, and then I get out of prison with nothing, and I used to love to tell people that I wanted, they were like, what are you going to do when you get out?
Starting point is 01:40:53 I'm like, I'm going to work at McDonald's. And because, and they were like, why, I was like, because I want to work at McDonald's. I want to live in someone's spare room. I want to start at the bottom because I was so much happier in prison and so much happier getting out of prison than I ever was prior to that having everything. I ever fucking wanted because to me it's like I'm so like you know it is it's the whole I hate the term I'm blessed you know but I am blessed I'm thrilled I'm happy I have people around me that like me because they want to be around me not because I'm going to make them 300,000 next next month or they're getting 50,000 here or 100,000 here or they're just hanging out with me to fucking hang
Starting point is 01:41:35 out with me yeah yeah like like you know because when you get arrested you find out that those friends ain't oh no no the more money i made for people though the let the quicker they hung up the phone if they picked it up at all the people that i never made any money for showed up and came to see me would come visit me would send me would look stuff up for me send me books would it was such a reality fucking check it is for me to go to prison you know with me and i'm i'm really no different on that it's um if i would have gotten out and immediately went into you know the speaking the consultant the bullshit i do today i wouldn't have appreciated any of it any of it but i didn't do that it took
Starting point is 01:42:16 me years to build up the the trust in that industry and you know applying this you know 16 18 hours a day of bam bam bam you mentioned before you know you wake up you work 80 hours a week i work 80 hours a week now i wake up working i go to sleep working and um you know it's that the ability to build yourself up from nothing to that success you in a legal way screams just i mean it's just by god yes at that point i've done it i did it without doing anything wrong and it's me and it you know yeah you were a criminal i was i was too but to show that we're able to succeed in in a legal lifestyle as well talks about the character of the person and i you know i'm giving myself credit too but yeah you too man i mean it's it's it's
Starting point is 01:43:04 really there aren't many people out there able to do that you think of everybody comes out of prison You know, at least, you know, under 40, you're an 87% recidivism rate right now. Most of those guys are going to go back. They don't have a support group. They don't have the ability to turn their lives around. And it's just a circular thing. And you're right. We're very blessed that we've been able to do that.
Starting point is 01:43:28 We've got that support group people that help us. And then what else can you say in that? Yeah. You know, it's funny, the support group thing because, like, I used to, like, I can't mess up. Like, like, it's like, if you had a support group, I think it would almost be detrimental to me because I'm like, I'm like, I had nothing. I can't, you understand, I cannot screw up. I cannot. And listen, it was so bad.
Starting point is 01:43:49 I think I, I think I told Boziac this the other day, was somebody, I was at work and somebody said, like I was saving every penny. Right. I had. Somebody goes, hey, Matt, I'm going to, uh, where are they going, uh, whatever, a sandwich shop. We're going to sandwich. You want me to get you something? And I went, um, no, I'm good. I got, I got a bag of lunch from the halfway house.
Starting point is 01:44:08 Okay. Right, right, right. peanut bird jelly or mac or whatever it was polony and um i said no i got i got a bag lunch and and it his name was leanne and leon he goes she said um do you matt she goes it's come on you eat that every day she says get get a sandwich from jimmy john and you get a sandwich from jimmy johns and i went no no i said i'm good she goes come on and i went she was i said honestly i don't have any money i don't have money to do that and she looked at me and she said it's fine i'll get it for you and i went okay listen lean you're not understanding let me let me be perfectly clear she was there my boss is
Starting point is 01:44:38 there. Another employee is there. And I said, if out of the goodness of your heart, you want to buy me a sandwich, I said, I said, that's fine. I'll take it. I said, but if you're expecting some kind of a reciprocation from me, I said, like two days from now, I'll give you the money back or next week I'm going to buy you a sandwich. I said, I am not in a position to buy you a sandwich. I will not be in a position to buy you a sandwich for years possibly at the rate I'm going. And I said, so if you want to give me a sandwich, that's great. I will take it. If not, I have a bag launch. Thank you. And she looked at me and she went, I looked around at everybody. And she goes, I'm going to get you a sandwich. And I was like,
Starting point is 01:45:15 I was just that. I was that like, like I bought $300 worth of clothes from Walmart in the halfway house. I still have blue jeans that I'm wearing to this day. And I can afford by it. Right. But it's just like the materialistic stuff just drop down to nothing for me. Like, I don't want it. Everything I buy is from Ross or Marshalls or that's it. Like, I'm not, I couldn't, I don't think I physically could, would be able to pay like 150 bucks for a shirt now. And back then, I was paying three, four hundred bucks for blue jeans. It's like blue cheese. They sell them at Walmart for $29.
Starting point is 01:45:50 Are you serious? What was your brand back then? You're paying $300 for? Oh, they were diesel. Of course. Diesel. I don't even know if they're still out. Like, I know nothing about clothes now.
Starting point is 01:45:59 I barely knew it then. But the girl I was with, she's like, oh, these are diesel. You have to get diesel. Yeah, my, my stripper fiancee, she likes sevens. That's what I remember. She tells me why I, hell, I'd never done anything like that. You know, I was, I was paying like 80 bucks for the luckies back then. And she looks at me one day, I need some jeans.
Starting point is 01:46:17 I'm like, where do you want to go? Sacks? And I'm like, we walk in the sacks and she goes over to this counter. And I'm looking at shirts. I'm like, shit, that's two, three hundred bucks for a shirt. I'm not going to buy that bullshit. So I look over at her and she's at the gene section. She's just taking one pair after another.
Starting point is 01:46:33 There's bam, bam, bam, bam. Bam. I'm like, holy fuck. So I walk on, like, how much? are those oh they're 230 dollars a pair i'm like how many pair you got that was it man i'm like shit they're expensive they're expensive they're expensive they're expensive strippers i mean yeah they're yeah they're expensive yeah they're expensive they have high tastes she was from what i understand she was able to turn her life around so i'm thankful about that but i mean jesus christ so now
Starting point is 01:47:04 you're you're doing the you're doing the channel and i've got uh so speak speaking gigs. I've got the speaking. So for those who may be interested, we've got the Brett Johnson show on YouTube. Tune into it. But I speak across the planet. And I'll put the, we'll put the link in the description. I appreciate that. Yeah. I've got speak across the planet. I mean, I've literally travel all over the damn place speaking. I've got the documentaries in the work. I'm talking with North South productions for a Discovery TV show, which is basically Brett Johnson scams you is what it is. Okay. talking about that got a book in the works i'm actually talking to one of the guys that's responsible for the irishman talking to him was friday on that um chief criminal officer of arcoe labs i mean i i i i'm doing all right yeah i'm doing all right you know it's funny if you just try and just kind of sounds so hokey i hate to even say you know you just try and do the right thing it's like like good things start to kind of happen it does and you know my motivation these days and and it really is one of these wake-up calls when when i talk to somebody and they
Starting point is 01:48:08 realize it. I'm like, don't give a shit about money. Yeah. It's about doing the right thing. And I'm going to call it out. Don't give a shit who it is. I'm that guy typically piss off somebody every week about calling out a company or something like that about doing wrong. But that's who I am these days. Are you interviewing people on your channel? Like other? Not yet. I've had the, so Justin Pierce. I've had him on there twice. He's this kid out of Arkansas. He's a good kid. He's, he's, he's one of these guys that needs some mentorship you know so i'm i'm trying to make sure that he's going to be all right had him on twice my my studio is not like your nice studio here my studio is basically a box we're wedged it in the corner but on on on phil this this looks like they're
Starting point is 01:48:51 like man they're in a massive nice studio so it's like it's good size man it's good size but mine is is is is very small literally i'm the only person can fit in the room i'm we're going to try to buy house next year and get a studio where I can bring people in in person I don't want to do that zoom bullshit if I can avoid it I just I just I didn't either I resisted the whole time but right to try and to get someone to come here is such a pain in the ass and that's why luckily like I'm here he's here you know like we've we've got like three channels here so usually if somebody gets here we just milk everything we can yeah you should absolutely I mean well Tyler he was like you know you want to do it on Zoom I was like no I'll do it in person when he told
Starting point is 01:49:31 me that because i just assumed zoom for sure i was okay so he wants to do a zoom and he's like no no he's coming there i was like he said he would be there did you tell him i can't pay him like i you know no i'm gonna show up in person i i don't like that zoom i don't like that zoom stuff at all so yeah that's what i do and you're so you're a painter now yeah and i like the word painter i do i mean i love this show right here this is great i really do i mean yeah these are are like modified screen prints but they're all different yeah everything i do is different they're good different they're unique but i also just do regular painting i like the i like the uh what are they what are the prisoner pictures that you're taking the criminal pictures that you're painting the criminal ones yeah are those
Starting point is 01:50:11 the patria on that we saw coming in that you show yeah yeah yeah yeah that's my patreon so who are they oh they're all con men it's like charles ponzi it's like um uh it's it's a frank abick now i've done like i've done like i've only been doing it for like four months i like it's nice man well i got guys that have them on the wall so think about if they keep paying then like by the of the year they've got 12 or so yeah they got a whole wall filled yeah so it's it's fun that's good that's good and it's it's it's working um yeah you know and i you know i mentioned to john earlier it's i've a firm believer that one of the main reasons that that we commit crime is so we can have that fuck you money yeah that nobody's going to tell us what to do we're able to tell somebody
Starting point is 01:50:53 get fucked at the end of the day right even today i'm still looking for that yeah yeah yeah i look Look, like I said, I figure it will happen eventually. And the truth is, if it doesn't happen, like, I'm okay. Like, I'm good here. Yeah, before you leave, I got to give you, everybody calls him John. Because I, for the minute I'm in prison, it's Boziac. You know, everybody, so I mean, I got to give you his book. Like, I wish I'd sent his book to you beforehand.
Starting point is 01:51:28 Well, we'll talk to him. Yeah, yeah. Bullshit around with him. Yeah, I know. Like, the whole time you've been talking. It's like I'm seeing all the, like, uh, the, the, how you were communicating. The first time I, I see Q, is that what it's called? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:51:41 Yeah. First time I'd ever heard about that was when he explained it. As you were explaining the tracks, he's, he had explained that like, all that's in his book. He broke there because he started. Sweet. Right, right. You know, these days, you've got telegram, you've got Wicker. You got all these other channels that are pretty damn impressive.
Starting point is 01:51:55 Yeah. You know, so, yeah. Well, um, well, let's wrap it up so you can. All right, let's do over there. So is that. that i appreciate it yeah um we're good okay hey uh i appreciate you guys you like the hey hey i appreciate you guys uh checking this out or checking out the interview do me a favor if you like the interview uh share the video hit the like button hit the bell so you get notified of videos
Starting point is 01:52:15 just like this leave me a comment and i will try and respond to all the comments uh hit up my patreon or if you just like to send me cash i'm good with that too i appreciate it thank you very much and see you

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