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Authors: Daniel Butler

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America's Dumbest Criminals

BOOK: America's Dumbest Criminals
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America's
DUMBEST
CRIMINALS

America's
DUMBEST
CRIMINALS

BASED ON TRUE STORIES FROM LAW ENFORCEMENT
OFFICIALS ACROSS THE COUNTRY

DANIEL R. BUTLER
LELAND GREGORY
ALAN RAY

Illustrations by Mike Harris

Copyright © 1995 The Entheos Group, L.L.C.
All rights reserved. Written permission must be secured from the publisher to use or reproduce any part of this book except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles.

The authors have taken great caution to protect the true identity of persons depicted in this book. While the crimes depicted are true, the names, gender, and races of the criminals depicted, and the details of the crimes portrayed, may have been changed to safeguard those identities.

Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Rutledge Hill Press, Inc., 211 Seventh Avenue North, Nashville, Tennessee 37219 Distributed in Canada by H. B. Fenn and Company, Ltd., 1090 Lorimar Drive, Mississauga, Ontario L5S 1R7.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Butler, Daniel R., 1951–

   America's dumbest criminals : based on true stories from law enforcement officials across the country / Daniel R. Butler, Leland Gregory, Alan Ray.

      p. cm.

   ISBN 1–55853–372–9

   1. Crime—United States—Case studies. 2. Criminals—United States—Case studies. 3. Crime—United States—Humor. I. Gregory, Leland. II. Ray, Alan. III. Title.

HV6783.B87 1995

364.1'092'273—dc20

[B]

95–30052

CIP

Printed in the United States of America.

99 98 97 96 95 3 4 5

To
the men and women whose portraits and photographs hang in the lobby of every police station we visited— officers who were killed in the line of duty. Under all the portraits and photos, the same quote was displayed:
“Greater love hath no man than this . . .”

Contents

Introduction

1 Never Mind

2 The World's Shortest Trial

3 Look Out! He's Got a What Is That?

4 Positive I.D.

5 Riches to Rags

6 D.O.B.

7 Drive Aaround, Please

8 The Considerate Criminal

9 Taken for a Ride

10 Jumpin' Jack Flasher

11 Beats the Hell out of Me

12 Insulated from Good Sense

13 Going out with a Bang

14 A Large Naked Anchovy and Pepperoni

15 “Not by the Hair of My Chinny-Chin-Chin!”

16 Junior Meets the Sandman

17 Write On!

18 Go Directly to Jail

19 It's the Law

20 He Can Hide, but He Can't Run

21 Lovin' in Fifteen Minutes

22 Look Out! He's Got a Turtle and He Knows How to Use It!

23 Luck of the Draw

24 Pulling the Rug Out

25 Don't Try It Again, Sam

26 Bound for the Cooler

27 Two-Bit Thief

28 A Really Big Bust

29 Bare Truth

30 Love Thy Neighbor

31 Five Will Get You Ten or Twenty-Five

32 Big Mac Attackers

33 In the Mood

34 There's One Born Every Minute

35 The Sad Saga of Bad Luck Brown

36 Another Run of Bad Luck Brown

37 A Dam Dumb Idea

38 Arrest Record

39 It's the Law

40 The Light at the End of the Tennie

41 Possession Is Nine-Tenths of the Law

42 All Thumbs

43 What's the Number for 911?

44 Backseat Driver

45 Door-to-Door Crime Buster

46 Drag Race

47 Bad Bribes

48 Type Ohhhhhhh!

49 Sticky Situation

50 Big Brother Is Watching You

51 Going My Way?

52 Asleep at the Wheel

53 I Can't Believe It

54 Hop in Back

55 Good Thinking

56 Read My List

57 If You Can't Beat 'Em ...

58 Camera Hog

59 Another Crime of Passion

60 Once Bitten, Twice Bitten

61 All Aboard!

62 Life Is Like a Pair of Brown Shoes

63 The Clothes Make the Man Dumb!

64 Potted Plants

65 Once a Soldier

66 A Shining Example

67 Always Wear Your Seat Belt

68 Auto Suggestion

69 You've Come a Short Way, Baby

70 Don't Pull That One on Me

71 Left Holding the Bag

72 The Wrong Guy

73 When You Gotta Go

74 Go Figure ...

75 Stop That Thief and Step on It!

76 The Twenty-Eight Daze of February

77 Name-Brand Robbery

78 Gone Fishin'

79 The Robber with a Lemon

80 A Con a Sewer

81 The Case of the Beer-Box Bandit

82 Skid Row

83 Back Door Man

84 Step by Step

85 Dressed for Arrest

86 Four-Wheel Suspicion

87 Quick Comeback

88 As the Crow Pries

89 Stealing Home!

90 The Fall Guy

91 Wrong Side of the Tracks

92 My Name's Steve, and I'll Be Your Dealer Today

93 Hooked on Crime

94 A Red-Hot Robbery

95 The Five-Year Cab Ride

96 Winner Loses

97 The Civic-Minded Cocaine Cooker

98 Cold Cash

99 Bloodhound Blues

100 All's Well That Ends

Introduction

T
he plans were all in place. The phone calls had all been made, the faxes sent, the interviews arranged and confirmed. Now the crew was on location, ready to set up and videotape our hilarious yet revealing interviews with police officers who had encountered America's dumbest criminals.

Time was money. With every moment, hundreds of expense dollars were clicking away. And here was the assistant chief of police, the man who had welcomed us so cordially the day before, giving us the kind of stern look that goes with “You're under arrest.”

“You need to speak to the chief,” he said.

We were ushered into a large office. Before us was a huge desk, and behind that desk was a very big man. To us, he looked like more than just an “authority figure”—he
was
the authority.

The chief did not smile. In that office no one smiled. And no one spoke but the chief.

“Explain to me,” he said, “what it is you boys want to do.”

Something in his tone made me think of every lie I had ever told. I swallowed. Then I launched into a nervous, chattering “pitch” for the home video series and book project we were trying to produce.

I explained that we had come to collect stories from the officers in his department about dumb criminals they had known. I told of my phone conversations and faxes to his assistant chief. I talked a little about our plans for a book and for television pilots.

As I spoke, I noticed a small plaque on the bookcase behind the chief's chair: “Treat the media as you would any other watchdog. Feed it, water it, pat it on the head, but never turn your back on it.”

I finished my explanation. No one smiled. The silence seemed to last, oh, five to ten years. Finally, the chief spoke:

“Son, you need to understand something. You see, I was the interrogator on the Ted Bundy case. I went through that whole trial with the media. Then Hollywood sent me scripts for their movies-of-the-week and they asked me to circle whatever I thought was inaccurate. I circled a bunch of stuff and they went ahead and shot it just the way it was. Plus, in the last six months I've had two abortion-clinic shootings and I've had the media climbing all over my back every minute of every day.

“So tell me again,” he said, “why I should let your cameras in here.”

I saw our whole project teetering on a toothpick. I swallowed hard, opened my mouth, and miraculously, words came out.

“Chief, I've got two sons, seven and fifteen years old, and they love to watch television shows like
COPS, Rescue 911
, and
America's Most Wanted
. They think those programs are accurate, that they show the way it is for cops and for criminals most of the time. They think the crime scene looks exciting, even glamorous.

“I don't think that's true. I think that even the term ‘Most Wanted' glorifies the criminals—sort of like a rookie-of-the-year baseball card. And from the few interviews we've done already, I'm convinced there's not much glorious about crime.

“In fact, I'm convinced that you police officers spend 90 percent of your time dealing with idiots—or with people just like me who have been caught doing the dumbest thing they've ever done. That's what I want to show in our videos and in our book.”

This time the silence seemed to last ten to twenty years—without parole.

No one smiled. No one spoke. Except, finally, the chief.

“Son,” he said, his face relaxing into something like a smile, “if you'll show criminals for the coldhearted dumbasses they are, and if you'll show our police force as being professional at all times . . . well, then, we'll help you any way we can.”

Over the next six months, this scene was repeated over and over. The stories were not all funny ones. With each officer that we interviewed, we felt the weight each one carries daily—the weight of pain and sadness and even fear. But police work, like any other stressful profession, is full of moments when situations take a turn for the absurd and when laughter seems as appropriate as tears. The most rewarding moments of this entire project came when the officers' very serious faces broke into broad grins and we all laughed so hard that tears came to our eyes. We hope this book shares a little bit of that laughter.

We want to make it clear, however, that in laughing at “dumb criminals” we are not making fun of the mentally challenged. We use the term
dumb
in the same way that great American philosopher Forrest Gumpused the word
stupid
: “Stupid is as stupid does, sir!” We say, “Dumb criminals are as dumb criminals do, sir!”

Dumb criminals, in other words, are criminals who
act
dumb—people who opt for selfishness, ignorance, greed, or just plain meanness instead of using the good sense God gave them. We take great satisfaction in showing the real and often hilarious consequences of such dumb choices.

None of the dumb crimes depicted in this book are still under adjudication. None of the criminals or victims described in this book are identified by their real names. All the stories really happened, but many details have been changed to protect the privacy of the people involved. The cops named in these pages, on the other hand, are very real. Their names and their stories are repeated with permission—and with deep gratitude. We wish them all the best as they continue to cope with the seemingly endless stream of America's dumbest criminals.

BOOK: America's Dumbest Criminals
11.5Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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