Read You Can Run but You Can't Hide Online
Authors: Duane Dog Chapman
Hawaii. It was a message of hope and inspiration to get myself to-
gether and start over.
My life has been filled with trying moments when my faith gets
tested. Tony Robbins used to say there was great power in positive
thinking and positive confession. The words you speak are crucial
to how you live. Your mind believes whatever you tell it. If I felt like
a deadbeat, I acted like one. If I moved through the world like a
leader, people would see me as one. I realized that every challenge
is an opportunity to strengthen my faith, to learn how to make it
stronger, and to use that situation to learn and grow. If you keep
making the same mistakes, you keep getting the same results. I
needed change. I had to make some hard decisions. I thought about
the story of Jesus raising Lazarus from the grave. He believed He
could bring him back to life when all of His disciples doubted Him.
Jesus led His disciples through fields of doubt. Sitting on the beach
that day, I felt like Lazarus. With Jesus’ love and strength, and an
unshakable belief in my own faith, I, too, was resurrected.
As hard as it was for me to concede, I had been beaten. Game
over. I stood up on the beach, cupped my hands around my mouth,
and shouted, “I’m going back to Denver! I will start over, I will suc-
ceed! I am the Mighty Dog!” I yelled until my throat was raw and
my voice was shot. I stood for a moment as the sun set over the Pa-
cific. This day was done. Tomorrow would be a new beginning.
C h a p t e r T h i r t y - t w o
I packed up
the kids and moved back to Denver. One of the
conditions my sister Jolene placed on our staying with her was that
she really didn’t want me to see Beth. Jolene warned me I would be
on the street if she caught me with her. I should have been able to
come back into town and walk right into my old bail bonds busi-
ness, but I had already handed it off to my sister before I moved to
Hawaii. That would have solved my money problems and helped
me get back on track. She did give me work as a bounty hunter, but
the business belonged to her. She and I have a long history of not
getting along, but now was not the time to be so harsh. I opted to
stay in a motel near Jolene’s house. The only way I could bounty
hunt for her was if she gave me a car to use, which she did. If I
caught two guys a day for her, I made a hundred and fifty bucks. I
didn’t have a lot of extra money for food, so most of my downtime
was spent just hanging around the motel.
Although I had left my girlfriend behind in Hawaii, I brought all
of her bad habits with me to Denver. I was still getting high from time
to time. I hadn’t spoken to Beth since she turned me in to Richard
Heath six months earlier. Everywhere I went, people brought up
Beth’s name. For the most part, everyone thought it was best that we
didn’t get together. They all warned her to stay far away from me. I
heard she had a boyfriend who shot steroids. Because of the drugs,
he’d go into rages and beat her.
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We managed to avoid each other for a few weeks. Then one day,
we were both standing in the alley behind the houses on bail bonds
row. It was like a scene from a movie. I looked at her and she at me.
By the time Beth got to the back of the alley I was already by her
side. I grabbed her and put the most passionate kiss on her.
“Meet me in an hour.” I told her where I was staying and took
off to make sure the kids were otherwise occupied for a while.
I am an extremely sensual man. When I kiss a woman, I want to
envelop all of her in my mouth. I like to lick her face and neck, and
I want to feel connected in my love. I’m not in it just for myself. I’m
not satisfied unless my partner is happy. Making love to Beth was
always hot, and the moment I saw her in the alley that day, I knew
we’d be together forever.
My sister had warned me she would take away the car if she
caught me with Beth. Well, later that night, Jolene saw the car parked
outside Beth’s house. She came up to the front door with her hus-
band, who is a federal police officer. They asked for the car keys. I
couldn’t believe my eyes as I watched them drive away.
I don’t know why I went to Beth’s that night. Our afternoon of
passion was the stuff that dreams are made of, but I was still angry
with her for ratting me out to the insurance company. A part of me
was mad at her, but I needed a place to go. I had my babies; they
needed a home. A small motel room wasn’t the right place for them
to be. Then, one night, the kids and I were over at Beth’s for a meal.
Her daughter, Cecily, was there, and all the kids were passed out
around the house. I’d picked up two tough bounties that day and
could barely keep my eyes open.
Beth said, “Why don’t you all just stay here for now? Don’t
worry,” she laughed. “We’ll just take it one day at a time and see
how it goes.”
Beth and I decided the time had come for us to join forces—
romantically and professionally. At the time, she was working for
Bail City, whose insurance company was Pioneer General. When
they found out about us they called Beth and made it very clear that
it was either Duane or her job.
She accused them of blackmail, and in typical Beth fashion, she
told them that they didn’t run her life. They fired her.
A few days later, we all moved into Beth’s house for good. It
wouldn’t be easy, and we were certainly no Brady Bunch, but we
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loved each other. That love would get us through any challenge that
lay ahead, and there would still be a few doozies.
“I’ve waited so long for you, Duane. I waited through your mar-
riage to Lyssa, and then Tawny. Now I have you, and you’re a drug
addict son of a bitch.” She’d been through the bullshit before. Since
prison, I was always the guy who didn’t do drugs. Beth began to
cry. When she weeps, she ruins me. I looked at her, tears also now
streaming down my cheeks, and I realized she was right. I remem-
ber thinking, “I’m her hero and now I’ve let her down, too. It’s time
to snap out of this.”
Throughout my six months of being on drugs, I avoided looking
in any mirrors. I knew God wasn’t standing with me. Once in a
while, I felt him check in, but I was too ashamed to ask the Lord
into my life during those months. I was terribly ashamed of my be-
havior. I never prayed, something I normally do all the time. I felt
like my prayers would hit the ceiling and bounce back down, so I
didn’t even try. Instead, I took another hit off the pipe.
God gives us all free will. I had a choice to get high or not. For
years, I hadn’t understood how someone could choose to hit that
stuff, smoke, snort, or do any kind of drug. I just saw them as
weak-minded. They were garbage, trash. How pathetic do you have
to be not to have control over your urge to get high?
Well, now I know firsthand. Whenever I talk to someone about
drug problems, I tell them, “We have to get through this,” because
every day is a struggle for an addict. Once an addict, always an ad-
dict. I’ve been there. I know how hard it is to kick an addiction.
One day, Beth forced me to look into a mirror. She said, “Look
at yourself. You’ve lost so much weight. You’re sick, Duane. If you
don’t quit doing drugs, you will die.” When her soft-love approach
didn’t sink in, she began humiliating me.
“You’re a crackhead.”
“You ain’t the Dog anymore.”
“Your dad’s at the door. He wants to talk to you.” That one re-
ally got me, because I never wanted to disappoint my dad. He al-
ways said I was a nothing. I never wanted to give him the satisfaction
of being right.
“I’m coming back, Beth. I swear, baby. I’m coming back.” I prom-
ised what I couldn’t deliver. I couldn’t kick the habit.
Kidney stones saved my life. The pain was excruciating. I thought
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I was dying. I went to the doctor and told her I was in agony. I ex-
plained I was a drug user.
“Let me take your blood pressure.” While the doctor examined
me, she began asking me all sorts of questions.
“Why do you take drugs?”
“For the sex.”
“Are you living with a girl now?”
“Yes, that’s her in the hallway.”
“Do you love her?”
“No.” The confession was a relief.
“Who do you love?”
I couldn’t answer. My blood pressure went off the charts.
The doctor diagnosed stress and depression. She prescribed
Prozac and blood pressure medication.
Beth took one look at the prescriptions and was mad as hell. She
didn’t think I needed Prozac. I took the pills anyway.
I was in a tunnel-like state from the Prozac. I had a hard time
telling fact from fiction. One day I thought Beth had packed her
stuff and left. I got up that morning earlier than usual, and she was
gone. I opened the closet to see if her clothes were still hanging
there. They were. I sat down on the bed and realized I was falling
in love with Beth. I started to love her in ways I never imagined or
thought were possible. My old girlfriend was becoming a ghost
from my past. I don’t know if it was the Prozac, or if my feelings
were genuine and real. I didn’t care.
The Prozac seemed to be working, except I couldn’t remember
the simplest things. For some reason, I wanted to call LaFonda. I
had known her number for twenty-five years, but now I couldn’t re-
member it. When I told Beth, she showed no mercy. She didn’t want
me on those pills in the first place. I called another friend of mine
and told her what was happening.
She told me to throw those pills down the drain because they
would make me do crazy things.
As soon as I stopped taking the pills, the pain from my kidney
stones came back, only this time it was worse than ever. I went back
to the doctor.
“You have kidney stones.” The doctor ordered me to rest. I lay on
Beth’s sofa for a month, waiting for the pain to end. The doctors were
scared I might not make it. I had lost so much weight from doing
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drugs that I was down to a mere 130 pounds. My body was dying. I
didn’t have the physical strength to fight for my life. In my peak phys-
ical condition, back when I was boxing, my weight hovered around
155. I was slim like my son Leland. Today I weigh around 200 pounds.
I was a sick, weak shell of the man I once was.
After mom died, I went into a deep depression. For the first time
in my life, I felt alone. Mom’s presence usually kept me from mak-
ing poor choices and dreadful decisions. After Huntsville, I had be-
come a pretty savvy guy who avoided doing heavy drugs and lots of
drinking. Women were usually my drug of choice. And like a drug,
it was a woman, someone I would never have been with if I had
been feeling better about myself, who started me down a path of
self-destruction that eventually led to the relationship that intro-
duced me to my drug abuse.
I was extremely lonely and not thinking clearly when I chose to
participate in smoking cocaine that first night. I didn’t know how
fast things could get bad. As hard as it might seem to believe, I sim-
ply had no clue what I was getting myself into. I sank so low that
once I was in the bottom of that deep, dark pit, I didn’t know how
to get myself out. I knew I had let my family and friends down,
which made it so hard for me because I miserably failed at getting
myself together. It became a vicious cycle. The worse I got, the
worse I felt. The worse I felt, the worse I got.
Truth be told, if my mom had been alive, I’d have never given in
to that type of temptation. I couldn’t have faced her. I was de-
pressed and desperate for love and acceptance. My life had taken a
downward turn, the likes of which I had never experienced. I felt I
had no control over any aspect of my very own existence.
For a year and a half, I felt as if I had suffered blow after blow.
My once strong mind and ego were fractured. I was a broken man.
And I was truly alone. My father went back to live in Denver and
my sister Joleen, who had helped out with my bail bonds business
in Hawaii after mom died, stopped coming. Throughout my career,
there was always someone in the office running my business so I
could focus on what I do best—writing bond and capturing jumps.
I had such an overwhelming sense of hopelessness. I lost my
edge, my spark, my judgment, and my belief that I was better than
the way I was living. That’s why I know how a fugitive feels when I
have to hunt him down. I know the pain that takes a brother to the
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depths of depression and desperation. I don’t want anyone to feel