Read You Can Run but You Can't Hide Online
Authors: Duane Dog Chapman
took Tim under my wing as a surrogate son. He was smart, edu-
cated in bail, and fearless. He knew the business cold. He is the same
Tim Chapman I work with to this very day. One of the other boys
was Max, who was the son of the vice president of the national mo-
torcycle club, the Outlaws, and little Lee was the son of another bail
bonds family, and David Bautista, who I brought into the bail bonds
business from selling Kirbys.
I began noticing these kids were constantly getting into trouble.
They all knew the bail bonds business from watching their parents
over the years. When their parents were tossing them out of the
house, I recognized the benefit of their knowledge and presence
right away. I was the guy who always caught their parents jumps, so
to them I was “cool.” They wanted to be around me because I
wasn’t their dad, but I could lead them in a way that kept them out
of trouble. I began using these kids to help out around Free as a
Bird Bail Bonds. I gave them all badges and radios so they felt like
they appeared “official.” They loved it and it worked well for me
because I needed the help.
I read
Billy the Kid
and wanted to have a gang of “Regulators”
like he did. These neighborhood boys fit the bill. I even took them all
on a road trip to visit to Wyoming where Billy the Kid once hung out
with his guys so we could connect like a true gang. We built a big
campfire one night and I swore each of these boys in to my version
of the Regulators. We made a pact that night to commit ourselves to
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fight for truth and justice together. The following Monday, we
started our crusade to wipe out the city of Denver’s “wanted.”
I trained the Regulators to be my eyes and ears. I sent them out
on fact-finding missions, bounties, wherever I needed help in the
pursuit of a client who jumped bail. Everyone knew who I was, so it
was becoming harder to go unnoticed. These young guys were vir-
tually invisible to the bail jumpers. It was easy to send them over to
see if someone’s car was in front of a particular house or if the per-
son was at a local bar. The Regulators could slip in and out without
the fugitive knowing. That helped me nab my man every time.
These kids took their oath to the Dog very seriously. They were
always on time and never missed a day of work. They respected me
because I was the guy who used to be them. I turned my life around.
They could see the opportunity to become something more than a
petty criminal by working with me to get the bad guys off the streets.
I talked to them about life, God, and living a good life all the time. I
offered the promise of a better plan if they followed in my footsteps
and stayed clean. Whenever they had personal setbacks, I’d be there
to encourage them to keep moving forward. I showed them love and
acceptance by always giving them another chance. I felt like the Pied
Piper trying to lead these boys who had mostly been degraded and
belittled their whole lives by living my life so as to be a positive exam-
ple. Two years later, all of these boys were as well known in the com-
munity as I was. It made them feel great knowing people saw them
doing good things for the community by getting criminals off the
streets. These days, my wife and children are my Regulators. I still do
the master planning, but they are all as loyal as my original gang.
Beth and I did suggest that a felon be required to wait a certain
number of years before being allowed to bounty hunt, much like the
law for bondsmen. Senator Lawrence got behind that idea. She
pushed the amendment through so I could get back to bounty hunt-
ing. The final vote was thirty-one ayes, two nays, and two absten-
tions. And, just for the record, Senator Ken Clover voted yes. I guess
he likes most types of pie after all!
Do you want to know why there’s a group of bounty hunters out
there who make it their full-time job to discredit me and destroy my
reputation? It started in the mid-nineties, just after Beth and I
joined together in the business. People were scared of us. We were
seen as a threat to the way all of the other bondsmen in Denver
O n e S t e p F o r wa r d
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were doing business. They took advantage of their clients in ways
we would never, ever consider. They were afraid we would blow the
lid off of their unsavory practices.
Two things to know about Beth and me: First, we don’t believe
bounty hunters should carry guns. There are lots of other non-lethal
weapons that can stun, stop, or sedate someone without killing them.
My weapon of choice is Mace. Second, Beth and I consider most of
our clients to be human beings who simply made bad choices. We
want to help them overcome their lives of crime. We will counsel
them, guide them, and talk to them like they’re friends. In our eyes,
they are all our brothers and sisters. We are honest about their situ-
ation. We will tell them they’re screwed but also reassure them that
they can get a good lawyer and rehabilitate their lives if they want
to. Unlike most other people in our business, Beth and I genuinely
want to see our clients change their lives.
One day I was out collecting a thousand dollars from one of my
clients in the parking lot of a 7-Eleven in Denver. We were making
the exchange when I noticed a couple of guys approaching us wear-
ing camouflage jackets and baseball hats that had big bold letters on
the front: BEA. They both carried two guns strapped to their hips.
When I first caught a glimpse of them, I thought their hats said
DEA. I’m sure the exchange of cash looked like a drug deal was go-
ing down. To make matters worse, I didn’t have my badge on me.
One of the two approached me and asked, “What are you guys
doing out here?”
I took off my sunglasses, handed them to my client, and said,
“Here, honey, hold these for me.”
As I turned around, I realized their hats said BEA and said,
“BEA. What the hell does that stand for?”
“Bail bonds Enforcement Agent.”
I asked the guy, “You got any Vaseline on you? Because I’m Dog
Chapman and those guns you’ve got are going up your ass.”
When I started walking toward them, they turned and ran to
their cars screaming, “Run, it’s the Dog!!”
Anytime I see the BEA guys carrying guns, I do whatever it takes
to stop them. These guys are not qualified to carry weapons. They’re
not cops. Cops are trained experts who shoot to kill. That is, they’re
taught to fire only when deadly force is necessary to save lives. They
don’t shoot to wound in order to bring someone in.
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A week later, I was in the jail booking another fugitive when an-
other BEA guy walked in wearing an empty holster and bragging
about pistol whipping a client. He saw me sitting there with my
fugitive but refused to acknowledge me. I stood up to confront the
guy, got into his face, and said, “You know who I am. You know I
don’t like that kind of talk. Why are you even carrying a gun?”
This guy said to me, “I don’t care if you don’t carry a gun. I’m
gonna dance on your grave.”
I was about to rumble with him right there inside the court-
house. I didn’t give a shit. Beth is a bondsman, I knew she’d get me
out. He was a chickenshit and wouldn’t take my bait. Later I saw
him outside in the parking lot talking to his wife. I waved him over
to talk, toward where I was standing.
“Come here, brother. Let’s say a prayer together.” I’m sure he
thought I was about to eat crow.
“Dear God, give this pussy-packin’ punk some balls. I’m going
to beat his ass to the ground right now. I want you to give him the
strength Joshua had at the Battle of Jericho, because he’s going to
need it after this ass-whooping.” I took a step back, spit at both of
my clenched fists, and said, “What was that you said about dancing
on my grave, white boy?”
He was shaking like a nervous Chihuahua. I turned to his wife
and said, “You see that, honey? You married a pussy. You see the
punk you got here, baby?”
I turned back to the guy and said, “C’mon. Show me how you’re
going to dance on my grave,” as if he was going to Fred Astaire his
ass in front of me.
Just then, his wife stepped in between the two of us to stop the
fight. She was yelling, “Stop, Dog. He’s legally blind. He’s got 40/90
vision!”
I was out of my mind at the thought that this gun-toting Stevie
Wonder had a weapon permit! Why would a man who is legally
blind be allowed to carry a gun?
The next thing I saw was his skinny little ass hiding behind his
wife as they ran toward their car.
To this very day I fight with the guys from the BEA. I hate them,
and they can’t stand me. I’ll continue my crusade to ban bounty
hunters from carrying guns until the day comes that we are all on
the same side of that subject.
C h a p t e r T h i r t y - f o u r
Hollywood has been
knock-knockin’ on my door for sev-
eral years. A few years before the Luster case plastered me all over
the front pages, I met a man on a flight from Los Angeles to Hon-
olulu. He was seated next to me in first class. I hardly ever talk to
people on planes. I don’t like flying. The young man asked my name
and what I did for a living. For some unknown reason, I was an
open book that day.
He was engaged before wheels-up. For five and a half hours,
he asked me question after question about my life. How’d I get
started? Have I ever been hurt? What was prison like?
I don’t believe I’ve ever talked more on a plane than I did that
day. A couple of hours into the flight I asked the guy his name.
“Chris McQuarrie.”
“Oh yeah? Well, nice to meet you, Chris. What do you do?”
“I’m a screenwriter.”
“Ever have a movie produced?”
He smiled in a way that made me feel kind of stupid for not
recognizing his name or something.
“Yes, I have had a movie produced. Maybe you saw it.
The Usual
Suspects
?”
I love that movie. I was practically starstruck. We exchanged
phone numbers and talked about getting together while Chris was in
Hawaii. I didn’t expect to hear from him, but I hoped he would call.
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Later that night, I told Beth about my new friend.
“Who the hell was she, Duane?” She was suspicious as hell,
thinking I met a woman.
I let out a boisterous laugh. “No. No. I met this guy, Chris
McQuarrie, and . . .” Right away she knew who he was. Beth
knows that kind of stuff. She was leery as I told her how he talked
about wanting to write a movie about my life. Beth is always prag-
matic in my otherwise overly optimistic world. Before she could tell
me she thought he was full of it, the phone rang. Thank God.
“Hey, Dog. How ya doing? It’s Chris. Let’s get together and talk
a little more about the movie idea.”
I smiled and laughed. For once, I could hand the phone over to
Beth before she called me a liar or fool. I wanted Chris to confirm
what he told me right in her ear.
“It’s for you, honey.”
It’s true, Beth and I had become very wary of Hollywood and its
players. There had been lots of guys before Chris who promised
big-money deals and never delivered. Hollywood is a lot of smoke
and mirrors. You never know who you’re talking to or what they are
really all about. One thing you can count on is that everyone has his
own agenda. You are merely a pawn to move around to promote
whatever that plan is. It’s hard to tell players from liars. I’d been
drawn in many times by seemingly reputable people; I never knew
when I was being played.
So, when this crazy Russian named Boris Krutonog called me
in 1995, I was already so jaded I didn’t pay him a lot of attention. He’d
read about me in Tony Robbins’s book,
Awaken the Giant Within.
“Dog, I am so fascinated by your story.” Even though Boris is
Russian he sounded a lot like Arnold Schwarzenegger in
The Ter-
minator.
As long as I can remember, people have been telling me I’d be
famous. I always believed that one day people around the world
would recognize the Dog for something good. There have been
plenty of times in my life I’ve dreamed of seeing my name up there
on a marquee. But I’d had so many calls like the one I got from
Boris, I was practically numb listening to him speak. I was void of
emotion. I couldn’t get my hopes up again, just to have someone lie
to me, use me, and mislead me for their own purposes. I thought it
was all a bunch of horsecrap.
G o i n g H o l ly w o o d
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“Yeah, thanks for the call, brother, but I have to hang up.” I was
nice, but quick to get off the phone.