My America

‘Cornbread Mafia’ Describes The Rise, And Fall, Of Marijuana Production In Kentucky

As I examine my county’s long-term relationship with marijuana, besides researching our past, I’ve turned to books that highlight the history of marijuana production in the United States.

Ohio, which recently approved medical marijuana, began its love affair with the drug in the early-to-mid 1970s. Preble County saw an increase in production, and consumption, that mostly correlates with the return of Vietnam vets. According to articles from the late 1970s, one Preble County farmer — and Vietnam vet — was caught up in a drug smuggling deal that left two dead and several imprisoned. By the late 1970s, this farmer was receiving weekly shipments of 25-50 pounds of pot.

Each week’s delivery would supply 100-200 users with enough pot for a year.

Cornbread Mafia

The Cornbread Mafia by James Higdon takes place about three hours south of Preble County in central Kentucky. It is a story of a code of silence, murder, crooked cops, and ‘good ole boy’ farmers perfecting their product through careful breeding until the weed grown in Kentucky can command top dollar.

Even though the author begins the book with some earlier history to help frame the belief system of Marion County, Kentucky, their pot production also begins in the mid-to-late 1970s. Much of the production was hidden in plain site due to the players involved. Higdon writes,

For the first decade of the marijuana era in Marion County, all processing from a number of top growers was centralized in one location, a place no one would suspect of housing a multimillion-dollar illicit factory — on a farm owned by a prominent doctor, whose brother had once been mayor of Lebanon. No one would have guessed that the stately proportioned barns and outbuildings concealed several tons of high-grade sinsemilla in any given October between 1972-1980.

Native Tells Story

Higdon, a Lebanon native and journalism major, wrote the book shortly after college, and since he has an understanding of the mindset of the region, it gives him an edge in telling the story. The characters come across as authentic, and not caricatures. It is a region, that for the most part, view the book’s main character, Johnny Boone, as a local Robin Hood type hero. By the end of the book Boone, who served two prison terms, is a fugitive.

The story is fairly complicated with its cast of 5-10 characters who are heavily involved in the central Kentucky’s marijuana business. As the feds start cracking down on the group, they are eventually forced to grow their crops in other Midwest states — but they always bring it back to Marion County for processing, which also ensures they get top dollar when they distribute it.

Eventually, 70 Kentuckians are arrested, and true to their values, they refuse to ‘rat out’ each other or accept plea bargains that will harm their partners. This is phenomenal since the sentences they receive range from six months in jail to 20 years in prison.

Quicken The Pace

My main critiques of the book is it starts off a little slow as the author explains the mores of the region, which is essential to the story, but it could have been trimmed. Also, the stories of minor characters could be condensed.

For the most part, it is a story of impoverished, yet entrepreneurial, Kentucky farmers doing what they do best — perfecting a crop and marketing it. If not for the handful of murders in the story line, the book would have a ‘Dukes of Hazzard’ feel to it.

Published in 2012, the book is a little dated because the story of Johnny Boone has evolved (I won’t link to it in case you want to read the book first), and at least one member of the Cornbread Mafia has written a memoir, which, of course, adds to the story. At some point, I’ll have to read that one as well.

Rating 4/5. If you are looking for a crime story — or are interested in marijuana production in the 1970s and 1980s — this is a very enjoyable read with very interesting characters.


Local Eyes Only

1982 marijuana bust in Preble County netting an estimated $10 million in drugs and equipment — or nearly $26 million in 2017 dollars.

Categories: American History, drug use, My America | Tags: ,

‘Missoula:’ Acquaintance Rape And Those Who Enable It

Preble County, Ohio courthouse.

“I was stunned to discover that many of mine acquaintances, and even several women in my own family, had been sexually assaulted by men they trusted,” author Jon Krakauer.

Rape is a crime that experts estimate is underreported by 80 percent.

In the past 18 years, 124 rape kits from Preble County have been submitted to state and local crime labs. If it’s true the crime is underreported, the number of rapes that occur annually in Preble County would be about 10. Yet, of the 158 court cases processed through the Preble County Common Pleas Court between July 1, 2017 and Dec. 31, 2017 only one individual was indicted on rape charges.

Books like Missoula: Rape and the Justice System in a College Town by Jon Krakauer offers some clues why, as a society, we are woefully lacking in our response to this prevalent, and violent, crime.

Book Inception Is Personal

Krakauer offers some commentary at the end of the book on why he chose to tackle the subject. When he decided to research the topic he was embedded with some U.S. soldiers for another book he was finishing up. As he explains he attended some therapy sessions with the soldiers who were dealing with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, and the individual leading the session made the observation that two groups are most affected by the disorder: soldiers and rape victims.

That statement, and watching a personal friend struggle with the aftermath of sexual assault, seem to be the catalyst behind the book.

College Town Rapes

As the book reveals, it is a combination of societal beliefs, undertrained and bias gatekeepers, and public perception that impedes justice. And, sometimes, the march to justice is also hampered by the backlash a victim receives as communities rally around the accused.

The book takes place in the college town of Missoula, Montana which was thrown into the national spotlight a few years ago due to a series of rapes and sexual assaults that occurred in the community. Several of the allegations involved players on the much-loved University of Montana football team.

Missoula follows a couple of those cases from the allegations to their legal end. The testimony is difficult reading, but just as difficult to read is the clunky handling of the cases by the legal system, from undertrained police officers to unconcerned deputy prosecuting attorneys. In one of the cases, a female police officer assures the rape victim that she would bring in the alleged perpetrator and ‘at the very least scare the shit out of him.’

But, as the author reports, that is not what happens. While interviewing the suspect, the officer says,

I don’t think you did anything wrong. I think it is torturing you that you are accused of this and that bothers me. The case in my opinion is closed. This case is going to be listed as unfounded. I think this is just a misunderstanding.

Typical Behavior Of A Rape Victim

The book explains the typical manner in which rape survivors respond — which is counterintuitive to how we want them to respond. At the end of the book the author explains this phenomenon — as does one of the expert witnesses in one of the trials — but it’s too detailed to explain here. (A book the author quotes is Trauma and Recovery by Judith Herman.)

But one of the rape victims does offer a snippet of the phenomenon. Before being raped, the woman was a stellar college student, but after the crime she notes,

“I started drinking a lot — way too much — and engaging in other really risky behaviors. You hear that rape victims avoid sex afterwards, but it is actually just as common for some victims to become promiscuous in self-destructive ways. That’s what happened to me.”

Of course, the unenlightened use this behavior to besmirch victims.

Intellectually Lazy Investigators

Another interesting, albeit troubling, aspect of the book is how much an officer’s bias, lack of training or ignorance can derail a case. In several incidences, rape victims were asked ‘if they had a boyfriend’ with one officer going so far as to suggest that sometimes,

Girls cheat on their boyfriends and then say they were raped.

But, by far, at least for me, the aspect of the book that is invaluable, is it is filled with the stats that show rape victims are telling the truth.

It is estimated that 92-98 percent of victims are honest in their testimony.

Rating: 5/5. Although, at times, the court proceedings and testimony is a little labored, the stories are well researched and well told. The end result is a better understanding of the legal and societal weaknesses that allow rape to go unanswered.

This book, a national bestseller, also has a 4-star rating on Amazon.

Categories: 8th congressional district, Books I have read, My America

‘Seductive Poison’ Shows Stages Of Indoctrination, Cult Acceptance

2008 Palladium-Item (Richmond, IN) newspaper clipping — remembering the 30th anniversary of the Jonestown Massacre.

It was about 15 years after the Jonestown Massacre when I learned Peoples Temple leader Jim Jones attended Richmond High School about 20 minutes from my hometown. I would later learn that he also spent part of his childhood in Lynn, IN — a very small town I was familiar with because some of my cousins lived there.

But I had never really wanted to delve into any books about him until I read an online review about another Jonestown book that piqued my interest.

Seductive Poison

Debbie Layton was a rising star and confidante of Jim Jones. About two months before the Jonestown Massacre, though, the mid-20s woman knew she needed to get out. This was accomplished with the help of a sister and some government officials in Guyana. She details this, and the slow indoctrination, that led her to put her faith in Jones in her memoir Seductive Poison: A Jonestown Survivor’s Story of Life and Death in the People’s Temple.

Like many readers, I presume, Jonestown always prompted an image of gullible people who, although they did not deserve to die, kind of brought it all on themselves. That is one reason I’m glad I read the book. It is easier now, for me, to understand that good people, seeking a sense of justice and community, can be pulled into a very bad situation. Many of us (myself included) forget that Jones was highly respected just a few years before the massacre. As the book notes in 1976,

“The Temple was becoming a reputable and widely recognized organization. San Francisco Mayor George Moscone welcomed Jim (who controlled a large voting bloc) and rewarded Pastor Jones’s good deeds with several prominent positions. In March 1976, Jim was honored with a mayoral appointment to the San Francisco Human Rights Commission. Seven months later, he was appointed to the San Francisco Housing Authority.”

In a 1976 event honoring Jones, then-California State Assembly Speaker Willie Brown introduced Jones as a “combination of Martin Luther King, Angela Davis, Albert Einstein, and Chairman Mao.”

Even president Jimmy Carter’s wife, Rosalynn, visits with Jones during this era.

True Believers

But, underneath the public persona that was capable of duping powerful enablers was a sinister, and unstable, side of Jones that Layton effectively reveals. From the first time he sexually assaults her — to the day he confiscates her mother’s pain medication (she would die of cancer just weeks before the mass suicide) — Layton paints the image of a very troubled man.

Another side of the story she tells extremely well is the paranoia and persecution complex that riddled the religious community as they became convinced the ‘outside world’ was intent on destroying them.

Jonestown, Guyana

Because of her high role in the church, Layton stays in San Francisco, and is a late arriver to Guyana. When she arrives, after months of hearing how great Jonestown was looking, she is shocked to see that the paradise she had been promised was little more than an ‘army camp.’ Once there, her days, like other members were long filled with hard, manual labor and deprivation. As she is working in the fields one day — a 12-hour task in a jungle environment — she daydreams of simpler things,

“When I didn’t dream of food, I fantasized about my shower… Planning ones shower was important because showers also had restrictions. Anyone reported to have allowed the water to run longer than two minutes was assigned to the Learning Crew for a day.”

The Learning Crew was a chain-gang type punishment with harder labor and no talking. The crew was also escorted by armed guards.

For Her Daughter

Even though Layton wrote the book for her daughter in a way to ‘set the record straight,’ it is just a heavy, unhappy story for her family. Layton’s family was deeply impacted by the tragedy. Besides losing her mother — buried in an unmarked grave — Layton’s brother was one of the gunmen involved in the attack on U.S. Congressman Leo Ryan.

He was the only individual imprisoned over Jonestown.

Rating: 5 out of 5. This is an important read and it’s written in a way that you understand how Layton was pulled in. Even though she is empathic to the victims, she does not sugarcoat anything — not even her own errors.


Afterthought

As I was researching for this post, I came across a Rolling Stones piece which, of course, sheds more light on the topic. And, it includes the story of a elderly survivor who slept through the ordeal and published her story in 1995. The book is currently out of print.

I also researched the Richmond, IN newspaper and found a piece they did on the 30th anniversary of the Jonestown Massacre. You can view it here: Page 1 | Page 2

Categories: American History, Books I have read, My America, Religion | Tags: ,