The Joe Rogan Experience - #2295 - Scott Payne
Episode Date: March 27, 2025Scott Payne is a retired FBI Special Agent who spent 28 years in law enforcement investigating cases against drug trafficking organizations, human traffickers, outlaw motorcycle clubs, gangs, public c...orruption, and domestic terrorists. He is the co-author of the book "Code Name: Pale Horse: How I Went Undercover to Expose America’s Nazis" and the subject of the podcast "White Hot Hate: Agent Pale Horse," both created in collaboration with journalist Michelle Shephard. https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Code-Name-Pale-Horse/Scott-Payne/9781668032909 https://link.mgln.ai/63oNQg Join Visible by visiting visible.com/rogan and experience all-digital wireless with nothing to hide, with plans starting at $25/mo. Visit LifeLock.com/JOEROGAN to save up to 40% off. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The Joe Rogan Experience.
Trained by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
You had a crazy fucking life, man.
Like a really crazy life.
So to get everybody up to speed right from the beginning, you spent 25 years undercover,
working for the FBI in the Klan, Nazi organizations, and
biker gangs.
And then some, yes sir.
What a crazy, crazy life that is.
First of all, how did you first get started doing that?
Good question.
I grew up in South Carolina, played ball, all that stuff. I was always
kind of a, I mean if you look back, not trying to be cocky, whatever, because that's not
it. You've had plenty of people on this show that are complete badasses. But I was kind
of a bully of bullies. I didn't, I always looked out, I liked the underdog. I bounced
in college. So I was already learning that gift of gab and
fight techniques and stuff like that. And then I became a cop because
when I was in college, I took a course, I'm taking electives. I went to college
so I'd have four more years to figure out what I was gonna do. Yeah. Because I
didn't know what I was doing. Except partying. I did three years. I was good at partying. But I had an
elective that was criminal justice and man, I really liked it. Psychology was always a
strong thing for me. But it took a backseat and I ended up coming out with a major in
criminal justice and a minor in psychology. But during those criminal justice courses,
I was like, at first, for a fleeting moment,
I said, I'm going to be an attorney.
Yeah, I'll be an attorney.
And then I realized I'd be a terrible attorney.
I said, because if I was the defense attorney and they said they did it, I would probably
just walk up and go, they did it, right?
That's not going to get me any clients.
And if I was the prosecutor, I pictured me being like Sam Kenison grabbing them and going,
say it, say it. You did it.
So I'm like, yeah, that's probably not the best role for me.
And I did a ride along with cops and the department and that was it.
But once I got in to law enforcement, I was uniformed patrol for three years.
I was just so fascinated with undercover.
I don't know what it was.
I can't really remember doing the book. I've tried to dive back in. People ask. I don't know what it was. I can't really remember doing the book
I've tried to dive back in people ask I don't really remember
I just know that I loved undercover movies period if it was a biker undercut
I don't care how cheesy it was. I love them all and then one of my mentors at the sheriff's office
He was actually the world's strongest man in the late 80s after Kaz Meyer. He was a he was a former Marine and
big dude and he
as a task force had gone on a task force had gone undercover in some biker gangs and man
I just I was I wanted to be a biker
I grew up on motorcycles and then just started taking off from there
You got to think that biker gangs are probably super suspicious of people being undercover
because it's such a theme.
You think?
It's been around forever, the stories of guys infiltrating biker gangs.
It's been around forever.
40 plus years right now.
Easy.
Wow.
Yeah.
And then there's books made.
There's books made.
They go to court.
They learn.
Yeah.
So it was right after the Vietnam War, right?
That's when all the biker gangs really started kicking off.
No, I think it goes back to world...
I mean, my history's bad, but I think it goes back to World War at least, too, right?
Because all those...
The way it goes, everybody always asks what a one percenter is.
And it goes back, I think it's 1947, but it goes back to when your veterans are getting
out.
They have nothing. They had no decompression back then.
They had no plans or programs for them. And they've been out here living this
raucous, rowdy life. And now they're back in the States and now they're supposed to just
flip and be like... So they started creating these clubs and
they were doing some raucous and rowdy stuff. And then it was the president
of the American Motorcycle Association.
They came out and made this statement
that said something to the effect of,
listen, 99% of all motorcycle riders
are good, law-abiding citizens.
There's only 1% that's bad.
And they took that as a badge of honor
and said, we're 1%ers.
Wow. Yeah.
Cool stuff. Cool stuff.
So who was the first person to infiltrate them?
Do you know the history that I don't but it's so it's been going on forever soon
I found out it's like it's been the case with the mob. It's been the case with everything sure Nebraska
Yeah, my mentor one of my really yeah, Joe Pistole. Absolutely. He helped certify me
I saw him probably within the last six months or so
He was graciously. He did a blurb on the book to oh, wow. I saw him probably within the last six months or so.
Graciously, he did a blurb on the book, too.
I call him boss man.
So do you remember your first undercover assignment?
Yes.
Yeah.
What'd you have to do?
It was at the sheriff's office.
So after three years in uniform, I make it to Narcotics Investigator.
Well it's a tough crowd, but we're funny.
You know, it's just like a good military group
or anything else.
There's gonna be a lot of ribbon and stuff like that.
So they said, hey, you're gonna go buy some dope tonight.
My first time.
Now, granted, I bought weed and stuff in high school
and I was around those groups,
but I never bought crack cocaine.
I was already probably six four
and I probably was like 270 pounds. I did not
look like I smoked crack, unless I just fell off the wagon.
Just real recent.
Or I just started, yeah. I'm the vegan that shows up still smelling like beef. I just
stopped. But they told me, hey, it's really easy. You're just going to roll down to this
corner. It's a known drug trafficking area. You're going to roll down there. White boy, you're going to roll down to this corner, it's a known drug trafficking area.
You're gonna roll down there, white boy,
you're gonna roll down the window,
they're gonna come up to you and say,
what do you want?
And back then it was a 20.
You just get a rock, 20 bucks for a rock.
And say, all you gotta do is hold that 20
and say, you just want a 20.
Joe, I drove down there.
I know I was scared because I was out of my comfort zone.
But I was also scared to make a fool of myself
in front of the narcotics guys and gals
that were training me.
And I rolled down the street and I pull up
and they come running up to the window.
What you want, what you want?
I cracked the window.
I crack it about this far and I stick a 20
like I'm trying to go to a vending machine.
I'm like, I want a 20, you know?
And the dude's like, he takes the 20, but he can't hand me the crack rock back to the
cracked window.
He's like, roll the damn window down.
And I'm like, my bad.
It's probably like a sliver of soap, who knows.
But that was my first drug buy.
First undercover, like legit.
And so what was the protocol?
Like you had to buy the drug and then what do you do?
It depends.
Case by case basis. We may
want to make numerous buys on that corner, try to come in with the jump out
boys they used to call them and shut that corner down for a while. We may be
trying to to make buys on the low level people on the corner selling who are
probably most likely users at least as my experience so maybe like every five
crack rocks they sold they can peel one for themselves.
And maybe we want to get them, build a case on them, kind of try to climb it up.
And then find out who's the distributor.
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for planned features and network management details. And that's that was
like the state and local. We hit it. Everybody's a little different, but three
buys hit them with a search warrant kind of thing, something like that.
And ultimately, so when you're doing this,
you're buying, you're trying to develop
some sort of a relationship or an understanding
of how this thing goes down.
How do you get to who's selling it to them?
Do you have to arrest them first?
You can, or you can do, there's all kinds of ways,
but you can do like a wall off, in other words, not let everybody see us pick you off, you can do, there's all kinds of ways, but you could do like a wall
off. In other words, not let everybody see us pick you off, you know, so you don't get
burned. Bring you in, talk to you and this is what we got on you. We're trying to figure
out who it is. And it's just traditional law enforcement. You're trying to find more intel
and work your way up. And you offer them a community or something like that? Depends.
Some people or some people do it out of the goodness of their heart. Really? Yeah. I mean, it's rare, but I mean, you can do it.
Hey, I'm patriotic. I want to help clean this up.
These people are trying to sell me dope.
I don't like them. I can go buy it for you.
A lot of times we're paying a source
or they could be working off a charge.
It could be part of their plea agreement.
So this is your first one.
You get comfortable doing that.
And then how often are you doing this?
I don't know.
I mean, we could come in.
Let's just say there's six investigators on Northern or Southern Command Narcotics
in Greenville County.
You might be one of my partners and we come in and you go, hey, I got a source.
He's going to go make a body.
Now you might hop in the car with him.
It just happens.
It gives me it's almost a daily thing.
And so you develop your skills doing this, you get real good at being undercover. And then how do you move on to the big boys? How do you move on to biker gangs, Nazis?
I got hired by the FBI.
And was it specifically because you were good at undercover shit? Or no?
You see a picture of me I had to buy this is me. but for the academy, I mean it's a cheesy, thin, fuzzy mustache.
Can't go past the crease of your lip high and tight.
You're going to get your haircut at the PX in Quantico.
It was usually foreign ladies that were cutting your hair.
No matter how I had to explain what I wanted, I got the same haircut every time.
You take it up a little bit here and not so much here. Oh yeah, yeah. You're like, all right, there you go.
I guess this is what we're doing.
But one thing I noticed at the state level was we would all go back then, the South Carolina
Criminal Justice Academy is in Columbia, South Carolina. So we would go there and get certified.
But in your county, I mean, how many ways can I shape? I'm in
the same county and you're going out here making buys. How many times can I change my
car, change my outfit, change my facial hair, the hair on my head until everybody starts
knowing I'm a narc? You know, because when you're in that local environment and I mean,
I'm talking Greenville, South Carolina, Miami might be a little bit different or New York City but you're going to court a lot and people are seeing you in court
and then so how do you roll out there? So a lot of it turns into just running sources. To me,
I believe developing and running sources is hand in hand with undercover because other than them
not being a bonded law enforcement officer and I don't have a
felon on my record, but they do, they're still the ones we're wiring up and going in to get
the evidence. So a lot of it over the last many years with the defund the police and
the black eye, it's hard to recruit. It's hard enough to get people to fill the uniform
slots.
So you really don't have anybody doing undercover.
Most of your smaller departments that I've talked to
or learned from is they're just running sources.
Really, so this all stopped during defund of the police?
Like the George Floyd times?
Yeah, a lot of it.
Yeah, it's the pendulum swings, right?
Or it could be that because
generations are different these days, people come to apply and they've got
felons on their record. And we're like, bro, you can't be a cop. You got a
felon on your record, you know? But I remember thinking, wouldn't it be kind of
cool if South Carolina Criminal Justice Academy had all of the certified
undercovers in some type of database where it says, hey, Scott's skill set is biker, you know, riding motorcycles,
can go in a biker bar or whatever, strip clubs, this, that, and the other.
Maybe Charleston County needs somebody.
Wouldn't that be cool if I could just shoot down there and make buys for Charleston County
but go back?
Then that way nobody knows me in Charleston County.
And when I got in the FBI, that's kind of what they do.
You get certified in the FBI,
and you can go around the world.
So what was your initial job in the FBI?
You are a case agent.
When you get hired, the only responsibility you have,
really, is you're a case agent.
And that means you investigate, you do your own cases.
I did that the entire career even when I was doing undercover
I was still a case agent, but I
I went through the Academy
I got New York City is my first office and New York is the largest office
So they put you kind of like on a rotation. You don't just go straight to a squad
You're gonna be like they want you to learn the city
They want you to learn the ins and outs of having a placard and the bus lane and all
that stuff.
Or just how to figure out how to get into the damn Lincoln Tunnel when six lanes go
like that, you know?
But eventually I went through the rotation and I got placed on the Colombian drug squad.
So there, then people start learning you were a certified undercover at a state level on
this side and the other.
So then they bought me something like say LA takes off a 3,000 and we're talking like
2001, 2000, somewhere in there.
So they take off say 3,000 pounds of weed in LA and it was supposed to come to New York.
Well we go with them and say, man, can you send us all the stuff?
They're cutting leads to us saying, hey, they're supposed to go to this address. But we got to build the
exact replica box. And it depends on the US attorney working the
case, they may want assistant, you know, I say, attorney, they
may want to just deliver it. And that's good enough. Some may
want us to deliver it, pull away, and then they've got a
hidden switch or something that notifies us when they open it,
just to make that case tighter. So I started doing cameos on stuff like that and then and then I landed an
undercover which I don't really talk about in the book because it's classified
and we are coming up on 25 years which is usually when they declassify them.
It's kind of been outed but I just don't talk about it because I don't want to
end up in the box the lie detector and have somebody beat me down but I landed
that undercover and after about 30 days in San Antonio I became they gave me
another 60 day extension and I became the primary and because I was there
full-time working undercover they transferred me to the San Antonio
division so the first undercover gig what was your, what was your job? What were you pretending to do?
The classified one?
Again, it's classified.
But I will say this.
I was a security guard.
Can you imagine being a cop with a cool uniform
with a real gun on your hip?
And now I'm making it to the FBI,
and I'm working third shift as a night at the museum
with a flashlight.
Oh, wow. But I wanted to get my foot in the door of the undercover I'm working third shift as a not at the museum, you know for the flashlight
But I wanted to get my foot in the door of the undercover program And sometimes it was easier to get a slot in the undercover school if you were already
In or slated for an undercover. Mm-hmm
And so how so you eventually work your way up to probably more and more dangerous and complicated assignments?
work your way up to probably more and more dangerous and complicated assignments?
What happens at least in my experience what happened with me is
I get certified our certification school is very very intense. I mean, I don't know what they're doing now, but I'm
99.9 percent sure it's still very intense. It's two weeks. No days off
Huge on sleep deprivation not going to give away all the scenarios and stuff for tradecraft reasons, but let's just say that I got certified in 2002.
In 2003, I started role-playing and assisting at the school.
I probably missed a handful of schools up until the day I retired, never 100% graduation rate.
I don't know of any 100% graduation rate
before I got into the program.
And it's not hazing.
You get 20 slots.
So it's four groups of five.
And generally it goes like,
you get some trainings during the day,
and then we're running scenarios,
and we're putting you into live stuff.
But day three and four,
when you're really hurting for sleep,
I've seen people nut out and minor in psych.
I didn't think I would see that
because some of them I might know.
Maybe we were on the SWAT team together.
Maybe I know you as a case agent and you're squared away.
But you go to the UC school
and after about three days of no sleep
and not getting your normal meals on your normal times,
not getting your workout in, one of my buddies walked in.
He looked like he'd been raped by a tribe.
He got him walking in, hair disheveled, buttons not lined up, zipper undone, half a shirt
tail.
I'm like, are you okay?
And some people, it's just, I would say that the reason the training is like that it's not hazing
it's just so we don't lose anybody try to make it as real as you can well you
got to find out who's gonna crack yeah and think of this in a real scenario not
all undercovers are like this but in the ones I would usually do there's gonna be
a lot of times with no sleep my skill set led me not to Wall Street it didn't lead me to the yacht. It didn't lead me to the Mafia Club unless I was standing in the corner and I was muscle
for the Mafia guy
I'm led me to the woods and what you already mentioned crazy crazy ass meth heads or just ideologies
so I
Get certified and then I go back and roleplay and that's when people start kind of seeing and you're trying I mean you're trying to make a name for
yourself I wasn't getting calls because on the paper I'm a white guy with no
foreign language but about every week or so I would call the undercover unit and
be like hey you got anything it's big country you got anything more medium
now but I could even be a little country at this point you know but I was like hey
you got anything for any rednecks?
When they foreign language and I just wear them down until they'd laugh and then they finally asked me to come to school
And once you do the school now, there's season undercovers coming back
And they're not only there to roleplay and to run a school
They're also looking for undercovers for cases in their own divisions
And that's where I kind of started getting into some things.
It has to be one of the most exciting kinds of law enforcement.
For me, absolutely.
It has to be so crazy.
So we're general, I mean, at the end of the day, military, first responder, type A personality,
we're adrenaline junkies.
Yeah, and that's got to be a gigantic rush.
Yeah.
They're onto us. That's gotta be a gigantic rush. Yeah
They're onto this I'm talking to a few guys that have done that kind of work and they always
Speak of it with sort of fond memories about crazy. It's weird It's like it's a very particular type of person that would want to put themselves in that highly stressful
Adrenaline-charged situation where you know any mistake and they find out who you really are you're dead
could be yeah yeah now you made me second guess my career
seems like it worked out okay i'm gonna call it cash now i'll call cash hey you think i could
come back in what was the first one that you got the first assignment that you got were like oh boy
this is big leagues that was an outlaws case i'd'd already done some undercovers again in the FBI. I've done
several street level things or numerous whatever at the state level. But I was doing a couple
of cases in the FBI and they were smaller. You know, maybe it was supposed to be interstate
transportation of stolen goods and it turned into a public corruption case.
But when I landed the outlaws case, that was my first big and probably one of the biggest
I did.
So how does that go?
How did that start?
I'm not a smart man.
So that's how it started.
Why do you do this, Scott?
I go, I'm not smart.
I am stupid.
My glutton for punishment and my last name is
Payne, you know. In that case, they did, they'll do canvases. A lot of times, so I was an undercover
coordinator. Every division has an undercover coordinator. So you are the front line on
all things covert and you're the liaison between headquarters and that field office. So if
I had a case come up, I may already know you or whoever and be like, Hey,
I'll just put a text out to you, you interested? Or we may just
send out a canvas and then a canvas comes from headquarters
and goes to every undercover coordinator. And if it gets to
the point to where no certified undercovers have responded,
then they'll do like a bureau wide canvas and see what we can
get. I can't remember exactly if somebody called me on
that one. I'm pretty sure I don't remember that outlaws being a canvas, but it possibly
could have been.
Will you fit the bill?
Yeah, yeah.
You look like an outlaw biker.
It depends on slash Viking, whatever. It depends. See, that's what a lot of people, I'll get
off on a tangent, but throughout my career, my mentors, my peers, people I've
been blessed to mentor, some people come up in the office, very good friends, unbelievable
agents.
I mean, brainiacs, awesome.
They'll be like, man, I could never do what you do.
My beard would be down to here, whatever, tatted up.
And I'm like, well, don't do me.
What are you, what's your background?
And they're like, well, I was an accountant.
And I'm like, with who?
Before, before they had been, I was an accountant. And I'm like, with who before before they about I was kind of with Disney or
whatever. I was this I was a lawyer. Will you be you? I can. I'm not somebody's probably gonna be
pissed because it's trade craft. But listen, I could bring you in. And you just walk into the
group. I'm in the primary. I've already laid all this stuff out.
It's a chess game, we're always trying to stay
four or five moves ahead.
Or master of puppets, I'm just trying to connect
with people and work the scene.
But you come in and you dress as an accountant
and you talk like an accountant and then you walk out,
you're you, it's real.
Right.
So there's roles for all sorts of different types
of personalities and life skills
Yeah, and I'm like you might see something where they say I need a person this tall that speaks this language
That does this and knows this but what are you trying to do?
essentially the FBI works everything and
If if a target if we have predication or or predicated target, or there's information coming in
about somebody doing something nefarious,
if we wanna do an undercover, how do I get close to you?
I mean, what do you find attractive?
Usually it's money in the criminal world.
It's green, right?
You can see the Mexican mafia working with
the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas.
They hate each other, but they love green.
And one needs guns and
one needs dope and you know it all in the criminal world. But for that case, I went
up, I got interviewed by of course the FBI. There were task forces there, DEA was there,
ATF was there. And they had been working this case for a while. And generally, this is the way it would work for me on these long-term type
undercovers. The case team's been working this for a long time, a year plus.
They've been building intelligence. Now they've got some evidence already, maybe
a seizure of dope here, report of a carjacking here, but to get that airtight
case and to find out what's really going
on, now they're at the point to where they can use the investigative technique, which
is undercover.
And we came up with a plan.
And I went in cold.
I tried to bump them, as we say, a cold bump, but I went into a bar that they frequented.
I went there when they weren't there.
It was a strip club.
I used to bounce at strip clubs.
In the book, I make a joke because I call them a gentleman's club, but then I say that's
an oxymoron because everyone I've been in, there's not a lot of gentlemen in there, and
that includes me back in the whatever days they were.
But I knew how they work.
So I went in there and I just started hanging out.
And of course, this accident in Boston, Massachusetts,
I'm getting noticed as soon as I start talking.
Where the hell are you from?
And I kind of worked that and started working the bar,
doing what I do.
Not everybody has their own way.
And let me say this since it's at the beginning, listen,
they're, for me, I want people
to know it comes from a humble spot. There are men and women out there that have done
way more undercovers than me. They have been through more harrowing things than me. I already
said I've got mentors, I've got peers, I've got people I've been blessed to mentor. Some
of them don't want to talk. Some of them haven't had the opportunity. So just know it's coming
from a love kind of place.
Got it.
So when you say you work in the bar, what do you mean?
You just like making friends with people there?
What I did last night here in Austin.
Same thing.
Isn't like old habits die hard?
Yeah, I just walk in like, hey man, how's it going?
Yeah.
It's like catch and release.
You're like pretending.
Yeah, it's still working your gab.
Yeah. That's interesting. So you're always working your skill set, even though you're like pretending. Yeah, it's still working your gab.
That's interesting.
So you're always working your skillset,
even though you're not on the job anymore.
Yeah, I know, right?
I love connecting with people.
I don't care whether you're smart, stupid, big,
skinny, fat, any ethnicity, doesn't matter.
And that's one thing I do miss about the job.
I miss getting called out at two in the morning
for the craziest of the crazies.
And you show up to do an interview and essentially I befriend you and you either confess or we find out
you really weren't doing anything.
I do remember one night, this wasn't undercover, but they called me because towards the end
of my career I was doing nothing but mainly domestic terrorism and they called me and
go, we got one down here, he's a white supremacist, he's assaulted a cop, this, that and the other.
Well, I get down there, it's like three, we got one down here. He's a white supremacist. He's assaulted a cop, this, that, and the other. Well, I get down there.
It's like three, four in the morning now.
I do my spiel.
I'm not screaming at the guy.
I mean, you need something to drink.
Here, man, you look cold.
Here's a coat.
So tell me about what happened.
I'm not here for this other stuff.
I'm just, and I start talking.
Well, somewhere in there, I'm like, okay,
this guy's not a white supremacist.
He's a sovereign citizen.
Man, he's just anti-government.
Pro-sheriff, elected, but anti-government.
Sovereign citizens, I really can't stand to deal with them.
It's like absurdity to the max.
Explain sovereign citizens to people.
You see it all over you today.
They get pulled over and they don't, I don't need a driver's license.
I'm in commerce.
I'm in transit.
If they touch you, well, that's rape.
They think they've got a hundred and I don't,
I'm gonna forget it, but it's like 175, $250,000
being held by the government for each person.
It's crazy.
They'll start putting liens on people.
People put on trainings.
So when it first started happening,
a cop pulls you over and they see like this thing
signed in blood and the paperwork looks legit, but hell, I never got that training. Is this legit? You know, I
guess I can't pull this guy over. Then you start diving in, you start getting the training
to go, these people are full of crap. And then you see the cops popping the window and
dragging them out of the car. You're still going. But this guy was a sovereign citizen.
He had a brother and we're, we're talking and he's telling me this stuff, and the Constitution, and the Declaration
of Independence, and I'm like, yeah, yeah.
And I said, but how do you know that's what the forefathers meant when they signed that?
And he said, because I was there, son.
Oh, boy.
And that's when I went.
Oh, he's not just a cyber citizen.
He's a kooky.
He's crazy. Why did it take me this long to find out? He said I was a cyber citizen. He's a kooky. He's crazy.
Why did it take me this long to find out?
He said I was there?
Yeah, I was like this.
He goes, because I didn't miss a beat.
I go, how do you know?
Because I was there, son.
And I went, there.
Oh, you've been reincarnated about four or five times.
Oh, boy.
And I'm like, and you got this life this time?
You got the one you're living right now this time?
What are you talking to me and four in the morning?
You look like you've had a rough life.
If I was going to buy into reincarnation,
I'd want to come back as maybe like my mom's dog
or something like that.
Eat, stay, get this great life, sleep, eat, and play.
So back to the outlaws thing.
I go in and I'm just shooting the shit.
I'm just working the bar, I'm telling jokes.
You get a crowd of people around you
and that's not trade crowd, I mean, that's just me, right?
And by the way, for the listeners who may not know,
little intervention, if you buy all your friends
all their drinks and their food
all the time, they're probably not your friends. You know what I mean? I got all
kinds of friends. Those aren't your friends. Stop paying, they won't come
around anymore. But that's kind of what I was doing. And then now we get to the
night to where the outlaws are leaving their clubhouse. And for the listeners
that don't know, in the biker world, especially one percenter world, there's a mandatory meeting every week at a clubhouse,
and they refer to it as church. So they're leaving church. I get the surveillance team
telling me, hey man, we're leaving church. I'm like, cool. I'm at the bar. Already the
Foxy Lady in Brockton, Massachusetts.
That's a rough town.
Right. And marvelous Marvin Hackwood. I'd go for a jog and I'd go home and Marvin.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm like, yeah.
But they tell me they're coming.
Now the intelligence that they provided me when we started getting this case together,
I was like, hey man, can they wear their colors, their cuts, their leathers in the bar?
And they said, no, they don't allow that.
And I'm thinking in my mind, well, that makes my approach easier because I'm not tattooed guy
Watching naked women listening to heavy metal and drinking next to a guy who's watching naked women and heavy metal drinking
They had that part wrong because about 13 15 outlaws come walking into the bar take the whole back bar
They're all wearing their colors so that
Does that change my approach? approach? I think it does.
Yeah. Unless you want me to go up and as I say when I'm teaching this I go up and
I go, what do you say? Hey, you boys ride? Nothing? No? Alright, fine. I'll just, I'm
gonna go back on the other side of the bar. Please don't beat my ass. So I just
was being loud and boisterous. It's me. That's
what I do. It doesn't always work for undercovers. Some people don't like it, but it's my personality.
Trevor Burrus Are you allowed to get drunk?
John O'Reilly Boy, that's a tricky question. Yes, I can
drink. But here's the thing. Let's say that outlaw's case. That was two years. So there's two years of recordings of you seeing me turn a Jack and Coke up, right?
I'm anal.
Even though I look and sound like trash on paper, I'm pretty tight.
And I wanted to be good.
I wanted to always get better and be more well-rounded.
So I would watch.
And even if I caught myself at five in the morning, six in the morning, slurring, as
I'm listening to it, I'd be like, dead gum it, man. And then I'd listen and within five minutes, I'd be back
because you got to remember, all that could be played in front of a jury. And if I'm on
there slurring and saying a bunch of stupid stuff, I mean, how does that affect my articulation
for what I was doing? But was my alcohol tolerance very high?
You're a big dude. They probably put some away. I did kind of still do
Okay, I'll tell you what what put me on a three-month timeout with CPI
Really? Yeah, cuz you go down there and you get the
Explained it. We're talking about the cellular performance Institute that my friends
Run down in Tijuana. Absolutely great great facility. I will tell you, my previous hospital visit
before I went to Tijuana, I almost died.
I had a hip replacement and I got sepsis and I almost died.
So 14 days after my total hip replacement,
quickest surgery I've ever had, about 30 minutes,
chopped the femur off, drill it, pop.
They're walking you out, you're still very high
on all your, they're like, if you can walk,
you can go home, and I'm like, I can't walk?
But apparently something happened, they got infected.
So 14 days later, I had sepsis, and they got it
under control, and they went back in and cleaned me all out.
I had two hip surgeries in 14 days.
But fast, so now I'm going to Tijuana,
knowing what I know about working the border,
knowing what, even though I'm friends with Ed and Scotty, the owners, and I'm like, I'm like, man, now I'm going by myself. Best hospital stay I've ever had.
It's phenomenal. It's an amazing place. But what I stopped, cut back on my drinking is, I got down there, you can't drink the week before,
especially if you're getting the IV stem cells,
because they travel through your body and they grab stuff.
So if you drink and it sees your liver working harder,
it's gonna go to your liver.
So you're kind of wasting the shots.
I knew I couldn't drink the week before I got there.
And they go, yes, you can't drink for three more months.
And I went, three months?
And they're like, I said,
there ain't nobody told me that. And I was was like and I immediately went yeah I need to cut back
anyway that's fine you know but yeah tolerance was high for them you have to
be drinking with these folks when you're hanging out you don't have to but this
will just go back to an explanation of the undercover school if you're gonna
drink we want you to drink in a controlled environment when you're tired,
because we want you to see how you feel. We also want to see how you behave when you're
extremely tired and you're plastered, right? So you have to know that. In other words,
you don't want to find out in the middle of the clubhouse that you can't handle your shit. Right. So yeah, I, you can drink and,
but you're being recorded. So be wary about wary about it. What about drug use?
This is what I'm getting at. Is this trade crafter or not?
Maybe this is the easiest way to say it.
If I believe my life is in danger and like literally I'm getting ready to die, I will
snort the lacquer finish off of this damn table.
And then I'll be like, is that all you got?
You want me to do some more?
Right.
Because I really don't feel like dying right now.
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And then I need to get to the team. I need to get out. I need to get to the case team
and I need to get to an emergency room to make sure I'm not ODing, especially today
with fentanyl and stuff. But that's kind of the general rule. I would say it's probably
not a good idea for you to do drugs. Just without answering it completely, let me give you this. You're going to trial.
We've got a two-year case against you. And I'm up here articulating what I did. It's
in my documents. It's in the recordings. And we have built this case. Usually with undercover
cases, in my experience, the evidence is is so overwhelming The only thing the defense can you can claim is entrapment?
Which you should be able to shoot that down pretty quick if you've done your due diligence
Or they try to make you look like a piece of trash on the stand
So imagine if they're saying well he did dope with us
You need to be able to articulate. Did you why did you that's more movie stuff?
It does happen on on levels and I wish it didn't
But it happens on levels where people don't have training
And that's that's sad because there have been plenty of people was just use biker gangs
From law enforcement from local small department all the way up to feds that have infiltrated biker gangs that have patched and gotten their colors
But the cases went to crap they lost themselves they lost their marriage
they became addicted to drugs so we shouldn't be there's no case worth that
that's that's the best way to say it there's no case worth you getting
addicted to drugs or in danger in yourself just walk so what is the dance
of getting to the bar becoming a regular and then eventually getting to the bar, becoming a regular, and then eventually getting to know these guys.
So that first night, I'm being loud and boisterous,
and they did say that there was one particular member
who loved to be the center of attention,
and he loved to be surrounded by big dudes.
Take that for what you want.
I don't know, I didn't dive too deep into that one,
but when you say hang out with big dudes, we were around. Why is there a jar of Vaseline over there?
What kind of party is this? What's with the cameras?
Hey Scott, have a drink of this before you come in here and sign this NDA. Yeah. What?
So I start befriending them and I'm being loud.
Let me take it back.
I'm being loud.
This guy did like attention.
He sees it and he's like, hey, hey, where the F are you from?
So I fire some stupid comedy thing back.
We start going back and forth because he's already asked the bartenders, who the hell
is that guy? Oh, that's Tex
He comes up here all the time from Texas
That's human nature. It's like, you know, you caught a fish this big by the tenth person you're telling there was like ten of them
I had to fight him off with my pinkies
but I
Get called over
I don't know who sent a drink to who first but he calls me over and just starts shooting the shit with me. And from then he pretty much invites me to one of their
Northeast regionals called Lobster Fest held in Brockton at that clubhouse. And we were
kind of on the way. There was a guy who was not patched and his name was Scott as well.
I said the name of the book, it's all it's all adjudicated. It's
all in the court proceedings and stuff. But Scott town was his name and he was a big dude. He was
jacked and he came in. I remember going to the bathroom. And again, I think I'm doing pretty good.
Like I'm in great shape. I'm being me I'm talking shooting the shit hanging out too much. I'll walk
back over play a little you know, you come chase me kind of thing. So I go to great shape and I'm being me. I'm talking, shooting the shit, not hanging out too much. I walk back over, play a little, you know, you come chase me kind of thing.
So I go to the bathroom and nobody's in there.
And for the listeners that don't know men's bathrooms and bars, usually at the
urinal, there's some kind of box plexiglass with some kind of ads like, Hey,
this person's coming next week, that stuff.
So as I'm peeing, I'm looking at the reflection and I see the door swing
open and I see this jack dude's got, it must have made an impression because in the report
I even say he's wearing like a gray shirt with black trim. He's completely sleeved out
and I'm getting all this from, you know, sleeved out on the left arm, huge earrings. And I
watch him and I see him kind of ducking and looking under stalls and hitting the doors to make sure nobody else is in the bathroom
I'm acting nonchalant, but then I see him walk up to me and for that split second. I thought I'm getting jacked
I'm gonna get jumped right here
But he ends up just asking me what brings you to Massachusetts? I think what happened is they sent him in there to press me
And this is a good lesson, don't bluff.
If you bluff, whatever you say today,
you might be still in that case a year and a half,
two years later.
It needs to match what you said on day one,
or you could be slipping up and getting found out.
But I'd said where I'd been around, McAllen,
grew up in South Carolina, all this stuff,
he'd been to all those places because he used to travel the country fighting dogs.
So if I'd have been bluffing, I'd have been done right there.
And then from there, we start building relationships.
Now I'm trying to ingratiate and I'm getting invited to parties.
My story was that I was a site survey specialist and I traveled the country for investors out
of Texas and I would look at properties that they want to buy, whether it's residential
or mercantile and pull stuff from the clerk of court and all that kind of stuff.
But as it usually does in the criminal world, it came out that I also did some crimes myself
and that's when we started getting into, they were doing
insurance fraud first with me. They would report vehicles stolen and then sell
them to me for a stolen price. And the story was, since I was based out of
McAllen, Texas, I'm just using the facts that we were moving vehicles to Mexico
in trade for whatever guns, most likely dope, but whatever. And that's how we started. And then from there, now you start gaining more trust.
You start hanging out more, you become tighter, you're building these relationships.
And then it's like, Hey, we just carjacked somebody. We got this car.
We took this dude at gunpoint. This thing's got low Jack or on star,
whatever was around. And then we'd have to get rid of it. Don't worry about about it. I got it have a truck driver show up. We load all the stolen equipment
vehicles whatever
On the truck and they thought they were going to Mexico, but they were just going to a warehouse somewhere in Massachusetts
So you never actually brought cars to Mexico?
No, so when you would do that, we just get cash from the FBI to like represent?
Yeah, I mean, they would, I would pay them, yeah.
A stolen price usually,
stolen is usually 20 to 25% of what it would normally cost,
you know, cause it's hot.
And that just started gaining trust.
I mean, like I said,
there was other undercovers that would help.
We call this cameos.
If you're the primary undercover, that's you.
That's your case.
A secondary undercover might mean you come in to meet me,
but you stay with me for a couple of days,
and we go out and meet bad guys together.
That's going to be a secondary role.
If you're coming in as a truck driver,
you're just pulling the parking lot, we're loading up stuff,
that's a cameo.
And I've done many cameos for other undercovers as well.
Just rolling to town town do a deal whatever
So no one's ever trying to go with you to Mexico to make sure that all this is happening
Not on that case, but if they did want to we would have to work that out
we would have to have that kind of because I
Come on
I took this from a buddy of mine who who I helped certify as an undercover and I just thought it was a great way
To say it is look at the end of the day,
we want that target going to bed thinking,
that was a good day.
You don't want them laying in bed going,
man, there's something went right about that guy.
Something's not right.
Because you want it to be as real as possible.
So was it a fact that the cartels at that point in time
loved 4x4 v8s and Harley-Davidson's? Absolutely. Did they get stolen all the
time on the border? Absolutely. So that's that's factual stuff that's real. So now
I'm a guy they they they eventually learned and believed that I was a high
ranking high ranking member of an international theft ring.
And that's what we were doing. And then through those, through those, then they start stealing vehicles, which I got to be careful of. I can't say, Hey, I want to, I want a brand new F three 50 quad cab, because then they go steal that car, right? But over the next year or so, we're getting more and
more stuff. I buy dope from them. Like I said, car jackings, we learned of them, certain
members extorting people, like the good old mafia days, you know, extorting businesses,
home invasions. But again, for the listeners listening to hear that at a bar and say, yeah, we robbed
that house, is that enough to charge somebody?
Probably not.
Is an assistant United States attorney going to be like, yeah, that's enough?
No, we're going to have to dive in more and find out and vet it out and get that evidence.
Wow.
Stressful shit.
Slightly.
Getting stressed out just thinking about you doing all these things.
Me too.
So how long is this relationship while you're building a case?
Like how much time are you spending with these people?
I was probably, for that case I was probably up there every three weeks for a good week.
But then there's constant contact when I'm not there.
Text messages.
Yeah, well Nextel's were big with him at that point in time.
So yeah, chirps.
Oh, that's the old days, the walkie talkie one. Radio, yeah.
Yeah, those were funny. People forgot about them walkie talkies.
Yeah, man. It was crazy about that. You could key up and talk to somebody in Japan and it'd be
Chris or Criller, but if you tried to call somebody, it was the worst connection ever.
Yeah, they were terrible phones.
Yeah, but that's what they used and that's what I got and I was mirroring them.
But yes, you build those relationships. And it depends.
Each case is different.
But I will say that the tightest relationship I had on that case
was Scott Town.
It was absolutely scary how similar we were
and how tight we were.
Now again, he didn't know I was Scott Payne, FBI undercover.
But he knew I was Scott Callaway.
And he knew, I mean mean it would be to the point to where
If we were going out to do an op that evening
Operation
They wouldn't put it in the operations plan, but they would ask hey Scott town gonna be there tonight
I'm like, yeah
And and even the FBI cover teams and stuff would be like good because they knew that he cared enough about me
He'd take a bullet for me and protect me and vice versa really for as me and Scott Calloway and
I mean we finished each other sentences. We thought the same other than the criminal stuff
and some faith belief systems, but
Yeah, that was my tightest and the second one over the two years was probably a guy
Whose road name was clothesline and he was the enforcer for the Taunton chapter and
then after that it probably would have been the president which was Joe dogs
and then it just trickles down from there. Do you have conflicted feelings
when you develop like these relationships with these guys? I did. You
can put on as much training, you can get the training, you can be a part of it. I'm
still human you know. Now was I to a can be a part of it, I'm still human.
Now, was I to a point to where I'm gonna go,
I'm leaving the FBI and I'm gonna become the Wander Center.
Some people do though, right?
I know some people do, but I wasn't there.
I wouldn't do that.
How often does that happen?
Well, in the FBI probably not a lot,
but those cases are well knownknown if something happens like that
Somebody goes rogue like, you know your breach story and all these people selling secrets and getting people killed
Yeah, I I wasn't there nor would I be I wouldn't be I would like to think if I did have a 1% or club
Nobody would ever infiltrate it though
Well, you probably understand how it works
But even then yeah, mean, you're dealing with
ragamuffin people.
Yeah.
How do you know?
I know who's real.
Again, those are my kinds of people.
When we're riding around and people are
wrestling each other over tables,
this is my favorite move, bang.
I mean, at one point, I'm driving down the road
with Scott Town in a snowstorm,
and I'm driving and I'm like this with my hand,
he reaches over
out of nowhere and breaks my pinky just pop and this suckers like a 90 degrees
and I'm like mother I pulled over I slammed on the brake well I mean snow
but come to the stop and I go what the f is your problem and he's looking at me
he's going hey I don't know what he was on but he was in an evil space right and
I'm looking at? And I'm
looking at him and I'm going, look, if you want to effing fight, we'll stand
by the damn snowstorm right now and we'll go at it. I know you think you can
whip me, but maybe I can whip you. And I saw it wasn't going anywhere and he was
getting more and more angry. And I just looked at him and I went, he's an animal
right now. I'm gonna diffuse. I'm to deescalate, which is really what
you should be doing as an undercover. And I look over and I go, Hey, after I pop my
finger in, I go sniff, smell, good boy, friend, friend like that. I'm trying to calm it down.
They start laughing. But that's the kind of stuff you get. But to me, it was no different
than being in college playing ball, Hanging out with psychos.
Yeah.
When you're there in the month of August and nobody is there, it's just 24-7 football.
What was it like when you eventually brought that guy down?
It was sad.
It was sad because in that case, there was a point where I had a young daughter and his youngest daughter was roughly the same age
as my daughter. So I'm not at home with my kid, but I'm in his house bouncing his daughter
on my lap. And you know, when they're developing as a human being, at that stage, they're kind
of making the same noises, moving the same way. It was surreal. And then I remember thinking, man, I really like
this guy. You know, he likes to drink, I like to drink. He likes to fight, I like to fight.
He likes to ride, I like to ride. He likes to live, I like to live. I go, man, we finished
each other's sins. Everything I already said. And then I look over at his refrigerator and
I see all these stickers and magnets and stuff. and my eyes just settled in on WWSD.
And for the listeners that don't know, WWJD is very common in the Christ follower Christian
community.
What would Jesus do?
You see the bracelets all the time.
And I look over and say, WWSD, what would Satan do?
And I looked and I went, oh yeah, we're not the same.
We're not the same.
I'm back.
I used to, we'd be in the clubhouse and everybody's yelling, they're like, you know, if, for the,
again, people who don't know, whatever your biker club name is, you usually get these
same sayings.
So for the outlaws, it's outlaws forever, forever outlaws.
Hell yeah, yeah, yeah.
God forgives, outlaws don't.
Yeah, yeah.
It's better to be first in hell than second heaven." And
I'm like, what? T!
Hang on.
I'm like, I'm not saying I'm a chalkwalking Christian because I'm pretending to be a one-percenter
evil man, but what story have you ever heard of hell where it was good? I mean, are you
helping me out here? So yeah, it's a crazy bunch. But on that case, one of the biggest things that happened is we had been going for a year
and a half and doing all these things.
They've carjacked stuff.
We're getting more and more evidence.
There was a Hells Angel president murdered in Bridgeport, Connecticut.
Terrible town.
Terrible town.
Oh, Bridgeport's dangerous. So Bridgeport, Connecticut, and the other Hells Angel that was shot didn't die, and
he was able to give a description of a green truck with Florida plates.
We knew at that time that Florida outlaws were up in that area because they were hanging
out with our targets.
And even when I would call, I'd be like, hey, man, it's hot here right now.
If you come out, you need to be strapped.
And I'm like, well, I don't want to fly with it.
I don't want to put a bullseye on my back back then.
I'm like, if I show up, we'll give you a vest, we'll give you a gun kind of thing.
So we're doing all that.
And now we get to the point to where we can all the predications there.
They've done wiretaps. The case team
has been doing a wiretap. They know that there's drug deals going on. They're doing surveillance.
And now we're to the point to where we can introduce that I used to be in the dope game
as well. My story was that the reason I got out of it and only did the stolen stuff was
because some of my peeps got popped because the heat was getting close. I pulled chocks the reason I got out of it and only did the stolen stuff was because
Some of my peeps got popped because the heat was getting close I pulled shocks and I was out and all I do now is move stolen equipment down because it's a lot less
the way I explained it it was less likely for law enforcement to catch me and
And then they would ask, you know
Well, how come a white guy is not cut out by all these Mexicans you're working with?
And I go, because I'm the gringo that has the contact at the port of entry and the contacts
at the checkpoints to pay them 15 grand to turn their head for two minutes and let our
stuff go through.
And that was really happening on the border.
And I knew that because I was on the border working it.
Again, real things.
You're just putting them into your story.
But I'd now let them know it took a long time.
I don't put words in their mouth, but I started laying breadcrumbs over weeks and months that
I did used to be in the dope game.
And of course, Joe Dawgs, the president, I mean, the first time I met him and he said,
where are you from?
I said, McAllen, Texas on the border.
His next question was, how much can you get a kilo of cocaine for? And I went, well, if we were needing predication, I think he just
gave it. But his business skills weren't that great because I'd say, look, man, about 13
grand, which you could get a kilo for then on the border. He said, man, so if I got 10
of them up here for 13, I'm like, no, this thing don't cost 13 up here. There's a reason
the kilo cost 25 to 30 grand up here because somebody
has to get it from the border to here. Now, if you want to drive down the border and buy
10 for 13 a piece and you risk taking them back over. So we let it be known that I had
some cartel, of course they knew I had cartel contacts and we started introducing those.
Some cameo undercovers came in
unbelievable people And we ended up doing what some refer to as a drug protection
There was going to be a drug shipment coming in and my crew was going to be delivering it to another crew and we needed
protection and we did it in Brockton and
Several outlaws hopped in on it
The issue was this
At least one of the big issues pretty much that case. I had a great time. Yes
It's violent and my mentality was changing. There is a podcast. That's a series that's gonna be coming out
With the book and they actually interview one of the
Task Force officers who was over me on that case and the outlaws.
I remember him calling me, he's like, hey, what can I say?
I said, tell him the truth.
I said, I want to know what you were thinking.
I know what I was thinking.
It was really, really surreal to hear him talking about he could see my personality
changing.
He could see, and like the FBI office might be saying, we want him to patch.
He was over here fighting going, hell no, we're getting everything we need now.
If he patches, then they can order him to do shit.
And it was just really cool to hear that.
But essentially for the case, it was me,
an FBI case agent, and two task force officers.
We had Detective Joe Cummings from Brockton PD,
Sergeant Higginbottom from the Massachusetts State Troopers,
and then an agent with the FBI, and that was was it. I mean they would add some here and there
but for two years that was it was us. So now we get to this point to where we're
like man let's do this drug protection and the assistant United States Attorney
was like hey if you're gonna be at the clubhouse or did they talk about this at
clubhouse like yeah I guess well that would be awesome if we could get that
recorded because it helps right to show what they're planning on doing.
So the night before the deal is supposed to happen,
they don't know it,
but we've got 40 kilos of real cocaine
and a thousand pounds of weed, real.
So you can imagine SWAT teams are involved,
because I mean, can you imagine
if the FBI lost 40 kilos of cocaine?
And Brockton and Tauntons are all wide awake
for the next week, you know, or there's ODs, you know, because that's a liability.
Did you say you had 40 kilos? There's only 39 here. I don't know. But so they say, hey,
Joe Dawks calls me. It's night of church.
He says, hey, I need you to come to the clubhouse.
I'm like, all right, cool.
And of course, I'm thinking, I'm type A. I'm Scott Payne.
I got this.
Let's go do this, man.
These are my boys.
I've been doing this a year and a half.
And I went into the clubhouse.
And what I couldn't see, and I won't say where the recording devices were at, because that's
tradecraft.
But let's just say I had a video
and recording device hidden somewhere in my clothing. I had a completely audio recording
device somewhere else on me and I had a transmitter batteries so the team could listen in. And
I went into the clubhouse like normal but what you can't see if you go back and you
watch the video is if I'm facing this way,
and I'm shooting the shit with you and this is the bar,
and you're laughing at my jokes like always,
when I would turn my head to look this way,
it's still filming.
And I didn't see it because I turned my head.
They go stone face.
And I missed it.
I didn't see it.
I do know that when I got to the clubhouse,
I knock on the door, knock on the door, I'm got to the clubhouse I knock on the door knock on the door
I'm knocking on the door. I'm like what the you know Joe dogs props because they were already yet
And I'll give them why they held you tell me to come. I was being smart. I'm like
What's the deal? I would you say come if you're not ready. I didn't pick anything up
So I go in and for the listeners that may not know at least in this clubhouse if you're not a patch member
Which I wasn't,
they offered it several times, they wanted me to patch,
but I'm with what I said for the task force officer.
I said the same thing, I'm like, look,
if I'm a probate and they say, get your shit text,
we're gonna go check this dude, I kinda gotta go.
I mean, if I don't do it, I'm either getting kicked out
or beat down or whatever.
But being a high ranking member of an international theft ring that they're making money off of so a little different
We were getting everything we wanted so I go into the clubhouse. I miss that I also missed it in the back
One of them chocolate Scott. It looks like he's dancing to the song that's playing but he's warming up and I miss that and then
My second closest contact closed line says,
hey Tex, you got a minute?
And I said, yeah.
And we walk, I'd been in that clubhouse,
I don't know how many times, Joe,
but there's one door I'd never been in.
And that's the door we went in.
And it was a very tight stairwell into,
you can say a basement, but that's being very,
I'm stretching it because I could
probably touch the ball wall on both sides and I couldn't stand up straight. So they bring me down
in there. They've brandished their weapons. One of them walks in behind me. He's on the steps.
So they got their pistols and, uh, my friend says, Hey, there's a lot of shit going on. It's my job
to take care of my brothers. I need you to write down your full name your address your phone number
All kinds of stuff and I need you to take off all your clothes. I need to check you for a wire
Here's the problem
Had I not been wired embarrassing. Yes naked with a bunch of men around you in a cold basement
Yeah, that would have been bad, but it would have been no threat
but I was wired to the hilt. And so you think man, do you fight? Do you try to get out?
Well, there's already two or three there. I'm probably gonna do some Tommy boy
shit and knock myself out on the joist as soon as I start trying to fight. And
then upstairs there's what? Ten more outlaws. And that door, what I was getting
to do earlier, I didn't say if you're not a patch member you can't touch the door
that door has more than one deadbolt on it they had welded metal hooks to the
frame and put one of those like shipyard metal bars across so from a breacher
standpoint it's a fortified door it might be easier to breach the wall next
to it so we're down there in the basement and when I go to write
my name down I forgot my middle name and that's because I was having a no crap
moment. I had an adrenaline dump. Same thing as cops and shootouts, military
and shootouts, somebody in a car wreck first time. Everything when you're
having that adrenaline dump everything slows down. You get auditory exclusion so
everything you're hearing sounds like you're underwater is going whoosh, whoosh.
It's slow, like you're talking to me like this.
Time dilation, your eyes are clicking.
You look and everything's in frames.
Everything's slowing down.
Your hamstrings get really rubbery.
You feel your heart beating.
I mean, do you feel everything pulsing?
And what seems like 10, 15 minutes is probably 30 seconds.
And that happens.
That's an adrenaline dump.
So that was happening.
And I forgot my middle name.
And I'm going Scott Calloway, Scott Calloway, Scott Calloway.
I start going through this damn Rolodex in my head
and I'm going, Scott Calloway, Scott Calloway,
and I'm going Scott Joseph.
I go, no, damn it.
That was my middle name for another alias.
And I don't realize that I do a distraction technique
or something to try to get more intelligence.
I would have never known I said it,
would have never agreed I said it
had I not seen it in the recording.
But I turn and I go, and what else do you need?
And by the way, you've got a baseline of me now, my voice.
It did not sound like this on that recording.
My throat was tight, the octaves, I mean, it was very higher than normal, and I'm like not sound like this on that recording. My throat was tight, the octaves,
I mean it was very higher than normal and I'm like not even enunciating that well. I'm like,
what else do you need? And they're like, what? I go, my name and what else? Well, now I hear
them scream up and they go, what else do you need for that website? So now I know, oh, are they
going to Google me? Back then there was whozarat.comcom things like that. So I'm gathering that
evidence or intelligence and then I remember my middle name was my initials
were SAC because I'm an idiot and I thought it was funny because I shoot
the SAC is the head of an FBI division and I knew I was never gonna be one so
so I made my initials SAC. So I remember my name Scott Andrew Callaway and then I
write that down. Well now I take off all my clothes. I take off my outer clothing, all my shirts, I take my boots off and I basically pull my
underwear and jeans down around my ankles. So pretty much naked from, I mean
I'm definitely naked from ankles up and he starts searching me and I'm again I'm
having a no-shit moment and he's trying to talk to me and
we had known each other for a year and a half. So I'm not saying it out loud,
but if you saw what my face was saying,
what my face is saying and asking is, tell me I'm okay.
Is this okay?
Well, clothesline, because we were tight,
hits me back with a face look that's like,
everything's all right, this is just procedure. However, he didn't know that I'm an undercover agent and I'm wired.
So that adds a whole other issue. So he searches me. I think we're done.
He even one point, he even tells me, he says, trust me, if somebody accused me of being a Fed,
I'd probably smash him in the fucking mouth. And I said, those are his words.
And I immediately said, well, I'm not happy.
I'll tell you what I did do.
I did look to make sure there was no plastic on the floor.
And I've had people ask me, what does that mean?
And I go, well, listen, if you're in the criminal
underbelly of society and there's plastic on the floor
and they're telling you to walk on it.
They're gonna cut you up.
Yeah, you get, it's to clean up the blood.
I didn't see that.
I saw a rope, I saw pistols,
and I knew I didn't have a chance in saw a rope, I saw pistols, and I knew I
didn't have a chance in hell of getting out of there in one piece. So he finishes
and he's saying something. He goes, wouldn't you be suspect if somebody
comes to your town and starts doing all this shit with you? I said, yeah, if you
came to me. I didn't come to you guys. Y'all called me over. Nobody has to do this shit. I'm like, what do we, you know, nobody has
to do anything. Right. And I think we're done. So I pull my pants back up and I think we're
done. And he grabs a piece of clothing of mine and he starts needing it and going through
it. Now this is 2005 to 2007 ish so
technology today is way better than it was then just like technology is but
let's just say this had he done this down my entire piece of clothing he
would have felt something and he says as a joke when he starts he goes hey I'm
not gonna find anything in here I don't want to like some naked pictures of my old lady. And he laughs and his laugh is like, and my
laugh is like, you know. And then I'm watching him go down this piece of clothing and he's
doing this and he's needing it. And you can hear, again, I don't know how to do it, but on the recording you can hear me go
An audible sigh because I'm like watching it I'm going what what am I gonna do? So here's how it ends
He doesn't find it Wow almost I mean like very very close
And by the way that first adrenaline dump I've come back up and now I've got another adrenaline dump.
And now I've come in, I'm like son of a bitch, you know, peaks and valleys.
And everybody that I've taught this to or spoke about it to always ask, they're like,
man, what would you have said?
And I'll tell you, I had two responses.
Because I'm a jovial idiot, my first response, if he would have said, what is this? I would have probably said, I don't know, some naked pictures of you old lady to try
to buy myself some time, maybe make him quit searching. The only other thing I had Joe is,
and I remember it like it was yesterday, I would have said the gig is up, I'm an undercover FBI
agent and I can walk out of here and we can see each other in court, or all hell's gonna break loose. Here's the issue, as I get a swig.
That would have been a bluff on my part,
because as far as I knew, every time I was in that clubhouse,
my cover team could never hear me, for whatever reasons,
because somebody's gonna say it's Tradecraft,
but again, this is 2005 to 2008, but they could never really hear me in that clubhouse. And I make it out. I
end up going out with Scott Town and Joe dogs at night. But what happens is I am legitimately
pissed off because now my adrenaline is coming back down. And I'm, I'm taking it personal.
I shouldn't. I'm undercover as an FBI agent. I'm not really Scott Callow. And I'm taking it personal. I shouldn't.
I'm undercover as an FBI agent.
I'm not really Scott Calloway.
I'm not kind of Scott.
But you're so deep in the role.
Well, and it's really me kinda.
I mean, that's the whole thing.
I never was far off of who I really am in life.
A pedophile, yeah.
You hire me to kill somebody?
No, I'm not gonna ingratiate with you.
I'm a stone cold killer.
But I'm hanging with you for two years
or a year and a half or whatever. Yeah, the jokes are kind of the same so so I'm pissed and I'm at one
point I'm telling Joe dogs I'm like you know what man if all you sons I said
y'all show up tomorrow I said I'm stripping all y'all in the damn parking
lot you know I was just boy and they were nice they let me vent my stuff well
that night when I went to turn in my equipment in an undisclosed location, probably
3, 4, or 5 in the morning to the case team, what I found out was this.
The shift started with Sergeant Higginbottom.
Everybody called him Higgy and Joe, the detectives, the detective.
These guys are awesome, phenomenal law enforcement officers.
Although I think their love language is yelling.
Maybe that's my southern thing mixing with the northeast thing.
They told me, they said, Scott, we heard you in there.
And I'm like, what?
When I had that first interaction with Joe Dawgs, they are very street smart.
They're very good investigators and they have been working this group forever. Something that happened
in that first interaction made their spotty senses, or the Holy Spirit, if you're a believer,
say something's not right. They had pulled close enough, they heard everything, they
put on their vest, they suited up, and because they'd been in that clubhouse before and knew
that door system, their plan was to drive the van into the cinder block wall
next to the door.
Oh my God.
Just to smash that, you know.
Sometimes I'm teaching this, I'll joke about it and say, it probably would have killed
me because I was in the basement, you know.
Reverse, back up.
You're so damn heavy.
But at that moment, I was scared to death, right?
So they tell me what happened was they pulled close enough, they heard everything.
They're suiting up.
They have radioed now because it's kind of the beginning of the shift.
They've radioed now back to Boston.
Everybody that's working that night is now blue lights and siren all the way down to
hauling ass to Taunton, Massachusetts.
So I say this in a jovial way, but the case agent
was actually a good friend of mine.
We went through the FBI Academy together.
And that night, again, I'm still shell shocked.
He says, man, when I was coming down the highway
with my blue lights and sirens on,
I felt like I was in there with you.
And I looked at him and I said, you weren't.
I said, because I was looking for any friendly face I could find and that's damn
whole. But so that night, we haven't talked about my family. I try not well,
I take it back in the book, I'm very transparent about where things went south
with the family where my marriage almost ended, you know, 9-1-1 hangups, stuff like that.
But at that point in time, I'd bought my wife, everybody's pretty familiar now with the burner phone,
but I bought my wife a phone that came back to nothing so my undercover phone could call that phone, not violating the operational security.
That night, Joe, when I called her, I always called her every night.
And again, five, seven in the morning, didn't matter.
And it might just be she wakes up and says, hello, and I go, hey, I just wanted you to know I'm done.
Heading back to the hotel room. Whenever I wake up this afternoon, I'll call you.
It might be that quick. That night when I called her, the first thing she said to me was, are you okay?
And I said, she felt it. I said, yeah, why? And she said, I was driving with our daughters at such and such time in McAllen.
And she said she got this overwhelming feeling and pulled over on the side of the road and
started praying for me.
And I matched it up.
That's when I was in the basement.
So say what you will, but damn.
Wow.
Yeah.
Apparently my old shit signal. Apparently I don't need
Verizon or anything because it went from Boston all the way to the bottom of Texas but it's
just uh I mean that that's just one of the little one of the things that happen and it
just takes a toll on you over time. Um. I can only imagine. Yeah, so I'll get you to the next day. We do the deal. Clothesline doesn't show up.
Well, that pisses me off.
Wait a minute, you're supposed to be my boy.
And you took me into the damn basement and stripped me at gunpoint.
But you can't come up. You don't show up the next day and help with this thing?
Again, I'm taking it personal. I shouldn't.
So everybody knew there was a beef. Let's just fast forward a month or two. I go back home
I come back and big Scotty had even said he goes look these guys are gonna settle this like grown men face to face
They go happen over the damn phone. So the next time I go back to
Massachusetts I'm at a cantina. We used to go hang out and drink it and bridge water and
Another hard town. Yeah. Yeah
So this is my people this is where I get called
We did not do any meetings at the long wharf Marriott, you know, I mean, I
Would you like to meet me at legal seafoods tonight my fellow criminals, you know?
Yeah
criminals you know yeah so I'm at this cantina and clothesline walks in now you got to remember the last time I saw this dude he took me into a damn basement
and he looked a little rough like a little whipped you know like he'd been
disheveled and he says hey man can I talk to you for a minute and the first
thing I said was no and he says why said, because the last time you asked me that shit, I ended up making it in the basement.
No.
So he says, no, it's like that.
So we went back in the kitchen and we're talking.
And what we learned or what I learned and the case team learned is when we upped the
ante to do that drug deal, and again, a lot of those outlaws were pushing for it because
as a drug dealer, what are you always looking for? Cheaper product, higher quality.
That's just more money for you, right? So he was really, especially Joe,
they wanted to get a pipeline.
They wanted to get an introduction to the cartel so they could get quality dope,
you know, and, and have a, have a very successful business.
So I'm in there with him and I'm ready.
I'm ready to go to blows if we have to and he starts talking to me. And he says, you know Scott, he said, what had happened, what I was going to tell you,
is that the call went up to the top and the top to us meant Milwaukee Jack was the national president.
And this makes a hard argument for when they say it's not an organization, you do your own stuff,
we only DM each other, nobody knows each other's business.
Well then how did it go to the top of the outlaws
who said has this guy ever really been checked?
And they go back and say,
well we've done like six to eight jobs with him
and we're not in bracelets, meaning handcuffs.
And he said, I don't care, check him.
So now, that's when I get stripped in the basement.
He said I don't care check them. So now that's when I get stripped in the basement. I
learned that and
This is what clothesline tells me and you got to remember my mindset is screw this guy. I'm ready to go to blows I'm not gonna look like a bitch and
He says man, I know I was born to be an outlaw. I'm either gonna die young or die in jail
He said and these are my brothers. He said but I really don't have a lot of friends.
And he said, ones that I know would take a bullet for me and I'd take a bullet for them.
And that's when I start looking at his face and I'm going, oh, shit, don't you say it,
man.
Don't you say it.
And he says, and you're one of those people.
So now I'm like, ugh.
And he says, the reason he didn't show up is because he felt so bad
for what he had to do to me in the basement that night. He got so obliterated that night.
He was passed out through the whole drug deal the next day. So that night when I called my wife,
she says hello. And my first words are, or or she's like how's it going? How did
it go? My first words are I am a dick. I go I'm such a dick. This guy loves me. He
cares about me. Now that's the real side. That's the human side. Now there might be
you know we don't train that way. We tell you look that's not you but I'm
still human. I'm out there. I'm out there.
I'm surprised we hadn't said this yet.
A lot of times, if I'm speaking or teaching or whatever,
I'll put up there, what does undercover mean to you?
So I'll ask you, what do you think undercover is?
You're pretending.
Okay, you're pretending.
You infiltrate an organization, pretend to be one of them.
I get that a lot.
I get lying.
We hear acting.
You're a character.
Here is the definition of undercover work.
You are building relationships that you're gonna betray.
And that sucks.
If you look at it that way.
Especially if you genuinely have something in common
with these guys. Right.
And you actually like their company.
Now don't get me wrong.
If you haven't done anything illegal, well, then no, I'm
really not.
I mean, I guess I'm still betraying you,
because you thought I was somebody else.
But we're not arresting you.
I've done undercovers like that.
Those happen all the time.
You're in there for five months, and you're like,
there's nothing federal here.
I mean, they're just, they're within their constitutional
rights.
And you just bail.
But you have to, you are basically building and betraying relationships, especially if
you're gathering evidence of criminal activity.
And you need to know how you're going to deal with that.
Rationalize that in your mind so it doesn't have an adverse impact on your psyche.
And that's tough.
You know?
I'll fast forward, Jill, a little bit.
I crashed on that case for the three year period. I'd been
going nonstop. And I'm not saying I'm tough. I met my
threshold. I think your threshold changes every day,
just like your comfort zone. Some days I take off jogging at
54 years old. Sometimes I take off running and I go it's gonna
be a damn good day. I feel light, fluffy, floating on the floating on the cloud. Some days I take off running and I go, it's gonna be a damn good day. I feel light, fluffy, floating on the cloud. Some days I take off running and I go, how long have I
been running? Two minutes. Damn, it's gonna be a long day. So your comfort zone changes,
I think your threshold changes, but I go into great detail in the book. But for three years I had been doing too much. Well, I say doing too much, but
even when I moved to Tennessee, I did too much again. I just learned how to balance
it better. I'm a workaholic. I love working. I love doing it all. Swat call outs, running
tactical schools here, case agent first, building cases, putting bad people in jail, undercover.
But I had stopped taking days off because I didn't want to give management a reason to
tell me I couldn't go do an undercover. I'd just work through the weekend or be undercover
through the weekend, come back, type up all my stuff, then run my cases. Teaching all the
tactics and firearms for McAllen and Brownsville residents agents,
which is just satellite offices out of San Antonio.
I don't squat, running firearms for them, stuff like that.
And I just stopped taking care of myself.
So we get to a point to where, like I said, in great detail in the book, but just picture
this.
I already give you a little bit of a blurb on the undercover school, right?
Two weeks, no days off.
Let's just say I'm there for 10 days.
Well, once we put you to bed,
we're probably gonna hang out and drink a little bit
because you're my peer, and it's also therapy.
And I haven't made, it's good to know
that you're not on an island by yourself,
that there are other people doing the same thing you are.
And there's a lot of bonding that goes on there.
But that means for 10
days, I'm not getting a whole lot of sleep and I probably got too much alcohol in my
system if we're being transparent. But then I leave straight from that undercover school
and I go right into an undercover. And let's just say I land in Sturgis, which I did and
the Hells Angels shoot five outlaws at point blank range my first day there. Like I hadn't
been in town like an hour. there's two old ladies two patch members
and a probate but they're all shot they confirmed it was Hells Angels we're
talking paralyzed from the waist down for life we're talking shot-crush
clavicles I mean not just like a zinger and now you're back doing that for days
on end and when I would get home I would stop taking care of myself.
I got to the point to where I was a walking zombie. I was on antihistamines, decongestants,
inhalers. I was taking hydroxy cuts like crazy. I was making the strongest coffee I could
possibly make. And I'd drink a pot of coffee and fall asleep. So what I learned through
the book process, even though I'd learned
a lot already, I found out from my wife. I was a ghost, man. I'd come home from SWAT, work,
undercover, whatever. I'd be on the couch and my daughters would be on my lap. I'd help put them
to bed. But my wife couldn't even ask me a simple question about the bills. You know,
hey, there's this bill, I got do whatever
you got. I can't think. I just need to and she wanted to do everything she could to support
me and just let me vege and not put any put anything on my plate. So we get to the end
of the outlaw case. And I'm starting to crash. Didn't know it. If you are a certified undercover
and you were active in the FBI, you
mandatorily have to be psychologically assessed twice a year. That whole thing
is called safeguard. I'm not outing anything. It's out there. It's on the
internet. But the safeguard process was created by Joe Pistone down Nebraska. It
was created by Joe and a former agent who was, his background was a
clinical psychologist, Steve Band. And they came up with this because Joe, you got to
remember when Joe was undercover, there was no attorney general guidelines. There probably
wasn't even an operational procedure manual for undercovers. It was like, here's money,
here's your recorders, go make a case. He was one of the first 25 undercovers in the FBI in 1972
That happened right after Hoover left Hoover did not believe in the undercover technique, but soon as he was out they started working undercover
But the safeguard process goes like you take a bunch of psychological set the test and then you're gonna sit down
You're gonna take a break. It's gonna put a bunch of numbers into some charts. You're gonna sit down with a clinical psychologist. They may be an agent for the FBI or they may
be contracted in. They're gonna go over all that stuff with you. They're gonna dive deep
into your psyche. Try to. And then after that, you're gonna sit down with somebody like a
Pistone or an experienced undercover, because you know the old saying, you can't bullshit a
bullshitter? Well, we use undercover, UC, as a verb. You can't UC a UC.
So I remember going to take one of the tests as an open-ended sentence.
You have to fill in the blanks.
So I'm on my way to Daytona at a world run with the outlaws, still rolling heavy in the
case.
And I stopped off at an undisclosed location to do the assessment.
And I remember, like the opening sentence
might be, men are, and you got to finish it. I'd always say men. Women are, I put women.
They'd be like, what do you mean? I go, you know what I mean. I'm not opening that can
of worms. No, we're different. How's that? But there was one that said the last time
I relaxed, I, and I couldn't think anything.
Wow.
Nothing.
And that's not me BSing.
I'm like sitting there at the table going,
well, I work out all the time.
I'm like, but that's not relaxing.
It's not like I'm Namaste and listen to Yanni and shit.
I'm like, I'm trying to throw 45s across the gym, you know?
But I'm like, hmm.
So I just made up a story.
Even at that moment, I thought, man, so I just made up a story. Even at that moment, I thought,
man, that's really screwed up.
Wow.
But I was like, yeah, it ain't a big deal.
And again, way more detail in the book,
but the thing that happened to me was,
I ended up out partying without laws and mongols all night.
I wake up the next morning, I mean you can hear and feel
the whiskey and eggs squishing in your belly, you know that, you know, and I'm like I'm just
feel disgusted. I'm gonna start working out. So I'm in the hotel room doing, before P90 came out,
but kind of that thing burpees, mountain climbers, push-ups, air squats, sit-ups, all this stuff,
and I came up and by the way this is after I hit the inhaler, took a big congestant and
a histamine, three hydroxy cuts, two cups of coffee.
I don't know if there's anything else in there.
I later learned that that was basically a cocktail for an anxiety attack.
I was like, who knew?
Ah, it doesn't make a lot of sense, but I had an anxiety attack.
I was trying to work out.
I came up for air, hyperventilated, forgot all about combat breathing, forgot about paper
bags.
But did I stop?
Did I say, man, that's really screwed up?
No.
I took a nap, got up, started drinking Jack Daniels and went back.
But when I flew home, I slept wheels up to wheels down
till I hit Houston.
And then I slept wheels up to wheels down
till I got to McAllen.
And I think probably the first two days,
I might've slept close to 20 hours a day.
But for the whole week, for a five,
from like Sunday to Friday,
I slept an average of 16 plus hours a day.
Wow.
And I wasn't, I wasn't depressed, I wasn't sick,
I know what they both feel like.
I was that damn tired.
So by Friday morning, I take a phone call
from a former good buddy of mine.
He is probably one of the best undercovers I've ever seen.
But he was calling me about a possible another biker case.
And his first question was, how you doing country?
And I'm like, not too good.
And then he let me talk for an hour
and convinced myself I needed to call Safeguard.
So I called them, they came in and did an on-site assessment.
They diagnosed me as overassigned.
And they said, you can continue the case on the phone
until they take it down.
And I stayed on the phone. I
made a story up because I'd gotten married, technically, and I told them I was getting
a divorce, but I had to relocate my wife and my kids to El Paso, where her family was at.
Once that's done, I'm pulling chocks. I'm coming to Massachusetts. We had already created
– it was in the creation, our own biker club, that it was approved by the top of the outlaws
to be the number one support club in the Northeast.
And we were going to name it the Righteous Few.
Scott Town was going to be the president.
I was going to be an officer in it, sergeant in arms.
And I never went back up there because they told me I couldn't.
When you get put on timeout, it's like no travel.
You can be a case agent.
We're going to suggest to's like, no travel. You can be a case agent.
We're going to suggest to your division, no travel.
Definitely no undercover work.
There was some confusion there because one of the arguments is you need to get back in
to being a case agent and remember what you're supposed to be doing.
And I'm like, I never stopped being a case.
I'm running all these damn cases while all this is going on.
But I took a time out.
I made some phone calls. There was one guy named Tim Sylvia, not the fighter,
who is a buddy now, by the way. This guy's name was Tim Sylvia. He had been in prison most of his
life. But before I stopped going up there, he was introduced to me. He knew about the cocaine
He knew about what I did. He calls me and says man, I got some stolen vehicles for you
I'm in the magic powder business if you can get me
Those bricks or whatever. He called him code on the phone for 18 apiece. I can buy 10 of them right now
So I called the case team and said look he's reaching out to me. I can't come back up there
so we rigged it up to where the guys that were posing as my truck drivers went and
They were gonna pick up these stolen vehicles
They had like a 7 Series BMW worth 100 plus grand at the time and some other vehicles
While they were with them. So here I am on timeout in my garage sweating my tail off in
McAllen and I've got my two phones. I'm talking to the undercovers. I'm talking to Tim Sylvia.
I'm telling them where to go. They're being covered. They go. They meet while they're meeting Tim.
The truck driver, I suppose playing my truck driver, calls me. You can hear me clearly on
the recording. I'm talking on it and I tell him how much to pay Tim for the stolen vehicles and Tim
was like hey I'm gonna report the BMW stolen on Friday and I said can you make
it Saturday give me 24 hours more to get this thing into Mexico and they did that
and then when they went to load the vehicles he hit them for an 18 a key
for 10 keys.
And they said yes, and they ended the case
with them doing a ruse delivery of that dope.
And so you ask about the relationships.
So this is how it ends.
I'm in Nevada helping put on an undercover school.
That was one thing that Safeguard said I could go to,
because they also knew they could do many assessments, watch me, put me me around other undercovers make sure I'm not losing my shit and
I came over the time difference
To Massachusetts, but I've already been drawing up diagrams of all these houses and club houses
I've been in and I'm you know sending those to all these SWAT teams all over the Northeast that are gonna be hitting all these places
and I got back to my hotel room and I always kept my undercover, well the case wasn't over technically yet anyway, but I always kept
my undercover phones on for at least a month after a case went down, in case you
got threatened or anything like that. Well I get back to my room and my
next tail is chirping and I check and it's Scott town he's left me a message so I chirp him up and he's all raspy voice because he's
been just woken up and he's like hey man I just want you to know your your truck
driver Tony and then the other guy they were beating big Timmy and I don't know
what happened but they all I think they all got locked up well he doesn't know
that I'm an undercover and he's telling me that that was the take down day.
So he's calling me and I'm like, Oh, I said, you know what, brother, I appreciate that.
I said, I don't, I don't always control everything they do. Sometimes they do side jobs on their
own. I said, I, they were not up there for me, but I'll try to find out what's going
on. He's still, let me tell you what I'm going to do. He said, I'm going to get up, get cleaned
up. I'm going to find out what the hell's going on. I'm going to call you back. And
I said, okay. His last words to me were, I'm going to get chug cleaned up, I'm gonna find out what the hell's going on, I'm gonna call you back. And I said, okay.
His last words to me were,
I'm gonna get chugged up.
His last words to me were, I love you brother.
And I chirped back and I said, I love you too.
And he didn't know that a SWAT team
was gonna be hitting him in about 40 minutes.
Wow.
That's the last time I talked to him.
He'll probably hear this.
I got a 50-50 shot, if he walks up, I'll hug him.
He probably wants to beat the shit out of me, but. probably hear this. I got a 50-50 shot if he walks up I'll hug him he probably
wants to beat the shit out of me but Jesus. Man is he out? Yeah he's out now. How much time did he do?
I think he did like eight eight or ten somewhere in there. Do you have this
anxiety of running into those guys somewhere? Yes and no it really comes
with the job however somebody pointed out a difference
to me the other day. I'm like, look, man, as a cop or as an agent, you're locking people
up and they're getting out. You know, if you get threatened in Greenville County, if you're
working for Greenville County Sheriff's Office, let's say we're here, was it Travis County?
If you get a threat, a legit threat in Travis County, do you think they got the money in
the budget or they would even spend money in their budget
to move you to another town?
No, but in the FBI, we have that.
You hit the threat system, they move you somewhere,
change a bunch of stuff.
So in the law enforcement, there's always been,
you can lock people up, you go to the grocery store,
you're with your wife and kids and you see them.
Everybody handles it their own way.
For me, my best defense is
a good offense. I'll just walk right up to you. Hey man, holy shit, how are you doing?
I cannot believe, when did you get out? Are you okay? Hey, are you on the straight and
narrow now? You know, because I'm going to tell you, transparent, there's few things
I love more than a success story. Sadly, they're very rare in my 28 year career, but to see somebody who
Broke the law
Got out turn themselves around and are doing great. I love it. You do see some of those
Yeah, and I'll help them. I'm helping one right now. I told him I said look if you're doing the right thing
They're like well, I got a felon on my record
I'm like well who better to be a reference for you on your application than the guy who
gave you the felon?
If you're doing the right thing, I'll talk for you.
We all mess up.
I mean, shit, you know?
But that's got to be so complicated because you're the guy who got him arrested.
It is.
And I have had threats that were legit.
And I've had them at the sheriff's office
where I was like, what do we do?
And my lieutenant's like, we're gonna get some cops
and we're gonna knock on that dude's door.
Okay.
And I've also been in the FBI
where you could have gotten moved, and I decided no.
Once that case gets taken down, I'm overt.
Like a lot of people may not know it,
I'm not trying to insult intelligence,
but when you're arrested, I may be arrested with you.
I may not be.
There's all kinds of ways we can do a take down,
but eventually you're gonna be sitting
with your defense attorney and you're gonna get discovery.
And discovery is supposed to be everything.
Now there have been FBI people
who did not turn over everything and it was very wrong
and we are still paying the price for it,
but discovery is supposed to be everything.
And at that point, you're gonna hear me on a preamble.
You're gonna hear me go, let's see a preamble. You're gonna hear me go
Let's see. What's today? You're gonna hear me go. This is you see a undercover employee
This is you see a one two, whatever it's Wednesday March 26 central time to 45 p.m
About to walk in to meet Joe and they're gonna hear that and they're gonna know that I'm the undercover
They may not know my last name's pain, but they're know. Now what somebody pointed out to me was, you know, as a cop though, you're just doing your
job and you're arresting them.
As an undercover, you've lied to them.
And I went, hmm, probably should have thought about that before I did the book, huh?
But I try not to, I don't want to live my life in fear.
I'm a optimist, I'm a glass is always half full guy.
God, that's hard to believe given your circumstances.
I don't know how, for me personally,
I don't know how to survive otherwise.
Because if I was doom and gloom
and the glass is always half empty,
maybe this is a good time to interject this.
First responders, military.
Do you know what we're number? I'm talking fire medic cop
Military, you know, we're number one in suicide suicide. You know what else for number one in divorce
Alcoholism throw in pills or whatever you want there. We're also number one in dying within five years after retiring
Who signs up for there right, you You know, hell yeah. First in
hell, second in heaven. No. No. I'll pass. But yeah, so that hurt. I mean, it's very,
it's surreal. And yeah, great job. But yeah, I mean, I'm human. And I did really bond with
that guy. And just like I felt like a piece of trash when
Closed line told me that I was really he considered me really his friend. Wow, you know, how's he doing now?
I don't know if he's out or not. He had he was supposed to get I think he got twelve and a half
But I didn't keep up with it. I mean sometimes people go to jail
They pick up some more charges because they did something stupid in jail
But I will tell you talking on you, talking on that success story thing, most of my career,
with the exception of a pedophile, almost everybody I've arrested, I'll sit down with them and I'll
say, listen, I'm not saying I think you're a bad person. I'm not saying I disagree with what you
did. What I'm saying is, is you're an adult adult you made a choice to break the law and you got caught
So let's just start right here. This is whatever this is all I got. This is on the table
Let's don't do that date and game BS where you lie to me for two months and I lie to you for two months
And then we were figuring out we figure out we really do kind of like each other now
I can tell you the truth. This is what I got and just just
It's not dehumanizing and there's still people
And I love connecting with people like I said Wow
It was a great attitude
Did you ever think like while you're talking to people like Scott town like man if my life had been different
I had gone down the wrong roads grew up in a different neighborhood
You would be one absolutely.. Absolutely. Yeah. Absolutely.
That's why we had so much in common.
Yeah, that's part of the problem with life.
Yeah.
Everybody wants to pretend that that could never be me.
No, it could have easily been me.
And I'm like, I looked at it and I'm like, it's that proverbial fork in the road.
I went that way, but I could have easily went that way.
Yeah.
That's why I got along with them so much.
You know?
Yeah.
Like, yeah, other than like, pedophile stuff. So what pedophile stuff did you have to do? Uh, actually
One of the quickest under covers I ever did was the most satisfying and I actually did this one
I think before the outlaws
It was in San Antonio
they
There was a guy that got picked up from less than a kid
And I didn't know the whole backstory,
but in the San Antonio division, the agents and stuff knew me or the SWAT people, they
knew I'm the undercover guy.
And they called me up because while he was in Bexar County in San Antonio, he approached
somebody in jail, solicited them to kill the kid or to find somebody that could kill the
kid.
A lot of these murder for hire plans are stupid, but that's actually wasn't too bad of a plan.
Like if the kids, these cases are tough.
They suck.
They are atrocious.
They are, I mean, it's a waste of oxygen in my personal opinion, but it's usually a
kid from a broken home.
It's after the fact.
It's an adult versus a kid.
But he knew he wasn't't gonna do well in prison.
So he approached somebody in prison
who then, as most people who are serving time do,
they are trying to get credit to get out.
And that person called his attorney
and that attorney called the FBI
and they worked it out to where he intruded me.
So I drive up to Bexar County,
I sign in, cause he put me on the list. I go in and I'm in
I'm in the phone bank. It's all stainless steel. You can't hear nothing but baby mamas and everybody's
screaming and cussing and pissed off. And here I am trying to get this recording through this glass
and I'm talking to the guy and I said you know who I am?
He's like yeah I said well I hope you do because you put me on your list to come
see you. You know what I do and he's like yes I was like slow rolling I didn't
know I didn't want to scare him off so I was like you know I'm in the
extermination business and he's like yeah I said I kill pests for a living. He said
yep that's exactly what I wanted and I had a picture of the kid of course we're working with a family on this but I had a picture of the kid. Of course, we're working with a family on this.
But I had a picture of the kid just walking like a surveillance photo.
And I put it up on the window and I said, is this the pest that you want taken care
of?
Something to that effect.
And clearly on the recording, thank you, Lord, it picked it up.
He said, that's him.
So you're not going to call a bug him, right? So what I found out is I met him
twice, just a two-meet thing, but what I found out from the Solicitor's Office in
in Bexar County, it was mostly women working it because it was the the crimes
against children was combined with the domestic violence unit. And Joe, when I
went walking in there and they're like, this is Scott, I mean, they
all stood, it's like some TV show.
They stood up and they started clapping.
I'm like, I don't understand.
And they said, me chest beating.
That's not what I'm trying.
But it's like, what is going on?
They're like, thank you so much.
You're so and I'm like, I appreciate it.
But I'm doing my job.
What they told me is that guy had walked on four molestation cases before and he also
walked on some possession of somehow he got out of possession of child
pornography stuff and but when he found out when they approached him and said I
was an undercover and that they got him he pled guilty to hiring me to kill the
kid and pled guilty to the molestation of the kid.
Matter of fact, when I was talking to him the first time, he threw me off guard.
Because he starts, he's like, yeah, yeah.
And I go, all right, well, what do you got?
This, that, and the other were talking thing.
And he goes, hey, I'd like you to kill the rest of his family too.
They're in Wisconsin.
And I actually giggled a little bit because it threw me off.
I went, well, I'm not above traveling, but let's deal with one pest at a time.
I'm like, you agree?
I'm thinking in my head, go man.
You know, but he knew, as most pedophiles do, you're not going to do well in prison.
So his idea was kill the kid, kill the family, and then there's no evidence like he did?
Yeah, he just gets to walk because there's no witness to show up to trial.
Jesus Christ.
Right?
Yeah.
And, and then being around that stuff,
like I've had trainees that, you know, you get a new agent,
they come in, they assign you as the training agent, and they
might be working that stuff. And I'll tell you, for me,
personally, that's tough to work for me. It was before I even had
girl before I even had kids. I remember seeing like, like five
images, we hit a guy, he was actually a professor
at University of Texas, Pan Am, and he was so vigilant.
I mean, he had like, he had all the child porn videos
broken down by ethnicity, age, sex.
Oh, Jesus Christ.
So I mean, you could say, I want Asian male 11.
And he would have, I mean.
Oh my God.
And it was just sick.
Now, did he come from a messed up thing would have, I mean, and it was just sick.
Now, did he come from a messed up thing?
Yeah, turns out his mother had molested him
and his brother, would tie him in the basement,
tie them to each other, make them have sex with each other.
But it's horrific, but break the chain, man.
Break the chain.
So yeah, I saw like five photos
and I was messed up for probably a week or two a professor
Yeah, my wife would try to she tried to touch me not even just to be in it
I mean, you know just to touch and I'd be like, ah, no
I'm like I can't man. I got to get this shit out of my head now later on in under covers
I could be the guy to drive and pick you up
I could show you pictures is this what you want kind of thing but to like sit there and look through that stuff
My brains not cut out for that.
But there are those who are and in the FBI, they if you're looking at that, you have to
be psychologically assessed as well as you should.
I could only imagine.
How are these guys getting these videos?
Are they making them?
Joe, it is.
There's like, see, that's the thing, right?
This is one of the huge.
It's one of the freaking huge.
That's the scary thing, because most people aren't aware of it.
And this is one of the big conspiracy theories
that there's these pedophile rings out there, but they're real.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Human trafficking.
Now, I can sway on some of the human trafficking stuff,
because I've seen human trafficking from the border
all the way to the hotel room.
If it's rarely a hooker over on free will
or an escort of on free will.
But if they're out there doing, I don't know,
it gets a little muddy on some of the trafficking stuff
for me personally, but it's still trafficking.
They got brought in when they were underage.
Now they're a product of what they've been forced to do.
That's, it's very sad.
But as far as the child porn stuff goes, it's insane.
I've worked with some, they call them ICACs,
Crimes Against Children,
and there's so much out there,
but there was so much at once.
This is just me in Tennessee.
I'm with them.
They have so many hits on whatever dark web thing it is.
Might be Discord. I'm trying to think of what it used to be.
But there's all kinds of stuff like that, that they'll go to these, what they believe
or what are encrypted apps that are based overseas.
So they don't think that the FBI or Feds here, the alphabet boys and girls, can do subpoenas
and get that stuff.
That's why they use those. Now does that mean that everybody on
Discord's bad? Absolutely not. Telegram? No. But do people go there to do bad
things? Yep. Yeah. And it's just like you could go, I remember them showing me
stuff as the undercover coordinator. I'm over there and I'm looking at stuff and
they're showing me what all the hits they've got right now. Just people
hitting and through the databases,
you could do knock and talks every freaking day all day long. Hey man, how you doing?
Hey, if we look at your computer, you might not get in there, but yeah, it's a mess. A
mess.
And so there's a whole ring of people all across the country.
Yeah, or just mom and pops farming out their kids.
Oh my God. Yeah.
Sex across state lines.
Oh.
Yeah, not good at all.
There's just like, again, I mentioned McCallan several times.
This isn't undercover stuff, but case agent stuff.
I mean, I might look at doing a book on case agent stuff.
I was down there working the cartel with me and the people I worked with.
That was back when Oziel Cardenas ran the golf cartel.
So it was violent.
Violent as you know what, but there was some kind of SOP.
There was like a procedure.
But I mean, when I try to tell people, I'm like, look, I don't care whether you're left
or right.
I meet all kinds of people.
If you're extreme left, I'm probably going to tell you you're an idiot.
If you're extreme right, I know you're an idiot because I've been with them.
I'm like, I just want to bring it.
What's so funny is you start here and you go far left and they're like, I'm a socialist.
I'm a socialist.
I want everything for free.
I want it.
And you start here on the far right and they're like, I want Hitler.
I want Hitler.
But that's socialism. You get here, it's the same shit. They just want the stuff for free. I want it. And you start here on the far right and you're like, I want Hitler. I want Hitler. But that socialism you get here, it's the same shit.
They just want the stuff for free. I want all whites. Well, that'll fix
everything. You know, it's just, it's insane. But down on the border, you tell
people you're like, man, they just, I'm not saying that I'm not trying to shed
a bad light on Mexico and stuff, but it, a lot of it runs on corruption. A lot of
it runs on money.
And they do not value life like we do.
I mean, man, they chop heads off.
It's Al-Qaeda stuff.
I mean, they're sawing heads off.
You find a van full of eight heads.
We worked kidnappers and extortions down there all the time back then.
One of the cases, OZL, we thought it was a wives' tale.
And this is sick. One of the cases, OZL, we thought it was a wives' tale.
This is sick, so I apologize to people that think this is way gross, but it's real.
The first one isn't that gross.
He had a line.
He would feed people to.
A line.
And that was the rumor.
And then I can't remember if they went up in a fixed wing or a helicopter, but they
flew over the line.
And somebody was asking the other one, hey, what those bones and they were like I'll pull you know
chicken that's a big-ass chicken that chicken looks like a femur you know so
there's that but the one that was really sick is so when they would kidnap you
like like if you lost a load or they thought you stole something or you
didn't pay your quotas because even as a as a undocumented special interest alien whatever you want to call it
illegal alien smuggler
you had to pay quotas to the cartel to smuggle through their territory same
thing with that
you got behind on that
they can have you
same m o
three suburban pull up somewhere in south texas jump out on such a such
corner by some black bd use they grab you that was the. They were the enforcement cartel. They'd take you over, beat you, start calling
the family saying, we want 100 grand, 300 grand, whatever. We'd start brokering the
deal because we have border liaison officers and we would do cross trainings with military
and police in Mexico. So the border liaison officer calls and goes, hey, it's such and
such time of day on this corner.
Three Suburban pulled up, the guy's name is this, it was this time of day.
30 minutes to an hour later, we get a call back.
They got him.
What's the deal?
He brought a load back and it was missing 100 grand.
Okay, so now I'm in the house with the family going, okay, they want 300 grand.
Well, we don't have it.
Well, they don't have it.
They want 100 grand.
We don't have it. Well, what do you got? We got 300 grand. Well, we don't have it. Well, they don't have it. They want 100 grand.
We don't have it. Well, what do you got? We got 60 grand. What else they got? Remember
my V8 4x4? They got a Suburban. How many miles are on it? And here we are at midnight rolling
the Suburban over the bridge with $60,000 to get the sun back.
Wow.
So one of the, we thought was a a wives tale is that OZL had
a I don't know what the politically correct term is these days but a midget
small person I don't know but the rumor was back then that he had a midget he
was very well endowed and he would rate people for the cartel. He's like that's so Ken for a little bit.
My comedy starts coming out.
I'm like, how do you get the small person?
That's his thing.
So we all thought it was BS.
And then there was a Christmas Eve.
We started getting calls.
I was actually driving to Arizona for vacation, but I was on the phone calling sources and
calling all the other agents.
This guy had basically carjacked a car in Rio Grande City.
So directly across the river is Camargo.
So he gets in there.
He didn't look at the back seat as an infant.
Now the cartel is pissed at him for bringing heat and they are beating him and they're I mean it's they used to hit him with the clubs
throw kilos bricks at him cigarette burns cigar burns real big battery
cables stuff like that threatening them and we got him back but when he came
across the bridge my peers called me and go holy shit Scott is real I go what are
you talking about this dude is bawling when the call came in and the
car was like okay let this one go the midget was in the room that guy was
crying when he came back across the bridge he was getting ready to get raped
Wow slightly sick right yeah slightly hmm it's a different world. Yeah, that's probably the least bad thing they can do to you.
I don't know.
I don't know how to look in the mirror after all that.
I don't know. I mean, you get out alive, I guess.
It's insane.
Or do you?
So, other than the pedophile cases,
what were the most, like, shocking cases that you had to do?
Well they're all a little shocking in their own way.
The pedophile ones got to be the hardest one to like sleep at night.
Yeah, but what a good feeling to get him.
Right, that's a different feeling.
That's a non-conflicted feeling when you get him.
Good.
Yeah, when she called me, when the assistant solicitor called me and said, Hey, he played guilty. He got, he got 20 for, I can't remember which was for which, but he got 20
years for, uh, I believe the most molestation in 10 for hiring me to kill him. So, and then they
had to do state of Texas with 85%. Um, so yeah, it was going to be a tough ride for him. Pardon the
bun. Yeah. But, uh, yeah. so crazy stuff, man, I mean, some
of that neo-Nazi stuff was just insane. How'd you get involved in that? Well, number one,
I go where my skill set takes me. Number two, we kind of go to what the shift is in the
FBI. Were people doing a lot of biker club stuff anymore. Not at that time. I was a criminal,
criminal investigator for pretty much my entire career.
But towards the end in Tennessee,
I switched over to the joint terrorism task force.
And I really did it because it was just, I was having some disagreements.
Some would be likely, but I was having disagreements with management.
And my MO had always been, even though I'd burned myself out before, once I got to Tennessee, I set up accountability buddies, I set up tripwires, and stopped saying yes to everything,
and made ways to relax and balance and get myself back. But towards the end, we switched over to Joint Chairmen Task Force because, again, my MO
was try to be above average on your squad. And then if you're kicking butt on stats and stuff like
that, then maybe they won't say no to let me go do the undercover. Maybe they won't say no to let me go to the undercover. Maybe they won't say no to let me go help put on this SWAT school or this SWAT call out.
And that was what I did.
But that wasn't working for me in Tennessee anymore.
And I went to the head of the division and requested to be moved.
So I went to Joint Chessmen Task Force.
And my skill set kind of led right into that domestic terrorism stuff.
Because it was like in the state of Tennessee, you have Aryan nations, which was the Tennessee Department of Corrections, TDOC prison gang, but it's white supremacy. And then I just started getting more exposed to those kind of cases. So now when the canvases start coming up or we're running an undercover op ourselves,
those cases are coming in and it's like, okay, I'll do that one.
Unless anybody's got a disagreement, you know, and that's what I started doing.
That's how we kind of got into those because we started getting more threats.
You know, after the Charlottesville stuff.
Now it's really getting kind of on the radar.
They're like, man, this is maybe we should be putting more resources. Maybe we should be putting the FBI saying maybe
we should be putting more resources to this domestic terrorism threat. And that's what
I started getting. I mean, I would go into kind of mentioned it earlier, but a neo Nazi
group. But it's mainly online. and here I am for five months reading
post after post and if I woke up after six hours of sleep and there was I was
1,500 posts behind I'd rewind it and read them all for five months because I
didn't want to miss anything me personally I didn't want to miss
anything or anything bad happened because I missed something but after
five months and maybe meeting them once or twice there was it's all saw First Amendment protected. They weren't, they weren't doing any
thing to prepare for the violence, to cause violence. They're just preparing
for the day and then when the day happens, then they'll be ready. But again,
I talked to people overseas, Canada, whatever, I have to explain. I'm like,
look in the United States, we have a constitution and your first amendment is freedom of speech. I said, you can walk
out in the street right here and say, I hate every, say a racial slur. I hope every racial
slur dies. That's not illegal. As you know, have you seen it? You can burn American flags,
freedom of speech. Try that in China. Right? Let me know how that works for you death to China light the flag on fire
I'm not sure how long you'll last right not long, but
That's what we that's
That's the hard thing about working domestic terrorism is there's no federal domestic terrorism statute
So you're trying to see what crimes are they committing if any and what can we do to get them off the street if they're
planning bad things
So how did you infiltrate the neo-nazi organization? Did you actually meet with them in person or did was it mostly online?
So
I'll just jump to the base. Okay, because the base was the one that's kind of the beginning in the end of the book
They were actively recruiting. I mean I was in the Klan too for a little while
For the job. I gotta be careful I say
Back when I was in the Klan we were good old boys
but the
They were recruiting openly online the base. And the base is an accelerationist
group. And that's what I, again, great detail in the book, in the podcast. But the thing
is, is most people here, white supremacy, they think hoods and robes and crosses on
fire, right? That's not this man. These are, these are, this is why they're called
accelerationists. There's a book out there called Siege written by James Mason, long
time white supremacist. It's a weird book. It's basically articles and interviews all
just shoved together. But this guy kind of idolized and interviewed people like Charles
Manson, you know, what a great role model. I mean, if you're looking.
But he created a group called Atomwaffen.
And this is what accelerationism is.
Because when I go to infiltrate the base, I'm just answering stuff they're putting
out there.
Emails, they're posting on Gab.
Save your race, join the base.
We're a survivalist group.
Email us at thebase underscore one at protonmail.com.
So I start answering that stuff.
After about a week or so of emails back and forth asking me everything, my ethnicity,
my height, weight, when was my red pill moment, which they kind of use the Matrix theme there.
So if they say when were you red-pilled, as a Christ follower, it's the same thing as when I was baptized or when I got saved, right? So
if you're an accelerationist or that level of neo-Nazi and they say, what was
your red pill moment? You need to know it because it's kind of like the big deal.
That's when you said, ha, I hate all of the people. So after about a week or
so of emails, I get on, they tell me to download the wire app
similar to whatsapp you can call and talk on it stuff like that and
Create groups all over it. So I do like about an hour and 15 minute interview
Panel of like four or five people asking me all kinds of stuff
I answered best I could best I prepared for and then they gave me a 24-hour rest period.
They said, now that you know what we are, we're going to give you 24 hours to think
about if you want to be a part of this and we want 24 hours to think about it.
But this is what they told me accelerationism was.
They said, accelerationists, they call it siege culture, kind of far laying off the
book, but they do not believe there's a political
solution to save the white race. They believe that society is either going to collapse on
its own or for manmade events, and they want to speed that up. The group I was in was calling
that Boogaloo, the Boogaloo. And everything always ends with an ethno state. Now it's
not saying the groups that I was in, they weren't going to take over the entire United
States, but the group I was in, one section was looking at property and land in
the Appalachian Mountains.
One section of the base was looking at the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.
One section of the base had property in the Pacific Northwest.
So you get in there, you start learning that ideology.
But again, in the beginning, I'm just ingratiating
I don't I mean we know they've been saying crazy stuff online, but is it illegal per se no
But are they planning on taking steps to do some bad things and that goes back to that domestic terrorism culture you go in
Telegram or whatever you you've got your your
Terrence and your Brevix and they're in there, four-chan, eight-chan,
and they're posting right before they go
and commit all the murders.
You know, here I am, I'm going live.
Watch this.
Yeah.
So, but imagine being in law enforcement
and trying to look at all these thousands of posts
and trying to figure out,
well, which one's actually gonna follow through?
Which one is seriously planning on doing something? So always got to stay vigilant and keep going after it. So what would these guys planning on doing?
What was their their accelerate moment?
well
Per the siege culture, they like to do like guerrilla warfare tactics
So they're against the Charlottesville stuff being in a a group, picket signs, screaming racial slurs, you know, all this stuff. They're against that. They're like, that's stupid.
You're number one, you're making yourself a target. You're not doing anything. It's more guerrilla warfare tactics where, let's say over here in Austin poisoned anything to create chaos and killing of anybody
left anti-fash non whites very anti-semitic very like way more than it kind of opened
my eyes when I started getting into some of these neo-nazis because for the most part
I thought when I thought racism I I thought white against black, right?
But these these neo Nazis groups I was in, man, they are they are anti Semitic, man,
they cannot stand Jews. Wow. It's like, like it's sickening if you if you listen to it.
But again, they want that Hitler, they want Hitler back. I mean, some of these guys were
like talking about concave Earth, hollow Earth, Hitler's still alive, he's in
hollow earth, he's with giant white men who are Anglo white with red hair and 15 plus
foot tall.
And I'm like, and I go, so where are these 15 foot tall white guys?
And they're like, well, they're in the middle of earth with Hitler, they're waiting.
And I go, for what?
If we're going to what? NBA contracts.
Come on, let's do this.
Let's take this thing down.
And sometimes I'm just comical with them.
You're like, hey, we're in here with Nazis.
Yeah.
We're going to get the ethnostate.
Yeah.
We're ready for the bugaloo.
Yeah.
We're building our kit.
Yeah.
Who's going to be Hitler?
And everybody goes, oh, are they going to be one, buddy?
Are we going to fight it out right now?
Who's gonna win this thing?
But what happened with the bass is a lot of them were into the pagan.
And I say this loosely, I have plenty of friends that are pagan.
Sartreux and they are great people.
Love them.
What do you mean by pagan?
So there's different pantheons, but the most common one is Norse mythology.
It's basically the Marvel universe.
So they worship ancient Viking culture?
Yeah, Odin, Thor, whatever.
Really? Yeah, oh yeah, man. Wait, there's a church for that?
Well, I don't want to say a church per se, but yeah, the whole blot is just think Viking
kind of stuff.
The ones that do it that are serious, they're upset that white supremacists have taken their
stuff and used it.
But if you look at Hitler, Hitler was already looking into that Norse mythology too.
He had, you know, he had, you know, looking for Thor's hammer or whatever, the holy grail
biblical and all this stuff.
But there's Christian identity, which is making a comeback in the white supremacy realm, not
to be confused with Christianity.
Christian identity is, if you can wrap your mind around this, they, a lot of them have
a, it's the dual seed line belief.
So they take the story of the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve, the serpent, and the fruit of
the forbidden tree. They take that story and they say, okay, it's still the same except
the fruit of the forbidden tree is a sexual act with the serpent, who is a man of color, also known as Satan. And then
when Satan sleeps with Eve, their offspring is Cain, and they are the mud race from then
on. That's what they call them, mud race, non-white. Mud race from then on down. But
the procreation from Adam and Eve is able, and that's the pure white race. That's just
one of the many belief systems. So when you see, I know, right?
Yeah, I'm like shaking my head like, what the fuck?
Well, how did you get that? What are they using as like references? Like, how do
they get this information? So as far back as that I know, I'm sure it came out
earlier, but there was the Aryan Nation, Reverend Butler, Red Ray Fair, and all
that stuff, and they taught that.
They taught the Christian identity.
Church of Jesus Christ Christian.
And they take that and twist it, you know,
as if Jesus is just a white guy.
And so did you physically meet with these guys
and infiltrate their organization?
Yeah, some of those, yes.
And the Christian identity was kinda in the Klan belief
that I was
in for a short moment. But the pagan, just like I said, that the Christian identity takes
the Bible and twists it, then the paganism is taking Norse mythology or if you're an
Egyptian pantheon or whatever, and they're twisting it toward their white supremacy.
And that's not what paganism really is.
If you know, like again, I've got friends that do it.
They're upset with white supremacists using their stuff.
But then again, in the base,
there was a guy who wasn't a satire priest
and he led the first blot I ever attended, BLOT,
which is kind of like the worship ceremony for pagans.
I mean, we're down there with our shirts off,
wiping blood on our chest, drinking mead as if we're Vikings, and then praying to our gods.
And they would take wood, carve the wood, and they would carve runes and like white supremacy
symbols in it. And we would cut ourselves and bleed on the runes and then set that on fire and
pray until the fire went out. Whoa.
Yeah.
And that was kind of...
How many of these guys are out there in the world?
I don't know.
I mean, there's, there's academia stuff that they're like, there's millions of white supremacists
and Nazis are going to be on your doorstep tomorrow.
I'm not going to say that.
Well, they want to call everything white supremacy, which is a real problem because there's actual
white supremacy out there.
Yeah. And when you call everything white supremacist... Just real problem, because there's actual white supremacy out there. Yeah.
And when you call everything white supremacist.
Just somebody disagreeing,
or having a different belief system.
Watching a video of a fucking crazy professor
who was saying that marriage is white supremacist.
It's the craziest video of all time.
This is an undercover video where they interviewed this lady
and they were asking her questions
and she didn't know she was being recorded.
She was a professor.
Like marriage is thin privilege, it's white supremacy, it's male privilege which leads
to white supremacy and white privilege and just a bunch of gobbledygook nonsense words
that she was attaching to just people getting married.
Clearly she's not a Christ follower.
If you follow the Bible, it lays out what marriage is.. Yeah well she's definitely not. She's a kook. But
it's the problem is calling everything white supremacy it kind of it obscures
the fact that there's really people like the people that you're running it to.
Mm-hmm. They're real. Yeah. And it's just like how many of them and where are they?
Thousands? Hundreds of thousands? Yeah I'd say where are they? Thousands, hundreds of thousands?
Yeah, I'd say, I don't know about hundreds of thousands,
but I'd say thousands.
Cause a lot of times, if you're in that community
and you're looking, let's say this is a telegram channel
over here and it's Tearwave or whatever it is
before it was taken down.
And you see all these monikers, like I was Pell Horse
in the base, I was Pell Horse, that was my moniker.
And then you see pestilence, and you see TMB,
the militant Buddhist, and you see helter skelter,
and you say, well, you might go to another group.
Maybe they've changed their moniker,
but you start realizing, hey,
did you used to be pestilence in the other channel?
Yeah, that's me, all right, you know what I mean?
But what's scary is, like in that base case
As I said before I'm a tactical instructor firearms instructor I'm an alert instructor which is right near where we're at right now
in San Marcos, Texas
and
But you can't go undercover and help these
Help these guys train or help them get better
because they might be doing bad things.
So I go in, I had my whole backstory,
former skinhead, former biker,
and my skill set was like hand-to-hand combat.
Could I shoot?
Yeah, but I let them lead me.
We went out there and the first time we did tactical
and firearms training, it was led by a 19-year-old kid and it was good.
It was good. And he's not military.
And I'm like, I'm watching, I'm like, where the hell did you learn this?
So a lot of stuff happens on gaming systems because they're so realistic now.
Wow.
Yeah. I mean, these kids, you can go on and if you got your mic on,
you might get your butt handed to you by an 11-year-old kid
who's telling you to clear the hard corner and slice the pie.
They're using the same verbiage and I'm like, holy crap, you know, virtual world meets real
world.
Only problem is in the virtual world, you get to respawn.
Not so much in the real world, you know, I'm going to respawn now.
But yeah, he let it and They were shooting fast and accurate.
It wasn't the best, they were mistakes,
but I was impressed with how safe they were,
the two guys running at TMB and Pestilence,
because that was a concern for me.
If you could see the aerial footage,
when we first go out there and they're shooting,
I'm way back behind them,
because I'm like, I don't know how these people are.
I've seen plenty of bad shooters
doing some stupid things on the line. and then we start working like that.
So I start gaining their trust, do a couple of blots, hikes, drinking, rucking,
whatever and then it starts we're finding out a little bit more not
necessarily anything criminal except for the fact that
there was a Canadian who was part of their, basically it would be like their National
Guard, but he got doxxed.
And for the listeners that don't know, doxxing basically is being outed.
So a lot of these accelerationist groups are big on putting up flyers and stickers.
They go by and they slap up stickers everywhere,
you know, save your race, join the base with a QR code.
You scan that QR code, it takes you right to bit shoot
to a video of us, of a propaganda recruitment video
we filmed in Georgia.
Of us shooting and everything.
And so there's one in Canada, he puts up flyers, somebody answers it to make, again, it's more
in depth in the book, but he meets this guy, the guy does the same panel kind of thing
I did, but then he gets vetted face to face.
So when you get vetted face to face, it's going to be a little bit more intense.
They do a face to face vetting of this guy. And he says the punished snake was
the moniker, his name is Patrick Matthews. He was up there and he vetted him face-to-face
and said he's good to go. So after about a week to two weeks tops in the main chat group,
this dude bails. And it turns out that he was a journalist in Canada who went on his own and met Patrick Matthews and
infiltrated at least to a certain degree the base.
And then he puts out in a big news article up there that this guy is Patrick Matthews
and so Pat, RCMP comes to his house, takes his guns, he gets booted from the National
Guard thing, loses his job, his parents. He gets booted from the National Guard thing loses his job
His parents don't like him anymore and they they lose him. They find his truck near the border of the United States
so we're all looking for him and
You have to realize that on the base case. Let's just say you've got 40 targets
Well, they're all over the world a lot of them in the United States
Well, every one of those the world, a lot of them in the United States. Well,
every one of those FBI field offices are open separate cases, but we're all trying to work
together because it's the same group. And we get to a point to where I'm sorry, we were
looking for Patrick Matthews, and there's an unbelievable case agent. We had several on the case, but Nate Ploo was running the case out of Seattle because
the leader of the base had property in Seattle's territory.
But there was a case agent named Rashid who's out of Baltimore, and he's running for the
guys there.
Rashid was able to figure out by some unbelievable phone analysis when Patrick came into the
United States and we're tracking.
We're all looking for him.
We think we might know where he's at and I show up at a training in North Georgia, in
Rome, Georgia and he's there.
When I pulled up, I see vehicles and I'm counting heads under the barn and I'm like, there's one extra person. I know that's that person's there. When I pulled up I see vehicles and I'm counting heads under the barn and
I'm like there's one extra person. I know that's that person's car and I say well I
see when I walk up, I walk up and by then his hair had all grown out and had a red bushy
beard and he's like, as soon as he started talking it was a Canadian accent and I was
like hey man, welcome to the United States brother. So now we had him there and now we're
starting to find out a little bit more about death plots and this that and the other but
is it just drunk talk
or they actually plan on doing something and then that's when we get to the
the the big Halloween
of 2019 hate camp
and
there was
base members that came in from all over the United States and
Again, what I've done some pagan blots with them.
Like I said, cut yourself. I remember the first time I did it, I was like, damn it,
why didn't I bring my own knife? And when it was time to cut your finger, the tip of
their knife was broken. And I'm like, well, I'm not going to slice my damn arm open, my
tats, and I'm not going to slice my finger open. I'm trying to stab my finger to bleed with a broken tip.
Note to self, bring your own knife next time. So I did.
But we're doing
Halloween. We're there and I doze off. We've already done hand-to-hand combat, some firearm stuff. Had a couple of drinks and
I'm charging my phone in my truck. It's really cold, so I kind of doze off.
I wake up to pounding on my window,
Pell horse, Pell horse, you got to get up, you got to see this, you got to see this.
I'm like, what's going on? And they're like, man,
remember us talking about a sacrifice and the goat? I'm like, yeah. And they go, we got the goat.
So I get out and there's this ram in the back of one of the members trucks. They had gone not
far away to a house that had three rams and they all dressed up and I'll paint
the picture for you because the clothing, the camouflage pattern that the base
wore was Flecktarn because Flecktarn pattern is German. Again, how Hitler kind of stuff. So they went where balaclavas cover everything
up, they hop fences, steal this ram and bring it back to the farm in Rome,
Georgia. So I wake up and I walk out there and this thing's crapping all over
the bed of the truck and one of the members pretty big fella he says man
this thing's shitting everywhere and I said well hell I would be too if I just got kidnapped by a
bunch of dudes and flechtorn and balaclavas you know. So now we're kind of preparing and
I'm thinking man are we really going to do this and I walked over to the guy he went
by Eisen and he was going to be leading the block and Isen says I go to him and I go
Man, is it is it bad that I feel sorry for the goat? And he says you can't let the goat hear you say that
And I'm like, okay do tell and he's like
He goes this is a sacrifice to Odin this this this is a beautiful sacrifice that we love this ram love this goat, whatever the hell it was. We love it
and we're showing it love and it is being blessed to go to Valhalla and meet Oton. So
the rule was, everybody leave your weapons and we're going to go down to the holy spot
and deep in the woods. Hundred acre farm by the way. And we're walking down there and the goats just making all kinds of
racket and we get down, I'm sorry, I should let me rewind just a little bit.
I'm trying to figure out in my head should I do this or should I just blow
the case right now? And I'm thinking well they said they took the goat. Okay so
that's theft of an animal. That's not federal. I'm like trying to go through my head.
So I go to my truck and I lean into one of my devices and I'm like, hey,
if y'all can hear me because when I was out in the field, I'm covered. So for that four-day hate camp,
they were covering me 24-7 running shifts.
They being law enforcement.
And I go and I go, hey, if you all can hear me, I'm pretty sure we're getting ready to
go down here and sacrifice this animal.
And I'm running it through my brain.
And I know they said they stole it.
But I can't come up with a good enough reason to stop this right now.
If you guys don't want me to do this, you got to send me a sign and let me know.
And I waited and I waited and it was crickets. And then I said, okay, I guess I'm going down to the woods. So we go down. You had your chance. I was waiting. Oh my God. So we go down to the woods
and we get there. And I don't know how I ended up at the back of
the goat we're in a circle around the goat and I'm at the back of it and Isen
who's leading the blot is talking about we're gonna be starting the wild hunt
in Norse mythology the wild hunt is basically Odin and a bunch of other gods
going out in the middle of the night and whipping the crap out every other god
that they didn't like or whatever and the twisted middle of the night and whipping the crap out of every other god that they didn't like or whatever. And the twisted version of the base, starting
the wild hunt was going to start with the sacrifice of this goat which he named
Gar. His middle name was Garfield, named after his grandfather. To show love to
the goat he named it Gar after his grandfather. Okay, so he says once we commit, we do sacrifice and it goes to Valhalla that, that the wild hunt will start, but the wild hunt was going to be cleansing the world of non whites.
So the goat was the start of this whole
wild hunt, the wild hunt. It's in North mythology. It's called the wild hunt. But again, they're twisting it.
Right. hunt. The wild hunt. It's in North Mesology. It's called the wild hunt. But again, they're twisting it for white supremacy beliefs. So he's got this machete type object and I'm at the back of the goat and he's going through it. He does his own prayer and he didn't
lead the Blotineers get as the actual Asatru priest that did it before, but he's trying
and he's going back with this he's going back with this
machete and I'm holding the back of the goat and somebody's holding the front of
the goat he's coming down he's practicing practicing and he's a pretty
stocky kid and finally somebody says just do it man he rears back with all
of his strength and comes down right on the back of the neck of the goat I don't
even know if it broke a hair Joe I don't know if it's on the back of the neck of the goat. I don't even know if it broke a hair, Joe.
I don't know if it's because the back strap
of the goat was so thick or the blade was dull,
but when he hit it, all you heard was,
Bad!
And for that split second,
I'm holding the back of the goat and I go,
Oh man, I just saw blood.
I just pictured something bad happening.
And then somebody says,
has anybody got a gun?
Do you hear, do it again, do it again.
I take two swings and you see, I got a gun.
Well, I told you,
we weren't supposed to bring any weapons down.
Well, this one cat who was probably
the least qualified person to be carrying a firearm
anywhere within miles of us said, yeah, I got mine.
And we were like, what are you doing with your gun?
So TMB takes the gun, hands it to Eisen. Eisen, we're still
all on our knees in a circle around the goat for this sacrifice. Eisen points the gun at
the goat, goat's head, and then turns the opposite way.
Oh, Jesus.
And that's when the instructor enemy comes out. I'm like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
He's like, what? I go, look at what you're shooting at, man. We're all in a circle.
The hell are you doing?
So then he chambers around and gets up close, pow.
Even on recording, you hear the goat hit the ground.
Well, I was sitting there twitching.
It's been like two, three minutes.
It's still twitching.
And I'm like, hey, why don't you go put another bullet
in the ram?
He's like, oh, I think it's dead. And I and I go I'm just saying for the love of the goat and
It being happy in Valhalla
Let's give it a good clean kill
Trying to use this logic again. Yeah, and he puts another one in it and then somebody says yeah, it's definitely dead
So you think it's over? No, it's not over now. they slice the goat's throat and fill a cup with all of his blood. And one of the guys had brought a sheet of acid.
Isen had brought a sheet of acid. Oh boy. Yeah, right. It's supposed to help with the shaman,
which is kind of entering the spirit world during your block. You're going to get high.
And I'm shining the light because it's pitch dark, we're
in the middle of the woods, and I'm shining the light for Isaac. And he's
going around and what's happening is, is he's tearing off a tab. Not everybody did
it. Of course I didn't do it, but he tears off a tab, puts it under a tongue. Some
people never even done it before. And then you chase it down with the blood of
the goat. Part of the sacrifice. So he gets around, some people do it, most people do it, a couple
of us didn't. And then it gets to me. And I'm looking at the cup full of blood and by
the time, by this time it's coagulating, it's all clotty. And I'm looking at it and I'm
like, oh man, I do not want to turn that up. I really don't want to turn it up. And I think it was pestilence to get me out.
He said, man, you can just taste this.
I stuck my finger all the way down in the blood, pulled it out, sucked all the blood
off my finger.
And that was my way of dealing with the sacrifice.
Not exactly fear factor stuff.
But I would have sucked.
I would have been good on that show except for the gross stuff.
But disgusting. So over the next, actually the next day of training
was completely obliterated because everybody,
90% of the members were all still high,
been up all night on acid.
So we couldn't train the next day and I was pissed.
I told him like, this is a wasted fricking day.
I said, you sons, you know, I'll just give him a hard time.
And then by Saturday we were back training again. And then by Sunday night, I'm sorry, Friday, we were training again. And by Saturday
night, we did a bunch more training through the day, like, you know, navigating the land
living off the living off the land building bunkers and stuff like that. And then it's time to shoot some more for the propaganda video.
So we go back down in the woods and at this, now we're doing a bonfire at the holy spot
and we are burning American flags and we're burning holy Bibles.
While everybody's yelling, F you're Jewish, and death to America, stuff like that.
And I remember the one kid that was pretty clumsy.
He almost fell in the fire trying to light the flag on fire.
And in the video, you can see me grab the other side.
Part of me wanted to just let him fall.
You know, just see him go,
I don't know if he went up in flames or not,
but a little Darwinism.
But I hold the flag, we burn the American flag. We're screaming all that and and they take
they take holy Bibles and
They this is on the video. They lay them face down in the fire and I watched the fire go up
It's coming back down. We've been there a minute
Hell yeah high five and white power all this this stuff. And it's coming back down.
And if you've ever seen like a book in a fire, all these pages, it looks a certain way, kind
of ashy.
Well, the one guy, the Canadian guy, he can't not screw with a fire.
He's over there.
He's probably still got an asymene system.
Who knows?
He's still poking the fire like, oh, man.
So he's stoking it back up well while he's trying to stoke it back up
He flips something over a Bible opens face up, and there's nothing burn on it at all
Like the outside's charred, but there's not a single page burnt
And I'm like okay
That's different, so he's trying to get it started. He starts tearing page by page, gets it on fire, bonfire goes back up.
We're all doing our thing, bonfire comes back down.
He's poking the coals again.
I'll be damned if another Bible doesn't flip open completely unburned.
And I watched them put it on that face first.
Now I know some people with science and they're like, well, in a lot of Bibles, the page is
made out of clay and they don't burn.
Listen, I watched a flag burn.
I watched all that stuff burn.
And I actually have a picture that if you blow it up, I didn't realize it.
I was just taking pictures like everybody else was taking pictures.
But I was in my hotel room one night just going through my pictures and I blew it up
and you can clearly see Holy Bible in the flames.
So I'm a believer. My faith is huge throughout
the book. I would not have been able to do any of it, in my opinion. But I remember when
that second Bible flipped over, one of the base members goes, he goes, man, these effing
Bibles just won't burn. And I remember I did it very nonchalantly, maybe only in my head,
but I did a little Sammy Sosa, you know, to the sky, you know? I'm like, yeah, you get them, Lord.
Yeah, I'm like, yeah, that's funny. By the way, if you want to blow everybody up, y'all just let
Scotty know and I'll be real still right now. But yeah, so after that week, I kind of said,
I got a pretty dumb sense of humor, but I got back to the office and I said, man,
I kind of said, I got a pretty dumb sense of humor, but I got back to the office and I said, man, I've been doing undercover work off and on since 1996.
And I said, I know my skill set takes me to different places and other people.
I said, but I have never had to burn Bibles, burn an American flag, and I damn sure wasn't
with a group of people that went out and stole a goat and sacrificed it at a pagan ritual
and drank his blood.
I said, I've done that in three days with these guys.
And I mean, I felt weird.
I felt weird when I got back.
I just, you know, I didn't even text my pastor.
I'm like, I need you to say a prayer.
I just felt, I don't know, dirty something.
I felt weird, you know?
Aaron Ross Powell Which is weird that guys like that exist
and organize and find other guys like that and get together.
David Morgan It's online.
It's this phone. Aaron Ross Powell I know. phone. Listen, a lot of these kids were young. I say kids because
it was the first alias I ever did where I made myself younger. My whole FBI career,
I was always two years older. It was just easy to remember. I mean, I turned 40 with
the outlaws. So when I turned 42 years later in real life and I'm in, wherever I was at, my calendar or Tennessee,
I'm like, yeah, my other party was a little better.
I'm not gonna lie.
I'm like, you know, the outlaws party was,
I mean, thank you guys for throwing me a party,
but this is not really nothing compared
to when I turned 42 years ago.
But for the base, I had to hustle and get in there fast
because we were getting calls from world working partners because again, this is online, you hop in those groups, there's people from
South Africa, Australia, UK, Norway, you name it, and they're all because it's online. Now
they may not be able to get weapons like we got weapons, but they were even planning on
flying into the States and doing some hate crime. I mean, hate crime. Well, I'm sure
we'd be doing hate crimes, but a hate camp. But they dive in. And flying into the States and doing some hate crime. I mean, hey, well, I'm sure we'd be doing hate crimes but a hate camp
but they dive in and what I saw a lot of is
younger younger guys
Outcasts, yeah
Don't have a job
Can't get a partner
you know and
They just dive down this rabbit hole of hate.
They've probably been bullied and they dive down this rabbit hole of hate.
And it's always, it seems like it goes back to like gangs and cults and stuff like that.
It's that need to belong and they want to bring you in and that's how they get you.
And then power and then being inclusive, having people with your own like mind.
But that's not just on the white supremacy side.
Same things happening on the radical Islamist side.
They're radicalizing you online and then dating you with videos.
You could go into gab.
I don't even have gab still around, but you could go into gab and there would be a group
called 14 Words.
Well that's the 14 Words coined by David Lane.
It is famous in the white supremacy
culture. It says something to the effect I haven't memorized anymore. As I say a lot
of times when I'm speaking, I go, hey, just so you guys know, I appreciate the questions,
but since I retired, I made a conscious decision not to hang out with white supremacists anymore.
Probably a good decision. I'm just saying. I mean, I appreciate you asking me, but-
Were they the wackiest people that you were around?
Probably good. I'm just saying I mean I appreciate you asking me, but they the wackiest people that you were around
It's gonna be close it's obviously the pedophiles are the most well yeah, but it's gonna be close but the
The I don't want to say I'm not easily shocked it's just that I mean you see so much stuff
It's like again. It's just that, I mean, you see so much stuff. It's like, again, it's that proverbial coroner who shows up eating a sandwich where brains are everywhere
because they've seen them, they gotta eat,
they're just used to it.
So there's definitely been some wacky things.
I mean, on the case agent side,
that stuff on the border was pretty wacky.
But undercover wise, these guys, I mean,
they were, I don't know about calling them wacky, but just wise, these guys, I mean, they're
on about calling them wacky, but just they were planning it. I
mean, we what we did is we uncovered violent, we we
uncovered several murder plots. They had found a couple that
they believe were an antifa couple, a couple of counties
over in Georgia. And we went in case to place. The idea idea was, it started, it took a while to come
to fruition because it changed a couple of times,
but essentially what was agreed upon is that
we were all gonna be the Georgia sale.
When I say sale, it's C-E-L-L, which by the way,
it's probably a good time to say the base
in Arabic is Al-Qaeda.
Ah, wow. base in Arabic is Al Qaeda. Wow. So Al Qaeda wanted to have three to five man
sales C L L and I got a redneck accent sales all over the world waiting on that
D day call. Well the base which stands for Al Qaeda wanted three to five man
sales all over the world waiting for the Boogaloo. Wow. You've got kids, 21 year old has no car, has no job, but has an
arsenal in his closet. He's wearing plate carriers or the same plate carriers that
FBI SWAT team wears. It's not cheap stuff and however they're getting their
money either from parents or whatever they're doing, they are building their kit for what they refer to as the day the set off of the race war
So we uncovered those murder plots
I remember
Helter Skelter we got the postponement because once we figured out they were trying to kill people man
We got to slow this thing down and make sure we've got control of it
Much like a murder for hire if you're hiring me to kill somebody
I want to make sure that I got the contract
so you're not out trying to find somebody else
to kill this person.
So we were riding out there
and Helter had not seen the house yet.
And Helter, I'll tell you the plan in a second.
Helter, we're riding out there and Helter goes,
hey, if you don't mind, man,
I'd really like to pop my cherry on this one. Well, you and Helter goes, hey, if you don't mind, man, I'd really like to
pop my cherry on this one.
Well, you and I here pop my cherry, it probably means something different.
Because I was like, what are you talking about?
And then Luke, TMB, told me, he goes, I think he actually wants to participate in the killing.
And he said, man, I've been waiting for this for two years.
He goes, I actually want to be, I want to put one of the bullets in their head.
And I said, well, it's a 22, 25, whatever,
with the silencer on it.
It may take more than one, shouldn't be a big deal.
But the idea was, and this is how much,
this is how much research was done.
We're going to go to a campsite.
We're going to leave everything electronic there.
We're going to leave from there.
We're going to have a car that doesn't come back,
rental car, whatever, fake plates, whatever.
We're going to go to a pay by the hourthe-hour hotel or motel we're gonna go there we're
gonna scrub and scrub and wash and wash to get any flakes of skin that may be
loose to come off as detailed as Vaseline on your eyebrows facial hair so
you don't drop any kind of DNA tape up kind of like WMD. We're going to tape our jacket to our gloves, our
pants to our boots so nothing can leak out. Luke had even done so much research. He had
read that a lot of people who kill somebody for the first time lose control of their bowels.
So he was suggesting we all wear Depends while we go commit the murder. I didn't tell him
I'd ever killed anybody, but I looked at him and said, I think I'm okay. I don't need to wear the pins. So that was the thing. And then we're gonna go into the house, breach our way in murder whoever's there. Because it was like, are there any kids there? Helter's like, I don't have a problem killing the comic kid. Now Helter kind of looked like a normal guy had a computer it job. He said that was a great cover for him because everybody thinks he's just a normal person
in society.
This is a guy who also told me, he said, again, they want to accelerate the downfall.
This guy told me, he said, I voted for Hillary Clinton.
And I was like, I'm in here with neo-Nazis.
They threw me off guard.
I'm like, why would you do that? he goes think about it bro he said we want to
accelerate the collapse of society so she gets in they usually try to defund
the police they make our military weaker there's gonna be riots there's gonna be
all this stuff and there's just gonna be chaos it'll help speed up the downfall
of society. Wow.
That's how that's what they're thinking is. So we got that murder plot going on. And then
you have the Canadian guy and his cell up in actually it was it would have been can't
go back, which is Brian Lindley. They had a cell up in the Maryland area. And I went up and I trained with them.
And they, at that point in time, so it would have been coming up to January of 2020, there
was going to be a huge Second Amendment rally in Virginia because the governor at the time
was pretty liberal, did not like guns, and was going to be making a lot of, was trying
to crack down on guns second amendment
So the idea of those base members was what if that's the set off of the boogaloo?
What if while all those people are there you've got three percenters, which is not illegal you got militia, which is not illegal
But you've got people wanting to do nefarious things most likely you got cops
What if we just pop a couple of rounds nobody know who's shooting at who and everybody and maybe that's the kickoff of the bugaloo again there's not
a lot of forethought and afterthought with these guys it's like what do you
what about the national I mean what about army Navy Air Force Marine what
about freaking cops you know we'll deal with it what about girlfriends I ask him
I go you know you guys talking about procreation all the time I don't see any
women I got a woman she's not for share and they're like, oh, we're just rape them and I go I'm sorry
What because yeah, we're just gonna rape the women on one D day happens and it's the bug look
Yeah, we're just gonna take the women and rape them. I kind of giggled and I said you guys don't have a lot of experience for women
do you
And they're like wow and I go well that stuff might work for a little while, but sooner or later you're
going to have to go to sleep.
You might wake up missing some parts you went to bed with.
I'm like, what are you talking about?
But we uncovered all that and we got enough evidence against them that everybody was happy.
And the week of the takedown, I'm sorry, yeah, it would have been close to the week of the
takedown. I had to postpone it.
I had a lumbar fusion in 2002.
What I didn't know, I thought it was just my disc,
a bulging disc or something, what I didn't know
was that fusion had broken free.
And for about 15 years, I just had nothing.
I had no disc, the cadaver bone dissipated.
So my back was spasming really, really bad.
Like I couldn't get out of the floor.
So I took some Prednisone, got off the floor with electric stim.
I just had to, we had to postpone it for a week.
So then I went and on a Friday I flew into Baltimore, met the case team, drove up Saturday
to Delaware, trained all day with those guys, helped get more information
that everybody wanted, came back late to Baltimore, flew to Atlanta, drove up to try to close
the deal with the Georgia crew.
And I think I got home Monday for a couple of hours.
I went back.
Now I'm meeting with the SWAT teams because we're planning on the takedown and by Wednesday I picked up Luke who lived on
the hundred acre farm and we did a ruse where the car like my car was messed up
I'm like did you hear that actually more divine intervention I was gonna fake
that something was wrong with my car and my truck we're driving all of a sudden
so good BAM like that I get I didn't run over anything. I go did you hear that?
He said yes, I swear if that damn brake caliper froze again. I said, let me pull over
Well, I pulled over the spot swat team wanted me to and then we did a ruse
I was I was around the back of the truck looking and another truck pulls up
I'm like, oh my gosh, man
I can't believe you're here and then I jump in that truck and then
The SWAT team and the bearcats rolling over the hill and they took him without incident
that truck and then the SWAT team and the Bearcats rolling over the hill and they took him without incident. Helter Skelter and Pestilence got picked up
without incident. We kept all that quiet on Wednesday because come Thursday
morning SWAT teams from Washington Field Office and Baltimore Field Office were
going to be hitting that crew so we wanted to keep it quiet. So now Thursday
they get arrested. Now stuff's starting to come out. I'm still in a chat group.
And Friday, I'm watching it.
And they're like, Pell horse, are you there?
And they're like, wait a minute.
Now the affidavits are starting to come out.
It says that there's a federal undercover agent that
infiltrated the base.
And they're like, who's the damn fed in here?
And I'm just being quiet.
And somewhere around 515, the leader of the base,
he went by the monikers Norman Spears
and Roman Wolf.
His real name is Reynaldo Nazzaro.
So you can let this sink in.
Here's an American citizen born in America, went to Villanova, was in the Army, to my
understanding, Army, Intel, and he was contracted at some point for some job in the Department
of Justice, now resides in St. Petersburg, Russia.
And I guess he supposedly teaches English.
They tried to say the base didn't have a leader.
He's definitely the leader.
Wow.
And as a Russian family,
so you can do your own speculation there.
I'm not working that case anymore.
How fucking crazy.
Right?
What was his red pill moment?
Because clearly, if you look at his history,
he was kind of on the liberal side.
Something happened somewhere.
And then he starts spewing crazy stuff.
And then the base gets infiltrated
by journalists from Vice.
Well, then they tighten it.
Every time the base got infiltrated,
they tighten their opsec more and more.
Every propaganda video we did, the rule
was it has to be better than the last one because we're trying to get everybody and
So I'm watching all this roll out
There's no way of feds and hear this that and the other blah blah blah
And then I see Roman finally respond around like five ish on Friday, and he's like I'm not sure
We could have found him
Because he was good
He attended every a meeting which I didn't. He said he
attended every meeting, which maybe that should have been a red flag, but I didn't attend
every training or meeting. And I'm like, okay, he's figured out it's me. And then he said
something else. And then that was it. It says, boom, you've been removed by Roman Wolf. So
I screenshotted that and I sent it to all the case teams all over the United States
and the headquarters FBI. And I said, and I'm out.
Wow.
Yeah, so they went down.
That was a wild case.
And if you want to get into the effects on family and stuff, at that point,
I mean, we're talking 2020.
I started in 96 at a state and local level.
But my wife, we were dating when I was in arc.
So she was kind of used to, hey, I went out and picked up some hookers and got some cocaine stuff.
But clearly there were some very rough times, especially during that three-year period around
the outlaws.
But it's not always easy.
But what she says, because people always ask, and the spouses do not get enough credit at
all, she's not law enforcement.
She's not desensitized in my world. She used
to freak out and be nervous when I'd go in under covers. And what she would do is to
help her cook, she'd move furniture. I'd come home and open the door and trip over
stuff. I'm like, what in the... How did the couch get... Who moved that refrigerator?
You know, crazy stuff.
But one day, what she said is she said, look, she just had to give it up to God.
She's like, I can sit here and worry every day and I'm going to kill myself worrying
about it.
But I essentially don't have control.
I got to pray that you're good at what you do.
And you know, if it's your time to go, he can take me anytime he wants.
But finishing the base case is the first time, like an idiot, I should have realized it,
but I realized after an undercover, I have to decompress.
I have to kind of, okay, all right, I get my mind, all right, that's done, okay.
So does she.
And we were sitting out on the back porch having an adult beverage.
I might have been smoking a cigar.
But she said something to the effect of something.
I was at the base and she was like, yeah, I was covering you in prayer.
And I kind of giggled.
And she's like, she looks at me and I'm like, what?
I mean, we've been doing this for a while, right?
I mean, you don't have to be worried about me, worried about me.
We've been doing this a minute.
She jerked a knot in my butt, man.
She looked at me, stern, and she said, let me tell you something.
You were my husband, and I'm your wife, and it's my job to cover you.
And when you're going on these things, I'm covering you.
And I stopped smiling, and I said, I greatly appreciate that, and I'm sorry if I insulted
you, but thank
you.
Wow.
Craziness.
What a life you've had.
Listen brother, thank you very much for being here.
It was great talking to you, great hearing these stories, fucking amazing.
So insane and so interesting.
I do have a wacky one, I forgot.
Another one?
Yeah, you want a wacky one?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's a murder for hire basically. It was, I got hired to do me and another task force officer who went with me on the undercover.
Essentially they thought we were bikers and they ended up hiring us to do four home invasions and
murder two people. So you want to talk about wacky people. This is towards the end of my career.
Her name was Tammy. She gets in, it's all in the news and the court records. We go and we meet the husband.
We thought the husband was the one wanting to get us and we were like off a dirt road. It's pretty
rough, man. Like walking up to the place, I'm like, hey man, watch out sharp object, sharp object, TB,
MRSA, FC, you know. So we meet him and he's like, oh, that's really not my plan. It's my old lady's
plan. I go, where's my old lady's plan.
I go, where's your old lady?
Well she's asleep.
Are you going to wake her up?
You want me to?
I didn't drive all the way out here to talk to you if you're not planning it.
I'm here to make money.
So we pick her up, she comes out, gets in the truck, we start driving around looking
at these locations of where they wanted it because they knew some people that were dealing
dope, they had dens on where the guns and the money were so they thought and they
wanted us to do the home invasions and kill them but while we're riding around
she says if you need somebody torture I'm really good in torture I love
torture I'm driving she's in the passenger seat clawing herself. She's weathered. Yeah, she's weathered, tweaking probably.
And this is how my mind works.
So she's like, yeah, I'm into torture.
She goes, you know that you can take a hanger
and bend it on the end and shove it up a man's penis
and rip it back out and then pour salt in the penis.
When the other guys in the back of the truck are going,
oh my gosh, what she didn't know was two weeks prior to that
I had my second lumbar fusion which fixed my first lumbar fusion
That wasn't the problem. They messed up my privates and they had to dry calf me
So when she's talking about this hanger going in and out, I'm kind of feeling I'm like I think I know what the similar to that
So she says that and then she says, yeah, and you can take a PVC pipe
and you can run it up somebody's anus and then run barbed wire up it and rip it out.
And we pull up to a red light and I leaned over and I go, why are you so angry? And she's
like, Oh, now I said, are you sure you don't want to kill these people? She's like, Oh,
no, I'm too well known. But if you need somebody tortured, I can do it. Then on the next ride, or riding to the next place, she
says that her husband went on a cocaine bender and she told him never to do that
again. Cocaine meth something. She said cocaine, but he had been gone for three
days. She couldn't find him. He comes home after being high three, four days and he
crashes. She's so pissed at him. She tells us the story that he's naked, she takes a
two-by-four, shoves it under his back legs,
takes an industrial stapler,
and staples his scrotum to the board.
He didn't wake up.
That's how down he was, or his crash was.
But when he did, he finds himself hooked to a board,
and he's screaming for help, and she wouldn't help him.
He had to call a friend to do it.
So if you think the story's BS,
if you think the story's BS, we confirmed it with a husband. He's like, Oh yeah, yeah, she did it. I ain't
never had no woman do nothing like that to me before. And I'm like, so my buddy in the
back, he goes, uh, you really don't like men, do you? And she's like, I've been unlucky
in love. But in my head, Joe, that's when I'm looking over and I go, these are my people. This is my skill set. This is what I get. I don't get Wall Street.
Jesus Christ. So yeah, there's all kinds of stuff like that, man.
God damn. That's a crazy life, brother. Yep. So now, now it's book. I still teach alert.
Tell everybody the book. The book is code named Pell Horse
And it's how I went undercover to expose America's Nazis
But it's not just white supremacy. It's got the outlaws. It's got
Personal stuff the life there's murder for hire cases all in there the pedophile stories in there
public corruption cases where I mean some of the targets like I got put in a corner,
I underestimated. I'm dealing with a guy who's toothless and a mountain back woods guy and he
beat me at chess that night and I ended up with a bag of cocaine open shoved in my face. He's got a
sawed off shotgun, a red bone hounds growling in my crotch and he's like, if I find out you're the
law, you're dead man. Do it if you're not a cop. I had to figure out a way to get
out of that, you know. So there's stuff like that all in there. I bonded with that guy
too. You know?
That's part of your skill set, right?
And when somebody sent me his obituary, I felt sad.
Wow.
This is my last line from him and I think you'll like it. These are some of the people you
deal with. He said, now Scott, I'm gonna speed it up because he was on pills a lot and he drank
all day and did cocaine all day. So it was a constant battle of being pickled. But he's like,
I think he died five years before I met him. I was pretty sure it's the dope keeping him alive.
I think he died. He just didn't know it yet. But he would be like, now Scott, you know I don't do cocaine anymore.
And I'd go, I know man.
He goes, I used to do a boatload of it, but I don't do it anymore.
I say, I know.
And he pours cocaine in his hand and goes, but this right here, that's just a bump.
And I'm looking going, what?
You just did cocaine.
And he said, and you you know I don't sell
cocaine anymore either and I'd say I know man because I used to sell truck
loads of it I said I know I know you don't do it now but if you need them
five ounces I can get them for you for this much money you know that's the
kind of stuff man you got to find humor in that but yeah may he rest in peace
may he rest in peace well thank you Scott thank you for everything that was a lot
of fun thank you appreciate it I Thank you for everything. That was a lot of fun. Thank you. Appreciate it. I appreciate you, man. And good luck on the book. I guarantee it's gonna sell like crazy. One more time, Jamie, throw that up there so everybody can take a look at it. There it is. code name pale horse. It's available now. Did you do an audiobook? Yes, I'm sorry. Thank you for saying that. It's my voice. Thank you. Yeah, it's my voice. Actually, that was something I was told I needed to say the so yeah no offense to the other peers of
mine that have done books or just mentor people that have done it before me but
if I click on it and I hear there I was in the basement I'm like what in the
hell that has to be yes so I read the book and then we'll see what happens as far as TV and stuff like that goes.
Someone's gonna wanna do something, I'm sure.
Yeah, I did. I've been on, again, the tactical stuff. I've been in armor on movie sets in Tennessee.
I actually did a cameo. In the movie world, I have one kill under my belt.
Alright.
But that's the amount. I'm just trying
to pay it forward, still trying to learn, still trying to do good things. Well, tell
us the positive. I know something good is going to come out of this because the story
is incredible. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thanks brother. Thanks for being here.
All right. Bye everybody. Bye!