Witnessed: Devil in the Ditch - Borderlands | 8. Survival
Episode Date: October 19, 2021Nothing really ends in the borderlands. Want the full story? Unlock all episodes of Witnessed, ad-free, right now by subscribing to The Binge. Plus, get binge access to brand new stories dropping o...n the first of every month — that’s all episodes, all at once, all ad-free. Just click ‘Subscribe’ on the top of the Witnessed show page on Apple Podcasts or visit GetTheBinge.com to get access wherever you listen. A Campside Media & Sony Music Entertainment production. Find out more about The Binge and other podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts and follow us @sonypodcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Camp site media.
In a dusty field in far west Texas, it's a simple metal building, surrounded by the
rusting shells of classic cars.
Well, you're an Alpine Texas and you're at the biggest mechanic shop in the biggest
town in the biggest county in the biggest state outside of Alaska.
That's where you are.
Bam Automotive.
Sue Nia's run Bam Automotive alongside her husband Van since 2004.
Sometime before that she lived not far away in the town of Marathon,
just another dot on the map and the vastness of the big bend
In Marathon Susan mother ran a little country bar called Mel's place for locals
Cowboys can't even get all drunk up and those damn cowboys bloodload them horses out in trailers and get them right them into the bar
No silly cowboys get there on those horses drunk that those horses would be sliding and get them right into the bar. Those silly cowboys that get there on those horses, drunk darts.
Those horses would be sliding on that down concrete floor.
We'd be moving chairs and tables out of the wagon case
to horses because they were on the slick floor.
Those cowboys would be drunk darts.
They'd be huckerd over the horn of that saddle laughing.
Their ass was off to just ride those horses around the beer.
It was mild barred. Why don't they call them Mel's?
They can call my mother's name was Mel's.
Oh, okay.
And in fact, she shot herself in that bar.
Yeah, she, uh, I was 13 and she carried a pistol in her money box.
And so, the night that she shot herself, she thought she had shut the money box good.
Of course, she had had a beer too.
And, uh, when she picked the money box up, it opened and the pistol hit the floor and of course
she had it ready to go.
Well it went off and shot her in the stomach.
So that almost killed her.
It didn't kill her.
Hell no!
You do mean to die.
Marathon was also Sheriff Rick Thompson's hometown.
Su grew up with him, and she told me, even back in high school, Rick had made an impression.
Everybody loved him.
I gave him every piece of his girlfriend, where he always wanted to be his girlfriend.
As the years passed, like so many of the people in the Big bend. Sue's admiration for Rick only grew.
Because he had everything the world was going on.
His family was just perfect.
Him working as the sheriff.
I mean, he had the world by the tail.
And Sue felt the same way about another West Texas personality.
Robert Chambers.
And I've told you Robert never ever.
There was never a time he came by the shop
that he didn't give Van a big hug.
He was just as sweet as he could be.
Fun, very charismatic, persuasive, just a heck of a guy, really.
What I found at BAM Automotive was pretty typical of a lot of the reporting I did on this story.
On the one hand, there were people like Su's husband Van.
I tried to get him to talk before Su arrived.
But as soon as I said the name's Robert Chambers and Rick Thompson, he clamped up, so he was
too busy to talk.
This wasn't because of shyness or some individual need for anonymity, but according to Sue, because Van was part of a coordinated effort to keep quiet.
It's unfortunate he won't talk to you, but seeing his friends decided it would not be the best thing.
They've all gotten together and talked among themselves, and they just don't want to talk about that time.
And plus being a small community and client-ish and you just don't talk about each other. On the other hand, there were locals like Sue.
Happy to talk.
To give me a big West Texas welcome.
But when it came to the actual information she was prepared to reveal, well, let's just
say she stuck to what sounded like a script.
We all just loved Rick, just dearly loved him.
He was just as sweet as he could be.
He was always great to go.
Always great to go.
Good with everybody.
Everybody loved him.
Everybody loved him.
I really, you know.
You couldn't ask for a nicer guy in the entire universe.
And I guess I shouldn't have been too surprised
about this attitude, really.
Because the story of Sheriff Rick Thompson
and the smuggler Robert Chambers
isn't just a painful memory from the past.
The legacy of those two men and that horse trailer full of cocaine, it doesn't feel resolved.
Who else was involved?
What else did they done?
Were there other secrets buried when Rick and Robert pled guilty in the government wrapped
up its case?
But there's another reason too.
Rick and Robert, they were both sentenced to life in prison.
But by the time I arrived in the big bend to look into this whole story, you had to watch
what you said.
Because they were back.
From Campside Media, the first season of Witnessed, this is Borderlands.
I'm Rob Domingo, Chapter 8, Survival.
When Sheriff Rick Thompson was sentenced to the Federal Courthouse in Pekas on a warm spring
day in 1992. For a
lot of people in the big bend, it wasn't just sad. It made them feel lost. Who were the
good guys? Who were the bad guys? Which way was up? I heard this from just about everyone
I talked to.
Like Martha Stafford, the long-time teacher who remembered the share of doping his hat
to the ladies of Marfa.
It really was a defining moment for a lot of us.
You know, it was, it kind of shook your faith.
I'm more cynical probably because of it, you know,
when your own sheriff brings in tons of cocaine, you know, into the town and leaves it unguarded.
Hello.
You know, I remember town and leaves it unguarded. Hello.
You know, I remember saying, well, heck if he had called me and said, Martha, I need you to drive a horse trailer to Houston, I
Would have done it. He was the sheriff.
You know, you you wouldn't have questioned it. You would have done it.
Even Rod Pountain, the famous, I'm not a cat,
lawyer who represented Robert Chambers in the case.
He sensed a shift.
A lot of the emotions that the communities out here had
about the Thompson and Chambers case.
It was more than just Chambers being a big red lord,
so to speak.
It was the bringing down the icon of West
Texas Rick Thompson, ensuring that his feet were made of clay. Sort of been the old frontier
ethos, was the self-image, I think, a lot of the ranchers had, and they were still trying
to hang on to that image, that portrait of themselves, that Rick Thompson was emblematic of.
He was the ideal of that spirit.
And when he fell, that image cracked like a portrait
being dashed to the ground,
which would let everybody have to reflect on whether or not
their images of themselves was accurate or not.
It was then then the era.
Boom, the curtain closed.
Better pill for a lot of people as well.
And that bitter pill, it didn't just hit the people who admired the sheriff.
This case left everyone with a taste of something corrupt.
Something unjust.
Including the guys who should have been the big winners of it all.
Dale Stinson and Kelly Cook, the federal agents who had taken down Chambers and Thompson.
I wasn't even 30 years old yet.
And this is a huge case.
This is what would be deemed a career case.
You'd think for Kelly Cook, this kind of case would lead to promotions.
Ackolades.
Heck, even a parade.
But he told me his fellow officers weren't exactly eager to celebrate the fact that he'd
exposed a crooked cop.
And maybe that's because Rick Thompson, the sheriff of Presidio County for 18 years,
yeah, he might have been guilty, but it was almost like some local guys were asking,
what gave Dale and Kelly the right to take him down?
There was some resentment from some of our co-workers, and we kind of both paid for it, I think,
you know, because people that came in to work for Dale after all of this.
I think they were influenced
and didn't respect him the way they should have.
And for Dale, the disrespect from his colleagues
wasn't the only problem.
He'd taken down a big time smuggler and a corrupt sheriff,
but had it stemmed the flow of drugs into the US,
you can probably answer that one
for yourself.
Dale felt the DEA's approach to the war on drugs was increasingly futile.
He was going after a small fish in a big pond, so the true believer took on a higher
calling.
He quit the agency at the age of 51, to become an Anglican priest.
And as for Kelly, well, Kelly was at the start of his career when this all went down.
And he was a local boy, liked by the same West Texas cops who might have thought Dale Stinson
was an uptight school marm of a fad.
But even then, it didn't go much better for him.
The same thing happened with me, you know, after my boss's left,
a new boss came in, I think he was influenced with people that were just resentful
that I did this and they didn't.
And they kind of shunned me from the local DEA office.
I got transferred to El Paso after all that and, you know,
it's certainly what my desire, but that's what happened.
So like I say, it was a, I think it was a curse and a blessing.
Maybe it is what it is.
So at the end of the day, the guys who had exposed the corruption, no one wanted them around.
That was the legacy of the Thompson and Chambers case, a kind of silent
curse over the big bend. As for Rick Thompson himself, he became kind of a ghost, not dead,
but seemingly gone forever from the region, and people could remember him however they
chose. And then, in April 2018, something unexpected happened.
Other stories will still keep an eye on this afternoon, a former
Presidio County Sheriff convicted of drug smuggling is said to be a free man today.
Rick Thompson has been in jail since 1992 for his role in smuggling a midnight
hall of cocaine.
He and another accomplice received
life terms.
26 years after Rick Thompson heard Judge Jerry Buckmeyer give him a life sentence, one
that it seemed would condemn him to spend the rest of his days behind bars.
He suddenly became a free man.
All thanks to a change to federal sentencing guidelines for nonviolent drug offenders under President Obama
It enabled the sheriff to successfully petition for early release. He was out
And so I tried to do what no one had been able to do to get him to talk
The full extent of Rick Thompson's relationship with Robert Chambers, the story behind his old nickname, La Puerta.
There were so many unanswered questions about what the sheriff was really up to in the years before his downfall.
And in the silence that still hangs there, like suspicions, suspicions that have taken on a life of their own.
I wanted to ask Rick about these.
I wanted to hear his side of things.
I wasn't going to take him at his word.
How could I?
But I wanted to see if talking to him could help me separate truth from legend.
There is one very clear example that speaks to why that's important.
The story I first told on this podcast.
About the teenage
Lico Miller and the night he came home to the border village of Paso, La
Hedas to discover Robert Chambers holding his father hostage. When I first
heard whispers about it, I'd been told a very different tale that Sheriff Rick
Thompson had crossed the Rio Grande that night and killed Lico's father. That's
why I tracked down Lico in the first place, to find out what had happened.
And when I told Lico in that first conversation what I heard, there was a brief silence
on the line.
Then his reply,
No, that isn't true.
I saw my father three months after that night.
But even in Lico's telling, there were big
questions about the sheriff's involvement. So I wanted to ask Rick, were you really
the guy who handed Lico and his brother over to the Mexican police? Because Lico
admitted his memory of that guy didn't actually match the sheriff's physical
description. That guy was thin and wirierry. Rick was big, tall,
husky. But that inconsistency? Doesn't mean the sheriff wasn't part of the action that
night. A DEA agent later testified in federal court about the incident. And he said,
yep, sheriff Rick Thompson and Robert Chambers were both involved in the hunt for Lico's dad that night in Paso LaHitas.
So I guess it all comes down to this point. Rick and Robert were working together. That's a fact.
But what was the full extent of that work? And what was Rick's motivation for doing it?
Did Rick think helping a guy like Chambers was the way to make the border safer?
Was he sliding down a slippery slope, telling himself that bending the law was his only option
in a lawless land? Or was he just shamelessly stuffing his pockets the whole time?
I needed to know.
I sent the sheriff letters. I called two of his sons. I had nice chats. Texted with
him about my reporting, told them about the show, explained why I hoped their dad would
tell his story. They were helpful, polite. Said they passed on messages, and I believe
them. But every time, the answer from the sheriff was the same. Silence. Finally,
I send him a letter asking for comment on all the information and stories in this show,
three weeks before the release of our first two episodes. Again, nothing but the whisper
of a tumbleweed blowing in the wind. But in this silence, the sheriff hasn't quite disappeared.
Rick gets out of jail, goes to Midland, he's working, got a new lease on life, per se.
Customs agent Kelly Cook might well have assumed Rick's sentencing would be the last time he would
ever see him again. But then, in February 2020, Kelly's dad died.
The obituary came out in the newspaper and I asked my mom, I said,
hey, do you think Rick and Barbara Jean will come to this?
And she just kind of looked at me and said, uh, no. I said, uh, you know, okay, I just curious.
Kelly's dad, the old game warden, had been friends with Rick long before Kelly busted
him, but as the funeral service approached, Kelly thought, given all that it happened,
Rick wasn't going to show to pay his respects in person.
But at the funeral, sure enough, during the middle of this in Warks, Rick and Barbara Jean.
And I wasn't nervous.
I was kind of anxious like, okay, you know.
I hadn't talked to Rick in, was it 20, 26 years or something like that?
So I didn't really know what to expect.
I wasn't gonna avoid him,
but and I was kind of curious, anxious to talk to him
because I thought, well, shit, man,
he goes crazy, at least I got plenty of backup, you know.
He saw me and he walked over to me,
and he stuck out his hand and said,
how are you, young man?
And I said, I'm done, I'm done, okay,
considering how are you?
And he said, I'm very blessed.
I'm very blessed, man.
And I think a lot of people,
that was the first time they had seen him,
a lot of law enforcement officers.
And nobody knew what to expect, but it was
almost as if he never missed a beat. You know, he's back in that community, he's shaking hands
and he's telling stories and it's like he never missed a beat. And that was kind of weird for me
because I kind of thought, well, but you've missed a lot of beats, you know.
More after the break.
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I was standing with Kelley and Dale on the side of the road, a little south of Alpine.
Next to the big property, Robert Chambers once owned. That's where he was arrested.
The guys that actually came out on that team did go in, but Dale and I never did.
I didn't know if Dale did.
I didn't either.
This was the property where Robert built his enormous horse stable.
It's still there.
The place where he was going to flatten the top of the hill to build a big house that
looked like a pyramid.
What'd you never got around to doing?
I mean, that's a great location.
Oh it is.
You can see the law coming from miles around.
It was always rumored or alleged that Robert's cash was sunk on these livestock ponds on his property.
That he had taken large PVC pipe and just stuffed as much money as he could in them and then sealed the ends and sunk them in these ponds.
And of course there was no way to verify that.
The livestock ponds are still here today, and still undrained.
They were never corroborated enough where you could have got a search warrant.
It was probably one of the urban myths linked to the guy.
There were so many urban myths attached to this guy, separating fact from fiction and getting enough to have
a search warrant, not into impossible.
There were things about Robert that Dale and Kelly just couldn't explain.
He'd sunk tons of money into the property.
The stables, plans for that pyramid house, intricate rock fencing that was said to cost
$100,000.
And yet, it's just always amazing that Robert put so much money into the surroundings
and continued to live in a beat down trailer house.
That's why I think so much of his money went here.
But he was content living in a huddle.
Kelly and Dale were pretty sure.
A lot of that money was left over when Robert Chambers went to prison.
Robert's cat for the horse trailer smuggling alone was going to be $500,000 from the cartels, with another
$500,000 going to the sheriff.
The feds did eventually seize the sizeable amount of Roberts land and properties.
$284,000 worth to be precise.
But there's no way that was everything, considering the tons and tons of pot and cocaine
Roberts smuggled over the years.
So the question becomes, where did those millions of dollars in drug profits go?
I didn't kid myself that I was going to find that money, but I was more interested in
another treasure hunt.
I wanted to find Robert Chambers himself, and that's how I ended up driving down Pinto Canyon Road.
The road begins as Highway 2810, just on the southwest side of Marfa.
It's wide and paved when you leave town, and it stays that way for 32 miles as it crosses
a wide expanse of high desert.
But as you head up a mountain pass, the pavement ends, the road narrows, and the hairpin turns
begin.
Soon, you've left any semblance of civilization behind, and enter the world that feels older
and harsher, with a road that seems to hang by a figure-down on the side of the craggy
cliffs.
I was driving on that treacherous stretch, because I heard Robert Chambers' brother Johnny
was likely somewhere near the bottom, still living on the family ranch.
I thought I could get stories, maybe an introduction, but Johnny wasn't returning my calls.
People said that Johnny was like that though.
Just show up, was the advice.
Then bring a couple cases of Bud Light, and if you do, he'll have more to say.
After making it down from the canyons, I followed the road along the river to its dead
end in a border town called Candelaria. It was a place Robert knew well as a boy, a
mishmash of small houses and trailer homes, a poor, isolated outpost where people have
to fend for themselves.
There once was a schoolhouse here where Roberts' mother taught.
Mexican kids would run across a footbridge over the river to attend class.
And a small store sold some essentials.
Bread, eggs, ice cream.
That's all gone now.
The feds destroyed the footbridge after 9-11.
To make America safe from terror, they said.
It was not far from this point in the river where the Mexican drug lord Amado Coriofuentes
had handed off a ton of cocaine to Robert Chambers one night in early December 1991.
The ton that would soon make its way
into the Presidio County Sheriff's Horse Trailer
at the fairgrounds in Marfa.
But that was a long time ago,
not even a memory for some people in the town.
The first person I saw was a young girl.
I asked her about the Chambers ranch.
She gave me directions in Spanish.
Zige El Camino, she said pointing.
Luego Vela de Urucha, Luego Alisquieta. My Spanish is limited, but I understood, head
out of town, right, then left. Her directions were good. I got there as the light was getting
low. To a place where it had all started, Chambers Ranch, but the
gate was locked. And when I called Johnny again, no answer. I was stuck there with an 18 pack
of Bud Light. I hate Bud Light. So I wasn't going to get an introduction to Robert from his brother, or anyone else.
So I figured I had only one option to track him down, knock on his door, and hope for the
best.
Unlike Rick, Robert hadn't had to rely on a federal sentencing reform to get out of prison.
He had got a deal with prosecutors by agreeing to testify against the sheriff if the case
went to trial.
When he was released from prison in 2005, there hadn't been any news reports like there
were for the sheriff.
He was just another felon walking out through the gates one day, back into the world.
I was told these days Robert was living somewhere in North Texas, working as something called
a landman.
Boy, you require property for a pipeline company to build on.
I drove up to the address I had for him, in a small city about an hour southwest of Fort
Worth.
It was a little bungalow tucked into a small cul-de-sac.
It was the only house I saw in the neighborhood with a no-trust passing sign.
I walked up the front pathway, knocked on the door, and a big guy opened it.
Over six feet tall, with meaty arms, his hair was buzzed, with the same scruffy beard he'd had in the pictures,
except it was now gray.
Robert Chambers, the scourge of the big bend, was now towering over me.
Standing on his porch, I told him who I was. The story
I was reporting. He didn't wave me inside, but he didn't slam the door in my face. He
gave a half-disgusted grin and said, that was a long time ago. I don't think there's
really anything more that needs to be said about it. That was pretty much what I got from Robert that day. I asked
a few more questions, but his answers, they never got more revealing. When I asked him why the
sheriff would risk so much to smuggle drugs with him, he replied, desperate people to desperate shit.
After that he muttered, and I got to go, and shut the door.
I was left, standing there with my pen, and a mostly empty notebook.
After my short visit to Robert's house, I managed to find his cell number, and I called
him.
He didn't pick up.
I left a message.
He didn't return it.
I texted.
Nothing.
But I kept trying.
And then, one day I called and for some reason, probably a mistake, something different happened.
I grabbed my recorder and put the phone on speaker. Robert? Hey, this is Rob Domingo. I've spent even your Porsche quite a long time ago and can you hear me okay?
But first Robert made it clear he didn't want to talk, just as he had that day on his
porch.
But sometimes interviewees say they don't want to talk, but they still want to tell you
something.
And as I kept asking questions, that's something started to come out.
Robert seemed like he wanted to do what a lot of other people in the big band wanted to
do.
Defend Rick Thompson. was what I was doing. Nothing. They got fucked up on that lap. They don't round
sit it. Now, that's a time here to what? Two, three months versus 15 talking years. Are you serious?
They're trying to fuck hell over. Look, the guy is a good man. He served at community and he did by being means that he needed to do.
He took out those people there and they should be checking for that in audio.
He still had a friend today.
He will always be my friend and that's it, dude.
Yeah.
What Robert's saying here in defending the sheriff is basically the thing that they got caught
doing together, the drug bust, that was it, a one-time deal.
No one in law enforcement told me that Robert and Rick's partnership had been a one-off. People who had dug into this story like Dale Stinson and Kelly Cook, they were pretty
sure the smuggling history between Robert and Rick went back years.
And I told Robert that.
I just want to let you know that since interviewed dozens of people mainly of law enforcement
and federal officials and so forth, I don't spark his line, I'm going to call you on
it then.
Well, they've done their story and this is from multiple sources because they've been I basically told Robert what I had. I told him about the details Dale and Kelly had told
me about building their case against him.
There's some great stories about what they supposedly did to surveil you and found and um, why is driving cars and all kinds of stuff.
Uh, I've been...
I don't know what you're talking about.
Well, they probably didn't tell me you.
I don't believe I ever saw those other Parker Stan next to me
because it had to be there.
Now, it's been his last day all there. The longer we stayed on the phone, the angrier he was getting.
Like he was about to blow.
Going to literally fly off the handle.
Like Nancy Bert remember him doing.
But then he'd pull himself back.
He'd simmer down.
Then the anger would flare up, like oil in an overheated
pan.
And it was a day. It was my responsibility, and I take full exemptions of that responsibility.
And I fucked it up because I entrusted my ray on God, who was a fucking smidge for the
God damn DEA.
Yep, Robert was still fuming.
Not about anything he'd done wrong, but about how Sam Thomas had turned on him.
Become Dale and Kelly's key informant, and tip them off to that horse trailer full of
cocaine.
Every few minutes, Robert would say, I need to go, dude. I need to stay on the line.
I'd ask one last question. Robert would answer. Then he'd let me sneak in another question.
But after about ten minutes, it was clear I was out of lives.
Leave me alone, Rob, he said. But he wasn't quite done. He had a few final angry words. And perhaps, in his mind at least,
they were the most honest words he had for me that day. Because Robert said this whole story.
It all boiled down to this. A cautionary tale. This to tell these youngsters that he's sticking love to Parker's that make the wrong choices and why
They get off into something
Where there is only two options
Of survival
One you're gonna go to parking prison and number two you're gonna die there are no three options
That's it I watched it all my life and that's it.
I gotta go man. It would be the last thing Robert Chambers ever said to me.
More after the break.
Katherine Palmer wasn't allowed to be in contact with her old friend Robert Chambers
when she was the secretary for Rick Thompson.
But as soon as she quit, she and Robert started talking again.
And as the years passed, they kept talking.
We would call and usually just to check and see how my daughter and I were doing and I have over a couple dozen letters and sweet cards
that he sent me and here's one. It's a Valentine's card. Don't think that Robert
isn't a romantic with a nice picture of himself.
Catherine's take on Robert is totally different from some others I've spoken to you for this
podcast.
People like Nancy Burton, who remembered Robert transforming from a friend into a man she
experiences a violent and abusive predator, or Liko Miller, who encountered Robert only
briefly as a mortal threat.
Catherine's take on Robert?
Well, it's tender. Robert only briefly is a mortal threat. Catherine's take on Robert?
Well, it's tender.
Like the letters Robert would write her from prison.
Sweet letters, just checking up on us
and I would write him back and then he called periodically.
They were Christmas, Mother's Day.
Hope you and Sophia have a wonderful Christmas.
He has nice handwriting.
There's a beautiful signature.
You know, Carol, show you the one
where he sent a picture of himself.
He signed these cards,
super friend Robert Chambers.
And Catherine didn't think she was the only one getting them.
He cares about a lot of people and,
and this is how he talks to people.
He just wants to know how you're doing and if you're okay.
And he always says, give yourself a big hug and a sugar.
Catherine didn't just think Robert was a good friend.
She thought he was kind of an extraordinary person.
She'd written up a reflection that she asked
if she could redo us.
Texas Ranger walking Jackson, once said of Robert Chambers that had he gone the other way.
He would have been one of the greatest lawmen Texas had ever seen.
At the time he was sitting at the end of my desk, talking to a number of other lawmen in the room,
and none of them disputed that.
and none of them disputed that. Here was Joaquin Jackson, this famous Texas Ranger,
saying basically the same thing Rick Thompson had
at his infamous press conference.
Cops and Crooks are just about the same caliber,
except ones got a badge.
That's what was so amazing when I heard him say that,
because that conversation had been in our office
and nobody disputed it.
And I think there are other cops that will tell you, you know, you have to think like a
criminal to be a good cop.
And you have to think like a cop to be a good criminal.
It's a two way street.
For Catherine, that was part of a deeper lesson about this story, that two way street of
contradictions.
Catherine had thought about this a lot.
You will hear a great many contradictions to the story, and no matter who you talk to,
or how many people tell you this story from their perspective, there will be those
contradictions that will be hard to square, but the truth lies within contradictions
because the truth of this story lies somewhere in the end between. Even if
Robert were to tell his story and tell the whole truth, start to finish, no holds barred, no one would ever
really believe it because Robert has become a legend.
And like with any legend, people want to believe the larger than life story.
They want to believe the fantastic story.
And some of those larger than life stories are true and some are not. But why they did it
is their story to tell. I see what Catherine is saying here about fact and fiction in the lives of
people like Robert. But to be honest with you, I think it misses a crucial point because the stories
of people like Robert Chambers
and Rick Thompson aren't just theirs to tell. As I chased down the history of these two
men, I learned about so many other people who were swept up and harmed by the events
they unleashed.
First start, Rick and Robert's families. Both had wives and children, and when they went
away, they lost
their husbands and fathers.
The families were forced to scrape by, forced to live with the fallout of the crime.
And then there are the people who felt the impact of Robert and Rick's actions that
can't revel in their larger-than-life stories, because they didn't survive those years.
Who knows how many victims there were from the guns and drugs conveyor belt that moved
across the borderlands while Robert and Rick were working together.
There were the famous casualties of the larger drug war, the narcos of course, like Pablo
Acosta, who died in a hail of gunfire, and the good cops, like DEA agent Kiki Kamarena, who chased down
drugs mugglers like Acosta, until they too met a violent end.
But there were tens of thousands of quieter deaths, too.
Occasionally in reporting this story, I'd hear about those quieter deaths, particularly
the ones that hit home in the Big Bend region, that were intimately tied up on what was going on with Rick and Robert.
Susan Woodward sprigs, the woman who remembered Robert playing my cheating heart tour.
Tell me about Robert's reaction to one of those deaths.
He did call me when Tray died and was crying.
Tray was Susan's brother,
and he had been one of Robert's best friends.
They'd battled school yard bullies as kids.
Then Trey had worked for Robert,
years later as his right-hand man.
He said, he was the best little soldier I had.
And that's a quote.
What do you think he meant by the word soldier?
I know he meant because of his business, his cartel business, his business of running
guns and drugs and whatever across the border.
Trey was his workhorse. I'm sure.
But Tray eventually succumbed to that life, not dramatically in a shootout like Pablo Acosta,
but slowly, from the very stuff that was making Robert and Rick rich. Infected with Hepatitis
C from hair when used, Tray's last couple years of relative sobriety were too late. He died
at the age of 54.
And for Susan, Tray's death wasn't her only tragedy. Her sister Emily was gunned down
on the street and outlying a few months before Rick and Robert imported their ton of cocaine.
Emily was just 29. Her husband was the murderer. He was a guy who used to hang out
with Robert Chambers in his outlaws.
I've always felt like I was dropped off
at the wrong place.
I found Buddhism luckily.
And it helped me with, it helped me not drink myself to death, you know, because I was
on the road to that after Emily died.
The violence of that time and place, it was staggering.
So many men and women in the big bend region died young, suddenly, horribly.
But even though Robert Chambers was the ringleader of that world, a world also presided over
by Sheriff Rick Thompson.
Susan, when she talks about Robert, she sounds almost sorry for him, like he's another of that time. He's, I think, trying to...
Oh, he's got to stay on the straight and narrow, and he's probably not the same person,
because he was wild and free.
And when you cage a wild animal like that. I think it changed him.
I don't think he's the same man he was.
He's a lot more mellow because he's older.
And I wish him well.
I bear no ill towards him.
We were all young and stupid. And what he did was step into that wild frontier
kind of mentality to his to his detriment.
Rick and Robert, I started this story by calling them a cop and an outlaw, but they ended up each playing
both roles, sometimes protectors and sometimes exploiters of the land they called home.
Both haunted with memories of regret, in the endless days and months and years of their
imprisonment.
The big bend is in many ways even more desolate and unsparing than when those men left it in 1992
Smuggling continues undeterred even as the federal government has poured billions of dollars into militarizing the border
The land itself
Pummeled by drought overuse and our changing climate has only grown less hospitable
overuse and our changing climate has only grown less hospitable. But the unforgiving desert in the rugged mountains, the hard life, it's kept its hold on the
free spirits who have always been attracted to this place.
And something about that harsh environment kindles an unmistakable warmth in the people.
As I knocked on doors and cold-called potential sources, asking them about the region's dark
history, about its scars.
I felt that warmth often.
And the more I talked to people about the region's past, the more I become convinced
that as much as the Big Ben region feels timeless, something fundamental changed there with
the fall of Rick Thompson and Robert Chambers.
Gone is the mythical portrait of this place as the last bastion of the Old West.
Lost are the fabled figures of the incorruptible Laman and the Rogesh outlaw.
They've both drifted away into the night on a cold desert wind.
But that wind, sometimes it heats up.
Worlds into a roaring dust devil brings to life the stories of these relics, lawmen,
and outlaw, in bar room chatter and long talks through the evening, sitting on porches
out in the high desert, gazing up at the brilliant array of stars that have always
shines so dramatically above the borderlands.
Thank you for listening to Borderlands, the first season of Witnessed.
Borderlands was reported and hosted by me, Rob Domingo, and written by me,
Eric Benson and David Waters.
Eric Benson is our supervising producer.
David Waters is our executive producer.
It came side the executive producers are Josh Dean, Vanessa Gregoriatis, Adam Hough, and Matt Cher.
Our field producers are Ryan Katz, Travis Bubenek, and Jesse Basham.
Our associate producers are Leo Schick and Lydia Smith, fact checking by Alex Yablon.
Special thanks to Rajiv Gola and Ashley Ann Krigbaum.
Scoring in sound designed by Ian Chambers and Rod Sherwood is our engineer, original
music by Julian Lynch.
If you enjoyed Borderlands, please rate and review the show on Apple podcasts. It helps
other listeners like you find the show. And make sure to subscribe or follow the show
on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And one last note. If you have questions or comments on the show, feel free to head to
witnessborderlands.com.
There you'll find a way to message me or post your thoughts publicly.
I'll also include some additional background and photos related to the show, all at witnessborderlands.com.
at nisborderlands.com.