1. My name is Lori Arnold.
Copy !req
2. I'm a material technician.
Copy !req
3. The money I make a week,
Copy !req
4. I used to make that
in a few minutes.
Copy !req
5. Even though,
it was 30 years ago,
Copy !req
6. I will always be remembered
as the Queen of Meth.
Copy !req
7. The use of methamphetamine
has skyrocketed
over the past several years.
Copy !req
8. It's now trendy.
It is now cheap.
And it is now spreading.
Copy !req
9. Meth makers have spread
into the countryside,
Copy !req
10. bringing tragedy,
death and violence.
Copy !req
11. Lori was
one of the first
Copy !req
12. to move significant quantities
of methamphetamine
Copy !req
13. from the west coast to Iowa.
Copy !req
14. She was a major
supplier making $200,000
or more a week.
Copy !req
15. I had a lot of respect.
I had a lot of power.
Copy !req
16. I could buy houses.
I could buy cars,
airplane, race cars.
Copy !req
17. Lori was
the queenpin,
Copy !req
18. I guess you could call her,
instead of the kingpin.
Copy !req
19. She was
on top of the world.
Copy !req
20. And then,
this all came crashing down.
Copy !req
21. Federal prosecutors allege
for the past six years,
Copy !req
22. Lori Arnold
ran a five-state drug ring.
Copy !req
23. She's the sister
of comedian, Tom Arnold.
Copy !req
24. Sister-in-law
of Roseanne Arnold.
Copy !req
25. - Do you think your sister
is a threat to the community?
- I don't think so.
Copy !req
26. Lori needs to get
fucking angry at my mom.
Copy !req
27. I feel the pain
of what happened to her.
Copy !req
28. What she did was wrong.
Copy !req
29. - No, no, she ruined your life.
- What she did to me...
Copy !req
30. I had to
grow up a lot faster than
other people.
Copy !req
31. I shouldn't have had to.
Copy !req
32. Like the people
that created the tech world
in Silicon Valley,
Copy !req
33. my sister created
the meth world.
Copy !req
34. I walk
like a truck driver,
Copy !req
35. I cuss like a sailor,
and I fight like a man.
Copy !req
36. It's kind of a combination
between my dad
and my mom's walk, I guess.
Copy !req
37. I go to work, I come home,
Copy !req
38. I sit in my pajamas
and I watch TV.
Copy !req
39. That's my life now.
Copy !req
40. Moved to Sandusky, Ohio,
two and a half years ago.
Copy !req
41. Me and my fiance
bought this little house.
Copy !req
42. This box is full of memories,
Copy !req
43. old pictures,
things from the past.
Copy !req
44. Right on top here,
Copy !req
45. there's a picture of me
at my ranch.
Copy !req
46. I was actually chopping
a line up in my lap
at the time.
Copy !req
47. I've got my little grinder
Copy !req
48. and a little drug
paraphernalia on
my lap there.
Copy !req
49. I'm more embarrassed
about my past
than I used to be.
Copy !req
50. This is me and my son Josh...
Copy !req
51. when he was about two.
Copy !req
52. So that means
I had to be in my 20s.
Copy !req
53. I hurt Josh a lot and...
Copy !req
54. I don't really
want to talk about it.
Copy !req
55. It's hard.
Copy !req
56. He's the only thing
that gets my emotions...
Copy !req
57. all screwed up.
Copy !req
58. 'Cause I love him.
Copy !req
59. He went through hell
after I got locked up.
Copy !req
60. I've always been very guarded,
because of the things
I've done.
Copy !req
61. You know, a lot of people
never even thought,
including myself,
Copy !req
62. never thought
I'd make it this far,
Copy !req
63. because of my lifestyle,
I guess, growing up.
Copy !req
64. But here I am, big 60.
Copy !req
65. So I'm just trying to open
myself up,
Copy !req
66. and I am taking a journey
back to Ottumwa, Iowa,
Copy !req
67. where everything went down
30 years ago.
Copy !req
68. I'm gonna see a bunch
of old friends and my family.
Copy !req
69. All right, careful.
Copy !req
70. And I want to relive
some good memories,
Copy !req
71. and also, relive
some bad memories.
Copy !req
72. But it's time to face it.
Copy !req
73. She was a gangster, all right,
Copy !req
74. a big-time
drug dealer gangster.
Copy !req
75. "Scarface in a Skirt."
Copy !req
76. Well, I've never seen her
in a skirt.
Copy !req
77. I just hope to discover
why it began, how it began.
Copy !req
78. Can't change history,
but you can learn from it.
Copy !req
79. She'll always be
the queen bee of Ottumwa.
Copy !req
80. You can go
and ask people today
Copy !req
81. that they know
who Lori Arnold is, you know.
Copy !req
82. They know Lori Arnold.
Copy !req
83. She was
on top of the world.
Copy !req
84. Like we say,
when she walked into a bar,
you knew she was there.
Copy !req
85. Iowa stands
for I Only Want Amphetamines,
Copy !req
86. and I think she put the name
on the marquee.
Copy !req
87. She was
very generous with
helping people out
Copy !req
88. and donating different things.
Copy !req
89. But at the same breath,
it was destroying
our community.
Copy !req
90. I don't think
you'd live in Ottumwa
without hearing about it.
Copy !req
91. People's lives
were devastated.
Copy !req
92. At the crossroads
of the nation
Copy !req
93. in southeast Iowa
lies the city of Ottumwa.
Copy !req
94. It might be your town,
or any town U.S.A.
Copy !req
95. You know I grew up here
and everything so...
Copy !req
96. And just turning 60,
it's like, man,
Copy !req
97. that was a long time ago.
Copy !req
98. Ottumwa is a town
that hasn't quite caught up
with the rest of the world.
Copy !req
99. This whole neighborhood
is exactly,
Copy !req
100. like it hasn't
changed anything.
Copy !req
101. Houses look same.
Copy !req
102. It's like
a little country town.
Copy !req
103. Last time I was with my family
was at my Dad's funeral.
Copy !req
104. This time, I'm hoping it's not
gonna be as painful.
Copy !req
105. Remember this place?
Copy !req
106. Oh, my God!
Copy !req
107. - That's Skateland.
- Skateland.
Copy !req
108. - Yeah. Nice, huh?
- Boy, I can't believe it.
Copy !req
109. Looks like now, but...
Copy !req
110. - Oh, had a lot of fun here.
- Yeah. Oh, my God.
Copy !req
111. That was a thing
we did all the time.
Copy !req
112. Yeah, yeah,
we did it. We did.
Copy !req
113. I mean, there wasn't a whole
lot going on in Ottumwa.
Copy !req
114. - Yeah, well—
- That was one thing but—
Copy !req
115. - Maybe. You made...
You made stuff go on, yeah.
Copy !req
116. Ottumwa
is a working-class town.
Copy !req
117. And everything revolved around
the meat packing plant.
Copy !req
118. Gee whiz. Look at
all them rumble cars.
Yeah.
Copy !req
119. That's how I grew up
and my family.
Copy !req
120. Watch as hog
carcasses are broken down
into primal cuts.
Copy !req
121. Working in places
that slaughter cattle,
Copy !req
122. slaughter pigs.
Copy !req
123. Slaughtering 6,000 hogs a day,
and it's rough.
Copy !req
124. The company, Hormel,
Copy !req
125. kept making deals with us
saying, "We're not
gonna pay you overtime."
Copy !req
126. We had to work faster
and faster.
Copy !req
127. And it seemed to get more
and more dangerous.
Copy !req
128. A beautiful sight, isn't it?
Copy !req
129. Finally, it's like, "We got
to fucking strike, man.
Copy !req
130. We got a strike, like,
Ottumwa, Iowa, strike."
Copy !req
131. They say give back,
we say fight back!
Copy !req
132. Hormel employees
blocked the main gate
Copy !req
133. to the meat packing company's
corporate headquarters.
Copy !req
134. We're gonna stand up,
and we're gonna fight
this company.
Copy !req
135. We're gonna fight
international if we have to.
Copy !req
136. It was like, "Yeah,
we're... We're doing this."
Copy !req
137. Police declared
the situation a riot,
Copy !req
138. then hurled teargas canisters
into the crowd.
Copy !req
139. Back up! Back up!
Copy !req
140. Hormel says
there is no more time
Copy !req
141. for the strikers
to come back to work,
Copy !req
142. and there are no longer any
jobs left to strike against.
Copy !req
143. Eventually they ended up
firing everybody in Ottumwa.
Copy !req
144. The town
will continue to hurt,
because of the past year.
Copy !req
145. It was devastating.
Copy !req
146. Nobody got their jobs back.
Copy !req
147. You could just feel a dark
cloud all over the place.
Copy !req
148. That was rough.
Copy !req
149. The reason people
do drugs and start with
Copy !req
150. is they're trying to escape
from something.
Copy !req
151. Boredom, loneliness,
self-esteem.
Copy !req
152. There's something going on
that when you do the drug,
Copy !req
153. all that disappears.
Copy !req
154. But once
all this meth comes in,
Copy !req
155. everything started picking up
around there.
Copy !req
156. Everyone is partying
pretty hard.
Copy !req
157. The money
just came in so fast...
Copy !req
158. I didn't have time to
reflect on what I was doing.
Copy !req
159. And it lasted about six years.
Copy !req
160. And then... It was over.
Copy !req
161. And it was almost like
a balloon deflating.
Copy !req
162. Tom Arnold's sister
faces six drug charges
Copy !req
163. in connection
with the distribution
of methamphetamines.
Copy !req
164. Psychological evaluation
was done
Copy !req
165. for my pre-sentencing.
Copy !req
166. "We cannot blame
Lori Stockdall completely
Copy !req
167. for her present circumstances.
Copy !req
168. Lori Stockdall's tragic life
has been influenced by adults
Copy !req
169. who did not have
her best interest in mind."
Copy !req
170. This is a picture
of my mother.
Copy !req
171. Beautiful lady.
She was a lot of fun.
Copy !req
172. My dad was Jack Arnold.
Copy !req
173. My mom, Linda Graham Arnold.
Copy !req
174. Brother Tom was the firstborn,
Copy !req
175. and then me.
Copy !req
176. And later on, had another
little brother, Scott.
Copy !req
177. We were just your everyday
average brothers and sister.
Copy !req
178. I always followed around Tom,
because he's my big brother.
Copy !req
179. He was a little rowdy,
very boisterous,
Copy !req
180. sometimes mean.
Copy !req
181. One time, Tom wanted
to go outside to play
Copy !req
182. and told me to hurry
and he'd wait.
Copy !req
183. He was holding
the glass storm door for me
while I was tying my shoe.
Copy !req
184. As soon as I got there,
Copy !req
185. Tom slammed the door
and my arm went right
through the glass,
Copy !req
186. causing me
to get five stitches.
Copy !req
187. Scott, he was
my little brother,
Copy !req
188. so I had to kind of
take care of him.
Copy !req
189. There's Lori,
the Queen of Meth,
Copy !req
190. and then there's Tom,
the bad actor,
Copy !req
191. and then there's me,
the good-looking one
with no record.
Copy !req
192. Scott was a disturbed kid
who liked to eat bugs.
Copy !req
193. He said red ants
were his favorites.
Copy !req
194. I remember once
when he held down a kitten
Copy !req
195. and ran over its neck
with a tricycle wheel.
Copy !req
196. I think we found this
cat at the swimming pool
Copy !req
197. in a garbage can or something.
Copy !req
198. The life of me,
I don't know why I would run
it over or anything,
Copy !req
199. but apparently, I thought
I was playing with it
Copy !req
200. until it stopped moving.
Copy !req
201. And, uh, I got grounded
for a long time for that.
Copy !req
202. I still feel bad about it
to this day 'cause
I love animals.
Copy !req
203. Yeah, she's insane.
Copy !req
204. We're just your everyday
average brothers and sister.
Copy !req
205. Oh, there she is, our mom,
Copy !req
206. smoking in the hospital
just besides the baby.
Copy !req
207. And there I am just born.
Copy !req
208. I guess that's
my mom there, yeah.
Copy !req
209. My gosh, how young
would she have been,
Copy !req
210. about 16 or 17, yeah.
Copy !req
211. Dad, he's a teenager, too.
Copy !req
212. That's hard to believe.
Copy !req
213. My mom
was out of picture
Copy !req
214. since I was, like, three.
Copy !req
215. I really don't remember her
ever being in the picture.
Copy !req
216. Don't remember her and dad
ever being together
or anything.
Copy !req
217. When I was four,
Lori was three,
Copy !req
218. my parents got divorced.
Copy !req
219. They were doing
a custody battle
for the kids.
Copy !req
220. They got to a day
where they put me,
Copy !req
221. would put me on the stand
back in the day
Copy !req
222. to basically say,
"Who do you love more, Tommy?
Copy !req
223. Your mother or your father?"
Copy !req
224. And my dad
didn't want to do that.
Copy !req
225. And so he surrendered
and he gave us to my mother.
Copy !req
226. The next day, my mother came
out to his office and said,
Copy !req
227. "Here's the keys to your...
The house.
Copy !req
228. The kids are there
with the babysitter.
They're yours."
Copy !req
229. I was told that mom
had a, you know, wild streak,
Copy !req
230. and she knew dad
would be a better parent,
Copy !req
231. so she actually gave us
to dad to raise.
Copy !req
232. That was the greatest thing
my mother could do
as a mother.
Copy !req
233. That's how I look at it now.
Copy !req
234. But at the time,
it was a rough deal.
Copy !req
235. And so my dad raised us.
Copy !req
236. Until I was almost ten...
Copy !req
237. and he married
our next-door neighbor Ruth.
Copy !req
238. Ruth, there, there's Ruth,
next door neighbor,
Copy !req
239. looking, uh, cute.
Copy !req
240. Dad's, boy, dad thought
she was so cute.
Copy !req
241. Oh, he loved her.
Copy !req
242. Ruth had two kids
from her first marriage.
Copy !req
243. And then she
and my dad had two more.
Copy !req
244. So there were seven
of us total.
Copy !req
245. Ruth was strict.
Copy !req
246. She always had like
a little contest.
Copy !req
247. Whoever was the best kid of
the week gets a little star.
Copy !req
248. I just liked to win.
Copy !req
249. So, you know,
I did what I had to do to win.
Copy !req
250. I didn't wanna call her mom
because she wasn't my mom.
Copy !req
251. Ruth wanted me
to wear dresses or girl stuff.
Copy !req
252. First ethos
was girl, Gloria.
Copy !req
253. Well, you're a girl,
so we got to do pink,
we got to do this.
Copy !req
254. But I was a tomboy,
and I didn't...
I didn't wanna wear that.
Copy !req
255. So I would leave the house,
I'd have it on,
Copy !req
256. but I threw my jeans
out the window,
Copy !req
257. and I'd just change
in an alley somewhere.
Copy !req
258. Washington Junior High School.
Copy !req
259. I'm going into seventh grade
and it's all older kids there,
Copy !req
260. because they had eighth,
ninth grade there, too.
Copy !req
261. So there's teenagers,
I'm just coming in.
Copy !req
262. My brother Tom is there,
very popular.
Copy !req
263. Lori and I were very smart
and did well in school.
Copy !req
264. We were very intelligent.
Copy !req
265. Lori, I met in
seventh grade at Washington.
Copy !req
266. They put her in a lot
of the, I think,
in the accelerated classes,
Copy !req
267. because she was pretty smart.
Copy !req
268. I was good in school.
Copy !req
269. Played sports.
Copy !req
270. I always got A's and B's,
Copy !req
271. because school work came
fairly easy to me.
Copy !req
272. But I was known
as a tough girl.
Copy !req
273. And I was always joking
in class
and I was cutting up.
Copy !req
274. Lori always
had a drive in her.
Copy !req
275. Was always thinking
what she could do next
Copy !req
276. to get a better place in life.
Copy !req
277. I had this gal
that was afraid to walk home,
Copy !req
278. because this bully
kept picking on her,
Copy !req
279. threatened to beat her up,
and everything else.
Copy !req
280. So, well, I'll tell you what,
I'll walk you home every night
Copy !req
281. since you didn't live
that far from me,
Copy !req
282. you just give me lunch money
every day.
Copy !req
283. So she gave me two dollars
every day,
Copy !req
284. and I'd give a dollar of it
to the bully
Copy !req
285. that was threatening her.
Copy !req
286. And we'd go down
to Mr. Quick Hamburger
and get hamburgers.
Copy !req
287. That worked
for quite a while, too.
Copy !req
288. I don't know if she's having
issues at home,
Copy !req
289. but she skipped a lot of
school and that kind of stuff.
Copy !req
290. My parents
went on a vacation.
Copy !req
291. So Tom decided to have party
at the house.
Copy !req
292. There they used to wear
the hell out of it, whatever.
Copy !req
293. So they got into a big deal
and Tom moved out.
Copy !req
294. He moved in with our real mom.
Copy !req
295. I moved in with my mom
so I could grow my hair,
Copy !req
296. and I could stay out and party
and, you know, no rules.
Copy !req
297. I walk in the door
and she says, "Hey,
there's beer in the fridge.
Copy !req
298. You can bring
your girlfriend here.
You could blank her.
Copy !req
299. You do whatever you want.
I'm leaving for a week."
Copy !req
300. I was 15 and a half,
and I was like,
Copy !req
301. "Oh, this is...
This is not good," you know.
Copy !req
302. Tom was like my hero.
Copy !req
303. And so I was kind of lonely
without him there, you know.
Copy !req
304. And all the little kids
always got all the attention
and everything.
Copy !req
305. Started turning
to my real mom more,
Copy !req
306. because she
showed me attention.
Copy !req
307. But mom would buy me
what clothes I wanted,
Copy !req
308. you know, I got to wear
my big bell bottom jeans,
Copy !req
309. and mom was more my style,
I guess.
Copy !req
310. Don't really know
what exactly snap,
Copy !req
311. made me do the final decision,
Copy !req
312. but I just wanted out.
Copy !req
313. I eventually decided
to move in with our mom, too.
Copy !req
314. That's when
everything changed.
Copy !req
315. - Oh, boy.
- Yeah, there's Mom.
Copy !req
316. Yeah.
Me and mom.
Copy !req
317. Little bob...
Copy !req
318. Why was she
in your school picture?
Copy !req
319. No, it wasn't
a school picture.
This was... We...
Copy !req
320. We went and got our pictures
taken down—
Copy !req
321. Together, you and Mom went
Copy !req
322. - and got your pictures
taken together?
- Yeah, yeah.
Copy !req
323. - Oh, that's creepy.
Copy !req
324. - Why?
- People don't do that.
Copy !req
325. My mom was the manager
of the Elks Club.
Copy !req
326. And they had a lot
of big parties.
Copy !req
327. So I went up there
to cocktail waitress
Copy !req
328. and help set up tables
and stuff like that.
Copy !req
329. You know, it was long hours.
Copy !req
330. So she said,
"Here, this will help you,"
Copy !req
331. because she got Preludin
from her doctor, diet pills.
Copy !req
332. I took a half of one.
Copy !req
333. It woke me up good
and we sat up all night long.
Copy !req
334. I liked the feeling of it.
Copy !req
335. I was starting to get
into more boys, you know.
Copy !req
336. And so weight is always
an issue with teenage girls.
Copy !req
337. And it helped me lose weight
at the same time.
Copy !req
338. I wanted the other half.
Copy !req
339. I also worked
at the Elks Lodge for mom
Copy !req
340. - when she was there.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
341. What struck me
about working there
Copy !req
342. was how everybody
called her mom.
Copy !req
343. - Yeah, yeah.
- Except me.
Copy !req
344. Well, everybody...
Everybody liked her,
Copy !req
345. because she joked all the time
and stuff like that.
Copy !req
346. - They'd be like, "Oh my God."
- Yeah.
Copy !req
347. - "You're so lucky
that she's your mom."
- Yeah. Yes.
Copy !req
348. - I'm like, yeah. Yeah.
- "Your mom's so cool."
You know.
Copy !req
349. - She's letting us drink
on the job.
- Right, right.
Copy !req
350. When we were in the womb,
we had our first alcohol
and pills for real.
Copy !req
351. Me and her were more
like friends than like mom,
Copy !req
352. and mom and daughter
type deal.
Copy !req
353. She's a bar person,
so we go to the bars.
Copy !req
354. "Lori Stockdall was addicted
to alcohol at age 14
Copy !req
355. as a result
of her mother's influence.
Copy !req
356. Lori would not have done this
on her own."
Copy !req
357. It's true.
Copy !req
358. "She not only encouraged her
to drink beer,
Copy !req
359. but encouraged her son Tom
to do the same."
Copy !req
360. Mmm-hmm.
Copy !req
361. Mmm-hmm.
Copy !req
362. True.
Copy !req
363. Her best buddy. It was...
Copy !req
364. Hmm.
Copy !req
365. Most of us were
pretty naive at 14, I think,
Copy !req
366. but not Lori.
Copy !req
367. Lori grew up a little faster
than the most of us did.
Copy !req
368. I was around so many
adults that drank and partied,
Copy !req
369. and, you know, I just grew up
really too fast.
Copy !req
370. I was getting ready
to marry Bobby Roberts
in that one.
Copy !req
371. Really?
Copy !req
372. Yeah, Bob Roberts,
fucking guy.
Copy !req
373. I liked Bobby.
Copy !req
374. You could tell he was tough
just the way he was built
and everything.
Copy !req
375. He was cute, funny,
and he had a car.
Copy !req
376. You know,
that was a big impression
Copy !req
377. to me at the time.
Copy !req
378. Told my mom he was 18,
Copy !req
379. but his divorce
was in the newspaper
Copy !req
380. and it stated his age as 23.
Copy !req
381. One day, I was going to meet
him here at the skating rink.
Copy !req
382. You know, I was 14,
I'm in love, you know,
and I'm defiant.
Copy !req
383. "Mom said I can't go.
She's a bitch."
Copy !req
384. And as soon as I said that,
all I got was a roundhouse
punch.
Copy !req
385. Mom come around the corner
and punched me,
Copy !req
386. knocked me down
on the kitchen floor,
Copy !req
387. and then she went
in the other room.
Copy !req
388. And when she did,
I left anyway.
Copy !req
389. Stepdad come walking
in the skating rink.
Copy !req
390. He said, "You either dump her,
marry her,
Copy !req
391. or you're going to jail
for statutory rape."
Copy !req
392. And Bobby's like, "Okay, fine,
we'll just get married."
Copy !req
393. I didn't wanna get dumped,
you know.
Copy !req
394. I didn't want him
to go to jail.
Copy !req
395. So, what am I gonna do?
Copy !req
396. I'm gonna have to marry him.
Copy !req
397. Couldn't get married in Iowa,
I was too young.
Copy !req
398. Mom drove us
to Lancaster, Missouri,
Copy !req
399. went to courthouse.
Copy !req
400. We got married,
and then we went across
to the bar and had drinks.
Copy !req
401. And then she...
She drove us home
Copy !req
402. to the apartment.
Copy !req
403. And see,
here's the difference.
Copy !req
404. I got to be a kid.
Copy !req
405. I got in a lot of trouble,
Copy !req
406. but nobody made me
marry an adult
Copy !req
407. who was a serial pedophile.
Copy !req
408. Yeah, I miss my child—
I miss my childhood, yeah.
Copy !req
409. - I agree.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
410. No, I honestly can't say
if I thought he was a predator
or anything.
Copy !req
411. I just, guess I blame myself
because I flirted with him.
Copy !req
412. His wife that
he'd just divorced
Copy !req
413. was only a year older than me.
Copy !req
414. So, you know, it didn't
seem weird at that time.
Copy !req
415. I mean, now, you know,
23, 14...
Copy !req
416. Yeah, it's a little odd.
Copy !req
417. I was a full-on alcoholic,
very young.
Copy !req
418. Very young.
Copy !req
419. But, you know,
I did miss out on
Copy !req
420. having a mother like you did.
Copy !req
421. But it's no comparison
what you happened
between me and you.
Copy !req
422. "At 14, Lori was not capable
of helping herself.
Copy !req
423. She wanted her mother's love.
Copy !req
424. Her mother taught her
how to get it the wrong way."
Copy !req
425. I think it's...
I think it's...
Copy !req
426. I think it's...
Copy !req
427. I guess,
I think it's bullshit.
Copy !req
428. It's sad. It makes me mad.
Copy !req
429. It's true. I think it's, uh...
Copy !req
430. It's... It's...
Copy !req
431. Hmm.
Copy !req
432. Awful, it's...
Copy !req
433. Anyways...
Copy !req
434. It's the deal.
Copy !req
435. That was the end of it.
Copy !req
436. That was the end
of Lori's life really,
her childhood.
Copy !req
437. When I got
married to Bobby,
Copy !req
438. we used to walk down
to this Casey's store,
Copy !req
439. steal ham and bread...
Copy !req
440. 'cause we lived off ham
and bread
because he wasn't working
Copy !req
441. and we were poor.
Copy !req
442. I tried to keep in school.
Copy !req
443. I really did,
but it just didn't work
'cause I had to have a job.
Copy !req
444. We were all like,
"Wow. We can't believe
she quit school
Copy !req
445. and she's living with a guy."
Copy !req
446. And so in the mornings,
we'd all walk to school
Copy !req
447. and we'd walk
by her apartment.
Copy !req
448. All of us girls are like,
"Gosh, he's so old."
Copy !req
449. I was in awe, like, wow.
Copy !req
450. But she seemed
pretty confident about it.
Copy !req
451. You know, today,
he'd be arrested
for being a pedophile.
Copy !req
452. Bob, her husband,
Copy !req
453. to me,
he always treated me decently.
Copy !req
454. He was, you know,
a decent guy to me, you know.
Copy !req
455. But I heard there's a lot
of other stuff going on,
extracurricular.
Copy !req
456. He was watching TV
and I was in the kitchen,
Copy !req
457. and there was a boxing match
on TV.
Copy !req
458. And he was just goofing off,
you know,
Copy !req
459. pretending like he was boxing
and everything else.
Copy !req
460. Then come up
and he kind of jabbed me
a couple times,
Copy !req
461. like he pretend boxing,
Copy !req
462. and then he just punched me
real hard.
Copy !req
463. It's like it triggered
something in him
or something, you know,
Copy !req
464. and he pushed me up
against the window,
Copy !req
465. and then he stopped
and he goes,
Copy !req
466. "You need to leave now
because..."
Copy !req
467. He goes, "Now that I did that,
it's gonna happen again."
Copy !req
468. He hit me a couple times
in the kitchen,
Copy !req
469. and told me get...
Get the fuck out.
Copy !req
470. Last straw was I found out
that Bobby was screwing around
on me,
Copy !req
471. and she was 12.
Copy !req
472. I called my brother Tom,
Copy !req
473. and I told him to come get me,
you know, I've had enough.
Copy !req
474. We were only married
six months.
Copy !req
475. I packed all my stuff
and went with Tom.
Copy !req
476. "Physical, psychological abuse
for Lori was common place,
Copy !req
477. and thus a learned behavior."
Copy !req
478. After my divorce
from Bobby Roberts,
Copy !req
479. went back to the school
to see if I could get back
in eighth grade.
Copy !req
480. And they sent me
to the Board of Education
for an IQ test,
Copy !req
481. and I had a high IQ,
Copy !req
482. so they passed me
from eighth grade
to tenth grade.
Copy !req
483. But, you know, at that time,
I was already married,
divorced,
Copy !req
484. I drove, I bartended.
Copy !req
485. The rest of the kids
in tenth grade
seemed so young
Copy !req
486. that I had to quit school.
Copy !req
487. Then I quit school,
I went and got my GED.
Copy !req
488. I had a goal.
Copy !req
489. Decided I was
gonna do something.
Copy !req
490. Even if it's wrong,
I'm gonna do something
to take care of myself.
Copy !req
491. Lori needs
to get fucking angry
at my mom,
Copy !req
492. feel the pain
of what happened to her.
Copy !req
493. She served my sister up,
Copy !req
494. her daughter, to a rapist
Copy !req
495. and a...
A serial pedophile.
Copy !req
496. She said, "Here he is."
Copy !req
497. That's beyond bad judgment.
Copy !req
498. That was a big deal.
Copy !req
499. It really set the tone for me
versus my mom.
Copy !req
500. I mean, openly hostile
from that point on.
Copy !req
501. I loved my mom.
Copy !req
502. She was a lot of fun.
Copy !req
503. She died when I went to jail.
She's only 52 years old.
Copy !req
504. So that hurt.
Copy !req
505. That was...
That was really tough,
Copy !req
506. because the prosecuting
attorney
Copy !req
507. wouldn't let me go
to the funeral.
Copy !req
508. He said they'll have
my brother Tom film it
Copy !req
509. and show it to me in 20 years
when I get out.
Copy !req
510. There's old mom.
You didn't go to her funeral.
Copy !req
511. They wouldn't let me.
Yeah. I didn't go.
Copy !req
512. I know you didn't.
And I tried to tell you,
you should have.
Copy !req
513. - Oh, well, really?
- Because you'd regret it
later in life.
Copy !req
514. - I... I have absolutely
no regrets.
- You should.
Copy !req
515. She was never a mother.
Copy !req
516. No, she wasn't
a mother.
To me—
Copy !req
517. No, but that's
what I wanted her to be.
Copy !req
518. My youngest memory
after she left
Copy !req
519. was going out
and looking for her.
Copy !req
520. - You guys were best friends.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
521. - Except you were 14.
- Right.
Copy !req
522. And that was the worst thing.
Copy !req
523. Well, I didn't think so
at the time.
Copy !req
524. - No, of course, you didn't,
because you're 14.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
525. So but everybody
makes mistakes.
Copy !req
526. No, but stop it,
because you...
Copy !req
527. Did you ever give Josh
drugs or alcohol?
Copy !req
528. - Oh, no.
- Okay. Why?
Copy !req
529. - Because I wouldn't do that.
- Why? Because why?
Copy !req
530. - Because he's my son.
- That's right.
Copy !req
531. Because there's just some shit
that mothers don't do.
Copy !req
532. Well, yeah, she...
What she did was wrong.
Copy !req
533. - You know, what she did...
- No, no, she ruined your life!
Copy !req
534. - What else she did?
- Yes, she fucking ruined
your life!
Copy !req
535. - But I forgave that.
I forgive her.
- Yeah, I know.
Copy !req
536. - Fine, that's good for you.
- Because I don't want it
Copy !req
537. - to tear me up...
- I don't want—
Copy !req
538. - I'm not telling you—
- ... inside to hate her.
Copy !req
539. You don't have to hate her.
Copy !req
540. But for you to get over it,
you got to fucking know
how shitty it was.
Copy !req
541. - It was shitty.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
542. I had a lot of time
to think about it.
Copy !req
543. But I'm standing here strong,
Copy !req
544. because maybe, because
of what I went through,
I don't know.
Copy !req
545. - Not because... No, no, no.
- Maybe because I love her.
Copy !req
546. - Don't give a fucking—
- I don't know.
Copy !req
547. - No, I'm not saying
because of her.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
548. I'm just saying
all the different things
Copy !req
549. that I went through
made me stronger.
Copy !req
550. - Made me a survivor.
- That's right.
Copy !req
551. - You know.
- That's right.
Copy !req
552. - That's what I'm saying.
- That's right.
Copy !req
553. All right.
Copy !req
554. "Lori Stockdall
is a young woman
Copy !req
555. who is a product
of a broken home
Copy !req
556. and an upbringing
characterized
Copy !req
557. by a total lack of continuity
Copy !req
558. of the morals and values
necessary to function
in society."
Copy !req
559. She became
a big-time drug dealer
and ended up in prison.
Copy !req
560. Well, fucking right she did.
Copy !req
561. I didn't meet Lori
till I was probably 16.
Copy !req
562. We were all going to the bars
back then.
Copy !req
563. We just really hit it off.
Copy !req
564. You know, we're a lot alike,
Copy !req
565. we're really outgoing
and, uh, like to laugh
Copy !req
566. and like to, you know,
kind of be the life
of the party.
Copy !req
567. Yeah,
she's a wild child,
Copy !req
568. out front, outgoing,
wanted to be herself,
Copy !req
569. but she kind of felt
like she couldn't,
Copy !req
570. because she was married
at a young age.
Copy !req
571. Her stepdad being a cop,
and it's just, I don't know,
Copy !req
572. I just kind of felt
that she was trapped in a way.
Copy !req
573. I didn't feel
like I fit anywhere.
Copy !req
574. It's like I can't go home,
I'm... I'm no longer a child
Copy !req
575. wanting to go
to my parents' house.
Copy !req
576. I was looking for something,
Copy !req
577. I don't know what,
I still don't know what,
Copy !req
578. but just somewhere
that I belonged
Copy !req
579. where I didn't have to pretend
like I was good
Copy !req
580. or pretend like
I was the wife,
Copy !req
581. like, with Bobby,
and be something I wasn't.
Copy !req
582. And then I met Shirley Inman
at the strip joint,
Copy !req
583. the Horseshoe Club.
Copy !req
584. She was always there
at the poker table,
Copy !req
585. and she always had
a wad of money
Copy !req
586. stuffed down her bra.
Copy !req
587. Everybody knew her.
Copy !req
588. She was like...
Like a madam, I guess.
Copy !req
589. And I got along very well
with Shirley.
Copy !req
590. She was somebody to look up
to another woman.
Copy !req
591. My mom believed
it's a cold day in Hell
Copy !req
592. before she deprived somebody
of a place to stay,
Copy !req
593. a hot meal and a shower.
Copy !req
594. She brought Lori over
to the house
Copy !req
595. and Lori...
Lori lived in our house
for a couple years.
Copy !req
596. Scotty Inman.
Copy !req
597. I met him when I moved
into his mom, Shirley's house.
Copy !req
598. And he's been by my side
for years.
Copy !req
599. Scotty was a good kid.
He's... he's younger than I.
Copy !req
600. - How old are you now?
- Now I'm 58.
Copy !req
601. - All right, so—
- I was probably—
Copy !req
602. Yeah, he's two years younger
than me.
Copy !req
603. He was two years
younger than me.
Copy !req
604. - I was probably 14.
- But to me, he's a kid,
Copy !req
605. you know,
but he was a good kid.
Copy !req
606. He's always been a good kid.
Copy !req
607. So he's always like
a little brother to me.
Copy !req
608. I love about Lori Arnold.
She's... She's like my sister.
Copy !req
609. She's always been outgoing,
outspoken person,
Copy !req
610. uh, stand up
for what you believe in.
Copy !req
611. Basically, you don't take no
shit off nobody type person.
Copy !req
612. And that's kind of like
the way I... I was raised.
Copy !req
613. You tell it like it is
and be told like it...
Like it should be.
Copy !req
614. I wasn't a very good influence
on him, I think.
Copy !req
615. But he was always fun
and laughing,
Copy !req
616. and he didn't...
He didn't do drugs.
Copy !req
617. He didn't drink.
Copy !req
618. - I smoked weed.
- Uh...
Copy !req
619. He just might have
smoked weed,
Copy !req
620. but, you know, to me weed
is not... No big deal.
Copy !req
621. Shirley, um,
she would do anything
to make money.
Copy !req
622. She had a couple girls
that stayed with her
at her house.
Copy !req
623. And she would not only have
poker games at her house
Copy !req
624. with lots and lots
of money involved,
Copy !req
625. but she would also supply
people with girls.
Copy !req
626. It was basically
an escort service,
Copy !req
627. I would...
I would have to say, you know.
Copy !req
628. She would like
pimp them out to help build up
her clientele,
Copy !req
629. because they were like
big shots around towns.
Copy !req
630. They were like
powerful type things.
Copy !req
631. I told her I don't wanna be
a hooker or anything.
Copy !req
632. But I had a car,
Copy !req
633. so she wanted me
to do her drug running.
Copy !req
634. So she would send me down
to a pharmacy
Copy !req
635. and go up to pharmacist
and say, "I need to pick up
Shirley's order."
Copy !req
636. - And they would have it ready.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
637. So I thought,
well, she's got clout
Copy !req
638. because, I mean,
she's getting shit,
Copy !req
639. the real shit
from the pharmacist, you know.
Copy !req
640. So I was impressed
by, you know, she had
connections type thing.
Copy !req
641. She had to have
open heart surgery.
Copy !req
642. They wouldn't give her
any disability at the time,
no help.
Copy !req
643. So that's kind of the reason
why she kind of started
selling,
Copy !req
644. you know, this a little bit
here and there.
Copy !req
645. But, you know, I mean,
it was nothing to...
To hurt anybody.
Copy !req
646. Then one day,
I went in to get her order,
Copy !req
647. and the regular pharmacist guy
wasn't there.
Copy !req
648. I said, "I'm here
to pick up Shirley's order."
Copy !req
649. He goes, "Well,
you just get it right there."
Copy !req
650. And it was just
over-the-counter stuff
Copy !req
651. that I could have
just grabbed myself and got.
Copy !req
652. I was thinking
it was all illegal drugs
and this type of thing.
Copy !req
653. So I thought, "Hmm."
Copy !req
654. Haysma, it was the name of it,
and it was for hay fever
and asthma.
Copy !req
655. So she would take a bottle
of 110.
Copy !req
656. She'd take 100 of them,
put them in a baggie
Copy !req
657. and sell them as speed for,
Copy !req
658. you know, five times
what... What's paid for them.
Copy !req
659. And then, you know,
just save up the other ten
until she got another 100.
Copy !req
660. I'm like, "I could do that,"
you know.
Copy !req
661. So I was going to get
my own over-the-counter,
Copy !req
662. and started selling the speed
to other people
Copy !req
663. making the whole profit
for myself.
Copy !req
664. I didn't do that
for very long.
Copy !req
665. That was the first time
I made money off of drugs.
Copy !req
666. I was attracted
to the power and respect
Copy !req
667. of the people
that were over there
in the card game.
Copy !req
668. You never know
when you might need
somebody like that.
Copy !req
669. If you get to know
people like that,
Copy !req
670. it may take you
in higher places.
Copy !req
671. I never was gonna be
like Lori.
Copy !req
672. I used drugs
and I drank and...
Copy !req
673. But I've also known there was
something else out there.
Copy !req
674. Lori, you know,
she was probably
Copy !req
675. abused so much by men,
Copy !req
676. and, uh, that she just didn't
have the confidence.
Copy !req
677. She also didn't have
the dream that I had
Copy !req
678. to be an entertainer.
Copy !req
679. And that's the difference
between Lori and I.
Copy !req
680. She also was buddies
with all the cops,
Copy !req
681. who I was not a fan of.
Copy !req
682. Cops in Ottumwa
were a lot of fun back then.
Copy !req
683. I mean, I would pull up
next to them in my car
Copy !req
684. and drag racing down the road.
Copy !req
685. Or they'd pull me over
for something stupid or...
Copy !req
686. "Aren't you too drunk
to drive?"
Copy !req
687. I'm like, "No, I'm too drunk
to walk home,
so I have to drive."
Copy !req
688. When I was living
at Shirley's,
Copy !req
689. Delmar Collier
was the captain of police
at the time.
Copy !req
690. And he'd come up
to the Elks Club and hang out.
Copy !req
691. Mom's divorced and everything.
And they hit it off.
Copy !req
692. And it was kind of crazy
my mom married a cop,
Copy !req
693. but, but, uh...
Copy !req
694. That's the way it happened.
Copy !req
695. I went to a party
at a cop's house
Copy !req
696. with my mom and Delmar.
Copy !req
697. Everybody was drinking
and everything else.
Copy !req
698. And I'm like, "Man,
you guys are boring as hell."
Copy !req
699. I said,
"I don't know about you,
Copy !req
700. but I need to smoke a joint
or something,
Copy !req
701. you know, liven this party up
a little bit."
Copy !req
702. And one of the cops asked me,
he goes, "What, you got some?"
Copy !req
703. I just fired it up,
Copy !req
704. and the cop next to me goes,
"Hand it here."
Copy !req
705. Mom and Delmar
had already left,
Copy !req
706. so I was there
just with three cops.
Copy !req
707. And one of them
was flirting with me.
Copy !req
708. You know, "Have you
ever been handcuffed?"
Copy !req
709. I'm like,
"It's gonna take more
than you to handcuff me,
Copy !req
710. I'll tell you that right now."
Copy !req
711. There was two of them
and they're putting
this handcuffs,
Copy !req
712. and I'm kind of wrestling
with them, you know,
and everything.
Copy !req
713. But they finally
got the cuffs on me,
Copy !req
714. and I'm like,
"All right, you win."
Copy !req
715. But they wouldn't let me up.
Copy !req
716. Then they started
trying to get down on my pants
Copy !req
717. and up my shirt,
Copy !req
718. and kiss me on the neck
and stuff like that.
Copy !req
719. And I'm like, "No, come on,"
you know, "Joke's over."
Copy !req
720. Fought them off.
Copy !req
721. I wasn't gonna get, two guys,
Copy !req
722. you know,
messing with me like that,
that was just little weird.
Copy !req
723. So I acted tough
and took care of it.
Copy !req
724. I was 18 at the time.
Copy !req
725. And then Floyd came
into the picture.
Copy !req
726. There's no bullshit
about Floyd Stockdall,
Copy !req
727. uh, who is the, the captain
of the Grim Reapers,
Copy !req
728. the Grimy Reapers,
as I would call them.
Copy !req
729. Well,
his nickname was Sin.
Copy !req
730. And you didn't want him
coming out.
Copy !req
731. Floyd is a great person,
you know.
Copy !req
732. Do anything in the world
for you.
Copy !req
733. Just don't, don't cross him.
Copy !req
734. First time I saw Floyd,
he came into Dona's place
Copy !req
735. with the Grim Reapers.
Copy !req
736. And it was just such
a powerful sight
Copy !req
737. to see all them choppers
just come in
Copy !req
738. and all these bikers walk in.
Copy !req
739. He was very well respected.
Copy !req
740. And usually,
when you have a lot of
respect, you've earned it.
Copy !req
741. We just kind of hit it off,
Copy !req
742. because I wasn't afraid
of him, you know.
Copy !req
743. And he wasn't used to people
coming up and just...
Copy !req
744. You know,
challenging him in anyway,
Copy !req
745. because everybody
was afraid of Floyd.
Copy !req
746. Floyd looked mean.
Copy !req
747. He had that mean look.
He had that unapproachable.
Copy !req
748. And that's the kind of people
I approach
Copy !req
749. because I like a challenge.
Copy !req
750. This group of guys
were specifically
Copy !req
751. about running drugs
at this point and crime.
Copy !req
752. Because of the socioeconomic
situation in Ottumwa,
Copy !req
753. it was on.
Copy !req
754. Fight clubs are known
for their involvement
Copy !req
755. in drugs, guns,
Copy !req
756. pretty much anything
to make money.
Copy !req
757. They're a band of brothers,
and they trust each other,
Copy !req
758. and they have
each other's backs.
Copy !req
759. So when you're moving
illegal stuff to make profit,
Copy !req
760. you want people around you
that you can trust.
Copy !req
761. Floyd said, "Tell you what,
if you'll take me to pick up."
Copy !req
762. He was getting white cross,
he was getting black beauties,
Copy !req
763. uh, all the different kinds
of speed.
Copy !req
764. He'd just be giving me money,
Copy !req
765. and all I had to do
was drive him to Des Moines,
Copy !req
766. and then drive him back
to Ottumwa.
Copy !req
767. I went to one
of his biker friend's house.
Copy !req
768. This guy had money stacked
on a coffee table,
Copy !req
769. and he had a pound of cocaine
laying there next to him.
Copy !req
770. He told me to sit down
and, "Would you want a line?"
Copy !req
771. I'm like, "Sure."
Copy !req
772. I had never done cocaine.
Copy !req
773. I said,
"This isn't just little pills
you can get off the pharmacy
Copy !req
774. or selling truck driver drugs,
you know, speed.
Copy !req
775. This is big time here."
Copy !req
776. Just looking
at that stack of money
laying there,
Copy !req
777. and everybody
was very calm, very cool,
Copy !req
778. no paranoia, nothing,
Copy !req
779. just having a good time,
I'm like, "I like this,"
Copy !req
780. you know,
"I can get into this."
Copy !req
781. Floyd had a big Grim Reaper
party at his house.
Copy !req
782. So Floyd, I said, "Look,
your birthday party's great,
Copy !req
783. everybody's fun
and everything."
Copy !req
784. I said, "So, what do you want
for birthday?"
He goes, "I want you."
Copy !req
785. I'm like...
Copy !req
786. I didn't know that he was...
Copy !req
787. You know, I didn't know
he was romantically interested
in me.
Copy !req
788. I wasn't sure exactly
how to handle that.
Copy !req
789. I thought
we were just friends,
Copy !req
790. and I was just trying
to make money.
Copy !req
791. But he just kept pursuing me.
Copy !req
792. So we started dating.
Copy !req
793. It took me a while
to love him.
Copy !req
794. He was 16 years older than me,
and he was super possessive.
Copy !req
795. I mean, it was like
after dating
Copy !req
796. when he asked me to marry him,
Copy !req
797. like, well, uh, "When?"
He's like...
Copy !req
798. He said May,
and this was, you know,
the year before
Copy !req
799. and he said May, like...
Copy !req
800. Well, if our relation lasts
till May, then I will.
Copy !req
801. She was funny
and gregarious,
Copy !req
802. and he was more silent
and tough.
Copy !req
803. And she brought out
the, you know,
Copy !req
804. more humane side of Floyd
Copy !req
805. and the funnier side of him.
Copy !req
806. And I... He really liked that.
Copy !req
807. And I think she really liked
his protection.
Copy !req
808. He'd exude power.
Copy !req
809. I liked it.
Copy !req
810. You know, back
in the days of the club,
Copy !req
811. women had to sit
in the background,
they had to sit in the corner.
Copy !req
812. They couldn't speak up.
Copy !req
813. They had no opinions.
Copy !req
814. Well, that wouldn't happen
with me.
Copy !req
815. So after me and Floyd
got together, Floyd's like,
Copy !req
816. "I think it's,
maybe it's time I retired,
Copy !req
817. because you're gonna get us
both killed."
Copy !req
818. So, finally, I got married
in 1980 with Floyd.
Copy !req
819. May 17, 1980.
Copy !req
820. There's me pregnant.
Copy !req
821. That's Floyd.
Copy !req
822. We wanted to have a kid.
Copy !req
823. I would drink a beer or two
once in a while,
Copy !req
824. but I stayed away from drugs.
Copy !req
825. Josh was born
in January, 1981.
Copy !req
826. There's Josh looking for food.
Copy !req
827. He was a ham boy.
He liked to eat.
Copy !req
828. And me holding him.
Copy !req
829. I was a little bigger
back then.
Copy !req
830. When he cried out,
it sounded like he said mom.
Copy !req
831. But I didn't feel motherly.
Copy !req
832. So it took...
Took me a little while
Copy !req
833. to get more the motherly
or realize I actually had it.
Copy !req
834. I just didn't know
how to show it, you know.
Copy !req
835. But, yeah, he...
He grew on me quick.
Copy !req
836. We'd been renting a trailer,
Copy !req
837. so we had to find somewhere
to move,
Copy !req
838. and my friend had a cabin
on the river,
Copy !req
839. and she wanted to sell it.
Copy !req
840. It's more like
a fishing cabin, you know.
Copy !req
841. So it wasn't winterized
or anything like that.
Copy !req
842. But we weren't selling drugs
or anything at that time,
Copy !req
843. so it was all we could afford.
Copy !req
844. I remember her
and Floyd living out at
the cabin on the river.
Copy !req
845. I don't wanna say dirt poor,
but they were pretty poor.
Copy !req
846. It was hard living.
Copy !req
847. But there wasn't a whole lot
going on in this town.
Copy !req
848. For people in their 20s,
Copy !req
849. you know,
there was just nothing to do.
Copy !req
850. Still walk the same.
Copy !req
851. - Shh.
Copy !req
852. - What's up, Murph?
- Nothing. How you doing woman?
Copy !req
853. Well, you know,
I'm always doing. Ah.
Copy !req
854. Our kids are only
a couple months apart.
Copy !req
855. And so, we hung out a lot.
Copy !req
856. We would just get high,
and the kids would play,
Copy !req
857. and me and Lori
would smoke weed
and talk and laugh.
Copy !req
858. And they'd have their time
and we had ours, you know.
Copy !req
859. Oh, now I'm, you know,
I'm just horrified.
Copy !req
860. But, you know,
that was the life,
Copy !req
861. that was
what we were doing then,
Copy !req
862. that was just, you know,
kind of normal behavior.
Copy !req
863. - Back then,
we didn't have anything.
- We didn't have nothing.
Copy !req
864. I mean, we didn't...
We had to, you know,
put our money together
Copy !req
865. - to get a dollar pack
of cigarettes.
- Right.
Copy !req
866. Smoke somebody else's
cigarette butts.
Copy !req
867. So that was a thing.
Copy !req
868. Yeah, I remember
I was smoking someone
else's cigarette butts.
Copy !req
869. - Yeah.
- And Floyd
was on unemployment,
Copy !req
870. - I think at the time.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
871. So we had no money.
Copy !req
872. I mean, we owned the cabin
at the time,
Copy !req
873. because we'd paid it off
little by little,
Copy !req
874. it's only six grand total,
anyway.
Copy !req
875. But we just had nothing,
Copy !req
876. and we were fighting
and struggling,
and hauling water,
Copy !req
877. and, you know,
it was just the cabin
was cold.
Copy !req
878. - I was just tired
of living poor.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
879. I was feeling
I was entitled to something
better than what I had.
Copy !req
880. You know, I thought
I deserved something,
you know.
Copy !req
881. And then one day,
Floyd's brother Mike
came down.
Copy !req
882. He goes, "Today, I've got
something I want you to try.
Copy !req
883. I got a way you can make
a little money."
Copy !req
884. Methamphetamine.
Copy !req
885. He goes, "Well, I want you
to try it out."
Copy !req
886. When it hit, it's like... Like
you just felt really good.
Copy !req
887. You had all this energy,
Copy !req
888. and we were talking
and laughing, and...
Copy !req
889. You weren't thinking
about how broke you were.
Copy !req
890. You weren't thinking
how tired you were.
Copy !req
891. Nothing but all right.
I like this.
Copy !req
892. And my mind started thinking,
Copy !req
893. you know, that maybe
I can get out of this rut.
Copy !req
894. He says,
"I'm going to give you...
Copy !req
895. It's an eight ball,
three and a half grams."
Copy !req
896. He said, "What you do
is you package it up
in little quarter grams.
Copy !req
897. You can sell a quarter gram
for $25.
Copy !req
898. So you sell it all,
you got $350."
Copy !req
899. You send now,
"I'm gonna charge you $200.
Copy !req
900. That's $150 profit."
Copy !req
901. So I went to the bar, I said,
"Hey, wanna try this?"
Copy !req
902. I was hooked
for the first line.
Copy !req
903. It was just this seductive,
utopian feeling.
Copy !req
904. The meth lasted longer
than white cross,
Copy !req
905. black beauties, robin eggs.
Copy !req
906. It had a stronger effect.
Copy !req
907. I was transported
into this new wonderful world
Copy !req
908. of crank use.
Copy !req
909. It was electric.
Copy !req
910. So I sold the whole thing
that night.
Copy !req
911. I called Mike
and I said, "You know,
I really like that stuff.
Copy !req
912. Bring some more,
because I think
I can get rid of more."
Copy !req
913. She moved
into the drug world.
Copy !req
914. Then you move up
and you move up,
Copy !req
915. and the best you could do
Copy !req
916. is eventually become
the big cheese in that world.
Copy !req
917. So it fell on my hands,
Copy !req
918. and it was just like
a dream come true
for me, you know.
Copy !req
919. Loved it.
Copy !req