Cheating ring at electronic casino

August 6th, 2008 by Mason

Tribal gaming and police officials popped a cheating ring at Harrah’s Cherokee Casino, which offers digital blackjack and a digital game based on baccarat.

I didn’t know you could arrange to cheat electronic games in a casino setting.

Indeed, according to the Asheville Citizen-Times,

Cheating in the traditional sense is impossible because the card games are all electronic, with a dealer who pushes a button to “deal” cards that show up on small screens in front of each player at the table.

The cheating ring operated with the dealer paying off players for wins that never occurred, Lambert said. The players then took their chips to the counter and received cash. The dealer got a kickback, he said.

White lightning’s legacy in a Tennessee family

August 1st, 2008 by Mason

The Knoxville News-Sentinel has got a good read today about the moonshining legacy of a family that lives near Townsend, Tenn.

The story takes a good look at how moonshining has gone from a business to a historical curiosity and tourist draw, as the hook is that Mike Williams is loaning his father’s still to the Great Smoky Mountains Heritage Center there in Townsend.

One thing I like near the top is a description of why Mike’s father, Charlie Williams, was notable among the region’s many moonshiners:

– His whiskey was as smooth as a baby’s cheeks.

— He employed sophisticated engineering skills in the placement and concealment of the still.

— He was never caught at it. He just retired.

There’s also a fairly lengthy description of the still, along with a couple of anecdotes. This one describes how Charlie Williams schnookered federal authorities:

The senior Williams began operating the still in the 1950s, but it was discovered by federal agents flying over the site. Mike Williams said his father reckoned the family had about four days before the agents could find their way to the site, so in the meantime he dug a big hole in an agricultural field, disassembled the still, placed it in the hole, covered it over with roofing material and soil. Then he plowed the field so that the whole thing looked perfectly natural to the naked eye.

Sure enough, the FBI agents showed up right on schedule one day while Charlie Williams was not at home. The family was hospitable enough to them and allowed them to look around. They knew it was there, Mike Williams said, but never found it.

North Carolina takes on the nation’s largest public utility, one state over

July 14th, 2008 by Mason

Three years ago we linked a story when NC Attorney General Roy Cooper promised to take the Tennessee Valley Authority to court over air pollution. The actual lawsuit came in 2006, four years after North Carolina started to clean up its own act with 2002’s Clean Smokestacks Act.

The case has finally made it to court, with testimony starting today.
Here’s coverage in the Chattanooga Times Free Press, the Asheville Citizen-Times and from the Associated Press via the Knoxville News-Sentinel.

Cockfighting: About to become even more illegal (updated)

May 28th, 2008 by Mason

Inspired by the Michael Vick dogfighting case, the Virginia state legislature earlier this year passed a bill that tightens penalties for animal fighting across the board.
That includes cockfighting, which had been technically legal — but only as long as it didn’t involve attendance fees, gambling or the transfer of any sort of money. The new law, which takes effect July 1, does include exceptions for hunting and farming situations but increases penalties otherwise.

The Tennessee legislature has also been considering making cockfighting a full-blown felony. Last month, an FBI agent told a Senate committee that the activity is still “relatively common” across the state:

Thomas E. Farrow, a Johnson City-based agent who supervised the Cocke County operation known as “Rose Thorn,” said there are “still quite a few pits” operating in Tennessee, “pretty much throughout” the state.

Beyond the large, somewhat organized cockfighting pits, he said there are smaller and more informal “hack fights” that amount to “a circle of pickup trucks and bails of hay.”

Sometime back we reviewed Burkhard Bilger’s Noodling For Flatheads: Moonshine, Monster Catfish and Other Southern Comforts (a fantastic book which I heartily recommend), which looks at underground Southern subcultures. Many of the activities Bilger covers are dwindling or dying.
With the recent activity in Virginia and Tennessee, cockfighting appears to be well on the way to becoming — at best — even more underground.

UPDATE: I had a feeling I’d been sitting on the Tennessee cockfighting blurb too long. Earlier this month the bill went to a budget subcommittee in the House, dubbed in the story as “‘the Black Hole’ because many bills go there, but few emerge.”

And it looks like the bill to make cockfighting a felony didn’t emerge.

From columnist Tom Humphrey’s Sunday column:

Most effective unseen lobby: The state’s cockfighting crowd, which managed to quietly derail an effort to make it a felony to watch roosters fight to the death.

Maggie Valley moonshiner popped

March 20th, 2008 by Mason

Marvin “Popcorn” Sutton, who has lately made a career out of his reputation as a moonshiner, has been arrested and jailed for making untaxed whiskey near Parrottsville, Tenn., about 50 miles east of Knoxville.

According to The Asheville Citizen-Times:

Undercover agents with the Tennessee Alcoholic Beverage Commission said they bought large amounts of moonshine from Sutton in February and March before making the arrest last week, according to a U.S. Attorney’s Office affidavit.

They seized three 1,000-gallon whiskey stills, more than 850 gallons of moonshine and hundreds of gallons of mash and other ingredients used to make the liquor Thursday, while also confiscating firearms and ammunition, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

I worked for a newspaper covering Maggie Valley for a little more than a year, and while I heard plenty of “Popcorn” stories, I never met the man.

How would Obama do in Appalachia?

March 20th, 2008 by Mason

A writer over at Democratic partisan site Raising Kaine suggests that “Appalachia is the absolute KEY area to electoral victory for [Democratic presidential candidate Barrack] Obama.

The writer claims that by swinging Appalachia, Obama could win West Virginia, Ohio, Virginia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and maybe even Kentucky and Tennessee. The entry goes on to analyze voters in the relevant congressional districts in each state (the 6th congressional district in Virginia is omitted, and while I’d argue it should be included the reasoning for why it isn’t is included in the comments portion of the entry), as well as what Obama needs to do to win.

The number one thing? “Go there.”

I also like this final point which the writer emphasizes:

It is more than simple demographics that sets Appalachia apart from the lowland south. The Appalachian political system is a distinct one. It is more complex than that of the “solid” south, and entirely more unique (and mysterious) than it is given credit for.

Suburbs: The slums of tomorrow?

March 18th, 2008 by Mason

An article by Christopher Leinberger in The Atlantic posits that, with a one-two punch of the housing slump and skyrocketing fuel costs, suburban housing communities built fairly recently could become the nation’s next wave of slums:

For 60 years, Americans have pushed steadily into the suburbs, transforming the landscape and (until recently) leaving cities behind. But today the pendulum is swinging back toward urban living, and there are many reasons to believe this swing will continue. As it does, many low-density suburbs and McMansion subdivisions, including some that are lovely and affluent today, may become what inner cities became in the 1960s and ’70s—slums characterized by poverty, crime, and decay.

The story is lengthy, but well worth reading.

I first heard about it in this entry at Virginia policy blog Bacon’s Rebellion, where Jim Bacon has posted his own analysis. That’s worth reading too (and it’s much more concise than the Atlantic story.

‘Backroom politics’ out front

February 5th, 2008 by Mason

The New York Times picked up an eastern Tennessee story about local politics Monday. One might wonder, “Why is the ‘Gray Lady’ writing about the Knox County Commission?

The answer would be that there’s so much color in local political bodies, particularly in Knox County, that it allows writer Dan Barry to pen passages like this:

… on Jan. 31, 2007, a day soon dubbed Black Wednesday, the commission violated the first rule in the Handy Handbook of Backroom Politics: It conducted its hack cronyism in public.

Before an audience of hundreds, the commission staged a political version of a bedroom farce, with its members calling repeated recesses, retreating to a back room, shouting at one another and even swearing in one appointee during a break.

[snip]

At curtain’s close, the 12 appointments included the son of one outgoing commissioner, the wife of another outgoing commissioner, the father of a sitting commissioner, a top aide to the politically muscular sheriff, and a businessman who years earlier had come out on the wrong end of a sexual harassment suit. It seems a catfish could have been appointed if properly connected.

Barry goes on to document the political and judicial backlash to the meeting, driven largely by the editor of The Knoxville News-Sentinnel.

It’s a great yarn, and talks about what happens when meetings that often go unobserved come into public view.

What local music means for its hometown (and listeners therein)

December 19th, 2007 by Mason

I’ve been reading former Sleater-Kinney guitar player Carrie Brownstein’s NPR blog semi-regularly the last few weeks.

On Monday she mused on the sound of “local” bands, and how that relates to where they’re from. In particular she wrote about Bob Mould from Husker Du, and that while he hailed from Minneapolis, a performance from Portland, Ore., included seeming references to Kurt Cobain and the old ’90s Northwest music scene.

And she goes on to eloquently nail the appeal of local music to me. I’ve always kind of understood this intuitively, but never have translated it into words as well as this:

Great music transcends the spot on the map from which it springs forth. But music also captures the nuances and sensibilities of people’s lives in a specific place or even becomes a reflection of the city or State itself. Our local bands might be the best example of who we are right now or of who we want to become, or maybe not at all. They might live in Portland and sound like they’re from Manchester. So, it’s not just the bands who reside in our cities and towns, or who transplant themselves there, that make up the noises that represent our topography or our internal and external landscapes. After all, the chainsaw distortion of Husker Du’s guitar sounds conjure the felling of trees as much as Soundgarden embodies our half lit winter months or The Thermals bring to mind a restless frontier.

[snip]

The sonic or lyrical exploration and insinuation of place is one reason that music speaks to me. Either it transports me to distant shores, or reminds me of all the reasons why I stay.

“Into the Wild”: The book vs. the movie and what it says about wilderness

November 27th, 2007 by Mason

Evan Eisenberg write an interesting spiel for webzine Slate that looks at what “Into the Wild” has to say about the concept of wilderness. He writes not only about the differences between the book and movie, but also factors a William Cronon essay into the mix. The result is fairly short and worth a read, especially if you’re like me and maintain an Ed Abbey-inspired wilderness fixation.

An excerpt:

Harrowing in spots, the book nonetheless came as balm to a nation eager to believe that its newly revived interest in nature was overdone and it should probably just kick back with a six-pack and relax. Equally soothing, for some, was an essay by historian William Cronon published the year before in the New York Times Magazine. Titled “The Trouble With Wilderness,” it argued that wilderness is “a human creation,” and a recent one; in the wild, there is no such thing. Nearly every hectare of nature has a human history; to idealize untouched nature is to evade that history. “As we gaze into the mirror [wilderness] holds up for us, we too easily imagine that what we behold is Nature when in fact we see the reflection of our own unexamined longings and desires.”

Both Krakauer’s book and Cronon’s essay put a spike in the romantic notion of wilderness, but the spikes pointed in very different directions. Cronon said wilderness was not real. Krakauer said it was so real that it could kill you. The political upshot (with Newt Gingrich doing much of the shooting) was the same: Neither a mirage nor a monster needs protection. Neither is worth seeking out. Consign Muir, Thoreau, and Jack London if not to the flames then to the upper shelves, where they are less likely to lead environmentalists to foolish zeal or youngsters to a cold doom.

I especially like this nugget near the end, which serves as the essay’s nut graf:

The myth of wilderness can be dangerous, to the individual as well as to society as a whole. The problem is, the absence of that myth is more dangerous still.