Dangling from a cold metal railing on the second level of Cobo Hall
Auditorium in downtown Detroit, I gaze down on thousands of unsuspecting
concertgoers who actually think that a performance by the
Average White Band is going to be the night's main event.
I say to myself, "It ain't about no damn band, you fools! If you
don't believe it, check this shit out." Grinning, I plummet to the concrete
nine feet below, which is fairly difficult to accomplish wearing
platform shoes with four-inch clear plastic heels.
The impact sends a jolt crunching through my thin body and I
stumble forward a few steps. I'd nearly dropped on the head of a
young black male usher who is now frantically sprinting toward an
exit. He's probably trying to alert the police, but it's a little late for
that. The boldest mass robbery in Detroit's history is under way, and
ain't nothin' he or anyone else can do to stop it!
The Errol Flynn gang is in the house and everybody at this concert
had better give up some jewelry or a wallet. Either that or get
cracked upside the head.
The year is 1977 and I'm in my element--lawlessness, chaos, and
bold action.
The same holds true for two hundred or so of my fellow Errol
Flynn gang members presently terrorizing the Cobo Hall Auditorium
all around me during a brief intermission between musical acts. Some
have actually vaulted onto the main stage while frightened and bewildered
concertgoers look on.
"Errol Flynn, Errol Flynn!" I gleefully holler at the top of my lungs,
matching the cadence of a handful of my homeboys who've commandeered
the microphone onstage and are rhythmically waving
their hands as they perform a popular 1970s dance called the Errol
Flynn.
Like our movie star namesake, we Flynns fancy ourselves to be
suave, swashbuckling, and rakish. And like the matinee idol whose
name we carry, if we're trying to bust a move and you get in our way,
we'll go upside your damn head.
Scanning a row full of Average White Band fans to my left, I see
what I've really come to Cobo Hall for. As I look down the row,
everyone on it is scowling mightily and shooting me expressions that
leave no doubt about their fear and disgust. They have no way of
knowing it, but the looks on their faces only heighten my tremendous
sense of exhilaration.
I lock eyes with a young, muscular brother who has his hands protectively
interlocked around his girlfriend's. His demeanor is defiant,
as though he's feeling his oats and primed to do something heroic and
macho.
I instinctually understand that if I break him down and force him
to bend to my will, the entire row will meekly follow his lead.
"Your wallet, please," I bellow, giving my victim the hardest, meanest
look I can muster. He shoots me a hard look right back, releases
his girlfriend's hands and turns in my direction, preparing for battle.
I expected that and slowly pull back the black pinstriped jacket of my
double-breasted suit so he can see my ace in the hole--a .38-caliber revolver
tucked in my waist.
Then with my eyes I silently dare him to continue his foolhardy
challenge. Some concertgoers have already been punched and kicked
for resisting, but things can get much, much worse. Reluctantly ceding
defeat, my muscular victim sullenly digs into his back pocket,
pulls out a brown leather wallet, and angrily flips it into the concrete
aisle near my feet.
As I quickly bend over to retrieve my booty, the air inside Cobo
Hall is filled with the noise of frantically chattering voices, the amplified
racket from my partners onstage and screams of fear and pain.
The sounds of bedlam and anarchy, sweet music to my ears.
"Thank you, sir. Gimme that watch, too."
The still-warm, expensive-looking silver timepiece is obediently
passed down the row. Once the tough guy has been broken, my other
victims quietly turn over their wallets, pocketbooks, bracelets, and
rings, glaring at me the entire time. Like I could give a damn.
I barely have time to shake down half of another row before I need
to make a hurried escape. Running as quickly as I can in my four-inch
heels, I become part of a mass exodus of youthful thugs wearing
platform-heeled shoes, double-breasted suits, Borsalino hats, wide-framed
white glasses with no lens.
Many of us also are toting expensive-looking umbrellas and walking
canes, which come in handy when looking dapper or when scything
through hordes of frenzied concertgoers.
As soon as I get outside Cobo Hall with the other Errol Flynns I
spy black-suited, helmeted riot police standing shoulder-to-shoulder
as they anxiously scan the exiting throng for lawbreakers.
They look stupid standing in the middle of the street with the
streetlights glinting off their dark helmets. What do they expect me to
do--walk up to them and surrender? Slowing down so that I'm moving
at the same pace as the escaping concertgoers, I place a look of
consternation and fear that matches theirs on my face. A wolf flowing
to freedom among the panicked sheep. I gradually ease my way past
the cops, who are nervously tapping their gloved hands with thick
black billyclubs, looking for heads to lay siege to.
Battling a towering urge to run, I walk briskly down the sidewalk,
each step taking me a little farther away from the scene of our crime.
My crime!
But it's not until all the commotion and noise around Cobo Hall
fade into the distance that I slow into a swaggering pimp walk, the
stolen rings and watches in my jacket pockets jingling melodiously.
The warm night air feels fantastic, thanks to a slight breeze fanning in
off the Detroit River.
Only after I've walked a few yards does it dawn on me that I'm
breathing pretty hard, not so much from exertion as from excitement.
Even though the palms of my hands are moist and my stomach feels
like a freight train is rumbling through it, I feel ecstatic.
A few blocks ahead a sea of dark Borsolino fedoras is bobbing
down the street and I jog to catch up.
The cops were so worried about the safety of the concertgoers that
they've left the rest of downtown unguarded, leaving the door open
for a frenzied Errol Flynn gang looting spree. Soon store alarms are
going off like crazy, punctuated by the brittle sound of storefront windows
disintegrating. In no time the sidewalk is littered with glass
shards that twinkle like diamonds under the streetlights and crunch
underfoot.
Smiling, I saunter into Cousins, one of the premier clothing stores
in downtown Detroit, and head straight for a hat rack at the far end
of the darkened store. The store is filled with the fantastic odor of
leather that emanates from expensive jackets and shoes neatly lined
up on display. It's a smell I've always equated with wealth.
The leather looks tantalizing and I shoot an admiring glance as I
hurriedly pass, headed toward my primary targets.
I have them in view now--two authentic Borsalino Como felt fur
fedoras, painstakingly handcrafted in Alessandra, Italy. Taking off my
fake fur Borsalino knockoff, I fling it into a corner, then slip the genuine
article onto my Jeri-curled head. As soon as the baby soft felt fur
caresses my shoulder-length locks, I immediately understand why
Comos are priced at $100 apiece.
Not to mention why they're the favored headgear of the top Detroit
pimps and hustlers that I look up to.
With one Borsalino on my head and another in my hand, I bolt
out of Cousins and back onto the street, before the pigs start responding
to all the jangling store alarms.
Feeling like a kid on Christmas morning, I eagerly make my way
back to the 1968 Camaro that my five-man crew and I parked several
blocks from Cobo Hall. I can't wait to divvy up the booty we've lifted
from the Average White Band crowd and I'm looking forward to seeing
how the eleven o'clock news covers our audacious heist.
My boys and I have just ripped off several thousand Detroit concertgoers
inside a major auditorium located mere blocks from police
headquarters.
Millions have seen him on his nationwide TV show, dispensing justice in his own charismatic style. But Judge Greg Mathis’s own rise to success has been a trial by fire. In this truly candid memoir, his harrowing life on both sides of the law is revealed for the first time.
It starts in Detroit—but far from the court where Greg would one day preside. Raised in the hell of the Herman Garden Projects, he grows to become a “bad-ass, cool-dressing, do-anything gangsta.” His father gone, his mother juggling two jobs, he falls in with the Errol Flynns—“funkified English gentlemen” in three-piece suits and Borsalino hats, urban Robin Hoods who are truly stylish as they steal from everyone and give to themselves.
Considered bright but incorrigible, Greg is sent to stay in his middle-class cousin’s mixed neighborhood, where he enlists the local white youth in wrongdoing. Even jail can’t keep him from going bad again once he gets out. Then a threat to his beloved mother causes a shaken Greg to make a promise in a prayer to God: save my mother and I will straighten up.
To his and everyone else’s surprise, he keeps his side of the bargain. Inspired by The Autobiography of Malcolm X, working at McDonald’s by day and attending classes by night, Greg pulls himself through high school and college and then law school, using in positive ways the innate intelligence that made him a master at crime. Soon he becomes the youngest judge in Michigan history, a District Court judge and, at last, undaunted by the odds and propelled by his personal story, a sought-after and highly paid TV star.
In its blunt, bold, and sometimes hair-raising honesty, Inner City Miracle is both a cautionary and an inspiring story, one sure to stun all those who come to Judge Mathis’s TV courtroom every day.
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