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Timmy Overton of Austin and Jerry Ray James of Odessa were football stars who traded athletics for lives of crime. The original rebels without causes, nihilists with Cadillacs and Elvis hair, the Overton gang and their associates formed a ragtag white trash mafia that bedazzled Austin law enforcement for most of the 1960s. Tied into a loose network of crooked lawyers, pimps and used car dealers who became known as the "traveling criminals," they burglarized banks and ran smuggling and prostitution rings all over Texas. Author Jesse Sublett presents a detailed account of these Austin miscreants, who rose to folk hero status despite their violent criminal acts. Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
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Sublett, Jesse
1960s Austin Gangsters: Organized Crime that Rocked the Capital
History Press
176 pgs., 978-1-62629-840-1, $19.99 paperback
March 9, 2015
1960s Austin Gangsters: Organized Crime that Rocked the Capital is Jesse Sublett’s history of the Overton Gang, “Austin’s locally grown white trash mafia” (part of what is sometimes termed the “Dixie Mafia”). Tim Overton and his cohorts did their very best to control the criminal underground in Austin from approximately 1960 until 1968, when the gang went to trial on federal conspiracy charges of running an interstate bank robbery and prostitution ring. The Overton Gang of “safecrackers, pimps, drug dealers and Cadillac-obsessed hoodlums” did not content itself with Texas but went regional with “heavy connections to the Italian counterparts in the Big D, Cowtown, the Little Man in New Orleans, Biloxi, Oklahoma, Florida and Chicago.”
It is evident that Sublett conducted many interviews and exhaustive research. He is fond of his subject and it shows. The profiles of the individuals involved are interesting and include backstory, exposing the “dysfunctional backgrounds” that undoubtedly contributed to their career choices. For these reasons, it is a particular shame that the book could have done with a more careful edit and copyedit. It is intermittently disjointed and sometimes difficult to follow.
There is plenty of humor here, sometimes dry, sometimes sardonic. “It’s an important part of Austin history,” said Nick Kralj, former club owner and longtime Austin backstage historian. “You always had a connection with the outlaws and the lawyers and the politicians…because they all like the same things.” The author describes Corpus Christi as “the city on the Texas Gulf Coast named after the Son of God—ironically so, as in pre-European settlement times the area was inhabited by the Karankawa Indians, who were known to eat people.”
Sublett has a colloquial style that borders on the lyrical, which makes sense when you learn that his Austin band, the Skunks, was inducted into the Hall of Fame. For example: “Even before the “Summer of Love” in 1967, you only had to drive down the Drag to see Austin’s old, square corners melting into new, cooler shapes.” And: “In the fall of ’63, as Sean Connery showed Americans how slick double-zero agents committed government-sanctioned sabotage and murder, Dr. Timothy Leary was spreading the gospel of LSD, and Austin thug culture was still in an old school groove.”
Austin Gangsters is an engaging cultural history of Austin’s growing pains and class distinctions as it transformed from a “sleepy state capital and college town to the creative class/music mecca that we know today.” While engaging, it is cluttered with minutiae: dates, street addresses, lists of items and amounts stolen, and details unnecessary to telling the story well. You may feel as if you need an organizational chart. There is even some rather startling conjecture involving JFK assassination theories. Austin Gangsters belongs firmly in the Truth is Stranger than Fiction category.
Originally published by Lone Star Literary Life. ( )