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Gregg Allman & The Dixie Mafia: Legendary Southern Rock-&-Roll Star Stood On Shaky Ground With Mobsters In 1970s

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The Godfather of Southern Rock, Gregg Allman, the founder of the culturally transcendent Allman Brothers Band, died over Memorial Day Weekend at 69 of liver cancer in Georgia, the same state he drew the ire of the Dixie Mafia in back in the 1970s during the peak of his band’s fame. According to FBI records, the Macon, Georgia branch of the Dixie Mafia placed a murder contract on Allman’s head for agreeing to testify against alleged Dixie Mafia enforcer and drug dealer John (Scooter) Herring, his own former bodyguard and band road manager, at a highly-publicized 1976 federal narcotics trial.

Allman’s decision to take the witness stand broke up the Allman Brothers Band in the months surrounding his court appearance pointing the finger at Herring for supplying copious quantities of illegal drugs to large portions of the Southern Rock scene in the 1970s. Herring, who was tied to Georgia Dixie Mafia boss John (J.C.) Hawkins, was found guilty and sentenced to 75 years behind bars, but eventually had the conviction tossed on appeal and after taking a plea, was home by the end of the decade. Before taking his job as Allman’s head of security, he was Hawkins’ driver and right-hand man, per police informants at the time.

The Dixie Mafia, sometimes referred to the “Cornbread Mafia” or “Hillbilly Mob”, was a loosely-fitting “catch-all” term for any non-Italian continuing criminal enterprise operating in the American South in the 20th Century, some of which were tangentially connected, others not.

Formed by siblings Gregg and Duane Allman in their home state of Florida, the Allman Brothers band moved its base of operations to Macon, Georgia in 1969 and signed with a local fledgling label and early Southern Rock music-pioneer Capricorn Records. Putting out five platinum and 11 gold-selling albums, the group would go on to spearhead a movement in rock-and-roll in the deep south and be elected to the Rock-and-Roll Hall of Fame in 1995.

Duane Allman was killed in a motorcycle accident in October 1971, just as the group was ascending and finding success on a national and international level. Already a heroin addict, Greg Allman acquired a heavy cocaine habit while coping with his brother’s untimely passing and dove head first into the tailor-made-for-the-tabloids romance with then-TV star and recording artist Cher (they were married for four years – 1975-1979 – and Cher would win an Oscar on the silver screen for her work in 1987’s Moonstruck).

Allman was introduced to Herring at a Macon bar in 1973 and the pair became fast friends. Herring quickly jumped on tour with the band and became their No.1 dope dealer. He also acted as Allman’s bodyguard and soon thereafter was coordinating tour schedules for both the Allman Brothers group and Greg’s side project, the Greg Allman Band.

Herring’s wholesale supplier was another Dixie Mafia associate named Joey Fuchs, who provided Herring with cocaine, heroin and Demerol that Herring fed to the bands he helped manage. Fuchs, who often partied with and sometimes sold directly to Allman, was a licensed pharmacist and he was selling so much of his wears on the black market, he was forced to organize a fake burglary of the pharmacy he owned to account for all his missing stock. DEA documents from 1975 pegged Fuchs the main furnisher of narcotics to J.C. Hawkins and his Peach State Dixie Mafia faction.

“Scooter” Herring

The beginning of the end for Hawkins’ Hillbilly Mob organization and the original incarnation of the Allman Brothers band can each be traced back to a Georgia State Police investigation into political and city police corruption in Macon opened in April 1974.The inquiry uncovered links and pay-offs between Hawkins and politicians and law enforcement. However, that wasn’t all. It also revealed the connection between Hawkins and his Dixie Mafia gang and Herring and Fuchs and then in turn Herring and Fuchs’ tie-in to the Allman Brothers camp.

The FBI and DEA hoped by targeting Herring and Fuchs, they could get to Hawkins, their ultimate goal and soon-to-be prized head on their proverbial trophy wall. Both Herring and Fuchs were indicted and arrested on May 30, 1976. Herring was taken into custody at the Allman Brothers’ Macon office headquarters, Fuchs at his nearby home.

The first to flinch was Fuchs. He got a 10-year plea deal and agreed to testify in court and wear a wire.

Herring wouldn’t budge though. He refused to give up Fuchs, his pals in the Allman Brothers Band or his former boss, J.C. Hawkins in the Dixie Mafia. So the FBI let Fuchs loose, sending him wired-up into meetings with Herring and Hawkins.

Scooter Herring’s refusal to turn against his friends and business associates obviously wasn’t reciprocated. Greg Allman and Fuchs were the star witnesses at Herring’s June 1976 trial. A RICO indictment against Hawkins was filed that same month.

The street was talking. Informants began telling the FBI that Hawkins wanted Allman and Fuchs dead and was offering $100,000 apiece to hit them before they could testify. Protected and watched around-the-clock by federal agents, Allman took the stand in Herring’s trial for two days of riveting testimony. In between his first and second day of testimony, a Macon newspaper baring the headline, “Allman under heavy guard, death threats reported” made its way into court and back into the jury room, enough grounds for getting the conviction eventually thrown out two years later for a tainting of the jury pool.

J.C. Hawkins went to trial that fall and was convicted of an array of RICO predicates (arson, counterfeiting, running a car-theft and truck-hijacking ring, extortion, drug trafficking and insurance fraud). Although he didn’t wind up murdering Allman or Fuchs, Hawkins is believed to have had a lieutenant of his who he suspected of being a police informant killed: Dixie Mafia member Jimmy Reeves was shotgunned to death on May 27, 1974. In the days before the slaying, Hawkins was intercepted by a federal wiretap telling an associate of Reeves’, “That fink son of bitch won’t be around much longer.” The Reeves hit was allegedly carried out by Hawkins’ brother.

Following his release from prison in 1979, Scooter Herring went back into the music industry and managed a number of rock bands before he died of natural causes in 2007, including Allman Brothers offshoot Sea Level. Popular and gregarious, rumor has it Jim Henson based his “Scooter” character in the Muppets TV show and movies on Herring after meeting him at a benefit concert in the 1970s prior to launching his innovative and hugely-successful children’s franchise. Scooter on The Muppets was the manager of the show’s fictional rock-and-roll band.

The Allman Brothers reunited in a variety of formations in the coming years (1976, 1982, 1988). Gregg Allman, 67, today, portrayed an elusive and lethal Texas drug kingpin in the 1992 film Rush, co-starring Jason Patric, Jennifer Jason Leigh and Sam Elliott. He last released a solo album in 2011 and still regularly tours. His autobiography came out in 2012 where he spoke frankly about Herring’s 1976 drug trial, his personal battle with narcotics and choice to cooperate.

The post Gregg Allman & The Dixie Mafia: Legendary Southern Rock-&-Roll Star Stood On Shaky Ground With Mobsters In 1970s appeared first on The Gangster Report.


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