Copyright 2011 Michael O. Varhola
All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced in any fashion, print, facsimile, or electronic, or by any method yet to be developed, without express permission of the copyright holder.
Published by Clerisy Press
Printed in the United States of America
Distributed by Publishers Group West
First edition, first printing
| CLERISY PRESS PO Box 8874 Cincinnati, OH 45208-0874 www.clerisypress.com |
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Varhola, Michael O.
Texas confidential: sex, scandal, murder, and mayhem in the Lone Star State by Michael O. Varhola; foreword by Jesse Sublett.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN-13: 978-1-57860-458-6
ISBN-10: 1-57860-458-3
1. CrimeTexasHistoryCase studies. 2. Sex scandalsTexasHistoryCase studies. 3. ScandalsTexasHistoryCase studies. 4. PoliticiansTexasConduct of lifeHistory. I. Title.
HV6793.T4V37 2011
364.109764dc23
2011019717
Edited by DONNA POEHNER
Cover designed by STEPHEN SULLIVAN AND SCOTT MCGREW
Interior designed by STEPHEN SULLIVAN
Layout by ANNIE LONG
Front and back cover photos appear courtesy of: Wikimedia Commons; photo of Anna Nicole
Smith courtesy of Photofest, Inc.
Photos in Texas Confidential appear courtesy of:
Michael O. Varhola
Library of Congress
Wikimedia Commons
NASA
Other photos appear courtesy of: p. 36, IMDB; p. 47, CityView; p. 52, U.S. Congress; p. 74, New Braunfels Herald-Zeitung ; p. 90, Chester Harding; p. 95, Mexico City Museum; p. 10, National Photo Company Collection; p. 159, Joe Burgess; p. 175, J. H. E. Partington; p. 180, Paul Joseph; p. 204, 1980 Larry D. Moore; p. 207, Austin Police Department; p. 208, Austin Public Library; p. 213, Gunnar Hansen; p. 217, Houston Police Department; p. 241, Anthony Frederick Augustus Sandys; p. 255, Laura McKenzie/ New Braunfels Herald-Zeitung ; p. 258, Laura McKenzie/ New Braunfels Herald-Zeitung ; p. 268, Jasleen Kaur; p. 271, Edward S. Curtis; p. 273, National Archives; p. 280, Frederic Remington; p. 289, Robert Stringer; p. 294, Matthew Rutledge; p. 295, U.S. Air Force; p. 296, Daniel Schwen; p. 309, Avon; p. 342, Diego Fernndez
To the good people of Texas who have, over the years, been preyed upon by the villains of this volume and suffered the effects of their countless crimes.
Acknowledgments
A GREAT MANY OF MY FRIENDS, family, and associates deserve recognition for the roles they played during the development of Texas Confidential .
Foremost among the people who are due thanks is my wife, Diane. Among other things, she traveled with me to a number of the sites associated with the various chapters, discussed the project to one extent or another on almost a daily basis, and carried the weight of household responsibilities so that I could devote the necessary time and effort to this project.
Karen Holmes, publisher of the Hilltop Reporter , deserves thanks both for providing a venue that allowed me to work as a journalist in Texas and for offering encouragement and information throughout the development of this book.
Gratitude is due to the hosts, organizers, and affiliates of Psi-Fi Radio, a paranormal-themed show I appear on regularly. Donna Stewart, Sharon Kincaid, Laura Schier, and Clarence Rice encouraged me to discuss this book and some of its weirder chapters on the show. Fellow Texan Lydia Aswolf, host of the show Lydias Literary Lowdown, also provided a platform for me to discuss my activities and provided ongoing encouragement during the progress on this book.
A group of people who deserve recognition for their help include the staff at Clerisy Press, including editors Jack Heffron and Donna Poehner, marketing and publicity specialists Kara Pelicano and Hillary Bond, and publisher Richard Hunt, all of whom provided critical support, guidance, and encouragement during the development of Texas Confidential . Thanks, too, to John Boertlein, author of two of the other books in the series of which this book is a part. The chapter Walking Tall in the White House in this volume was adapted from his book Presidential Confidential.
A number of fellow writers, editors, and publishers warrant some acknowledgment for their general encouragement and specific contributions. These include Dominick and Charlene Salemi of Brutarian magazine, for which I write The X-Phile column on the paranormal; journalist Theron Brittain, who covered the Vickers murder trial with me; newspaperman J.D. Prose, who has always set a standard in my mind; Chip Cassano, who introduced me to the works of Cormac McCarthy; author Gary Cartwright, whose books on Texas history and crime were invaluable resources for me; Jake Silverstein, editor of Texas Monthly magazine, whose research into the final days of Ambrose Bierce helped me with my own chapter on that subject; and crime author Jesse Sublett, who very generously agreed to write the foreword to this edition of the book at the last minute.
Several friends also followed the progress of this book and periodically provided comments or encouragement on various aspects of it, among them Rick Atkinson; Richard Balsley; Coleen Cox; Caroline Eveningstorm; Nikolas Orion French; Rebecca Gallagher; Robert Gruver; Denise Lindsey; Jon Reichman; Terri Rodabaugh; Roxie Ann Young Sasiela; William Thrasher; Chris Van Deelen; my parents, Mike and Merrilea Varhola; Pete Wyeth; and Stan, Charmaine, and Sean Swearingen.
A number of the proprietors of various sites I visited or people I encountered in the process of doing so deserve my thanks as well, and these include Mark Priest of Miss Hatties Bordello Museum in San Angelo.
Various law enforcement personnel I have worked with over the past few years also warrant mention here, not necessarily because they directly assisted with this book but because they have generally been helpful in providing me with information related to my journalistic activities. They include Lieutenant Mark Reynolds of the Comal County Sheriffs Office, Chief Joe Hamilton of the Bulverde Police Department, and trooper Rick Alvarez of the Texas Department of Public Safety.
It is important to recognize the work of the many authors, editors, journalists, radio and television reporters, contributors to online sites, and others who created the vast body of published information that I drew upon for this book.
I would also like to thank all of the editors, colleagues, family members, business associates, and friends who patientlyor, in some cases, not so patientlywaited for me to fulfill my obligations to them while I was focusing so much of my attention on this project.
Finally, if there is anyone I have left out of these acknowledgments, I would like to sincerely beg their forgiveness and thank them for their help as well!
Preface
TO SAY THAT AUTHORING TEXAS Confidential was a very personal experience would be something of an understatement. In the year leading up to the publication of this volume, I read dozens of books and hundreds of articles related to the subjects of sex, scandal, murder, and mayhem in Texas and travelled from one end of the state to the other visiting the sites associated with many of the chapters that follow. A number of things, however, ended up making this project especially relevant and interesting to me on a personal level.
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