Read You Can Run but You Can't Hide Online
Authors: Duane Dog Chapman
able. My face had been plastered all over the news for weeks. A cou-
ple of American kids spotted us at a fast food restaurant.
“Aren’t you Dog the Bounty Hunter?”
I gave them a blank, cold, death-inducing stare.
“Mi llamo es
Martinez.”
We headed to the airport the following morning. The date was
July 1, 2003. Jorge paid cash for our tickets. He didn’t want any
trace or trail that we were on the move. I was certain we were
screwed if the authorities figured out we left Puerto Vallarta. We
went through airport security.
“Passport, please.” The security guard demanded I hand over
my passport. I was nervous as hell. I barely gave him a second to
read before grabbing it and walking on through. Tim did the
same thing. Leland was worried about something happening at
the airport all morning, because he hid every article written about
us in the bottom of his suitcase. If they checked his suitcase,
they’d know exactly who we were. In preparation that something
might go terribly wrong, he took a pair of his shorts and doused
them with water. He laid the wet shorts on top of the things in his
suitcase. If someone opened it, the first thing they’d find would
be a pair of wet, soiled boxer shorts. Sure enough, Leland got
picked out of the line for a full security search. When the guard
opened his suitcase, he was disgusted by the wet shorts. He
zipped the case back up as he motioned Leland to go on through.
That’s my boy!
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We made the short flight to Tijuana. Jorge had arranged a van
to meet us curbside. We piled in as fast as we could. A few minutes
into the trip, the driver told Jorge he didn’t have any identification.
I thought this had to be a setup.
“Jorge! What the hell? What’s going on?” We had made it
through two airports and four checkpoints. We were a couple of
miles from the American border. We’d never get through border pa-
trol without the driver presenting ID. We couldn’t go back. Not
now. We were so close. But going forward would mean going back.
We were stumped.
“What are we going to do?” I looked at Jorge with puppy dog
eyes.
Leland was seated in the back of the van. While Jorge and I tried
to figure out a plan, Leland noticed a Mexican checkpoint soldier
chasing us down, waving with one hand and pointing his rifle at the
car with the other.
“Gun it!” I yelled at the driver to crash the gate and get us to
American soil.
Just as we approached the American checkpoint, the driver
pulled down the visor above his head. “Here it is! I have my pa-
pers!” I wanted to scream at him, but I was too eager to get to the
other side of that gate.
I could see the Mexican soldier in the distance behind us, still
waving. Right in front of us was a large official-looking white man
in a uniform instructing the van to pull over.
The officer opened the van’s side door, pointed directly at me,
and said, “You. Come with me.” I couldn’t believe this. We were so
close. This time I would fight to the end. I wasn’t going back to jail.
No way. I couldn’t shoot the guy—I didn’t have a gun—but I could
beat his ass to death. I took two steps forward.
“Dog Chapman?”
I didn’t want to answer.
“Welcome home. We’ve been waiting for you. I’m with Home-
land Security. You are safe. You’re free.”
I fell to my knees. I didn’t realize we had crossed the border. I
looked up and saw the largest, most beautiful American flag waving
above me. I cannot put words to how I felt in that moment. Free,
blessed, safe, loved, relieved, lucky. None of those words combined
or alone accurately describe that feeling. I kissed the ground.
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Yo u Ca n R u n , b u t Yo u Ca n ’ t H i d e
“Oh, my God. Sweet Jesus. I’m home. Thank you, Lord.” We all
wept tears of joy.
The driver took us to a nearby Budget Rental Car at the San
Diego airport.
The woman behind the counter immediately recognized me.
“Dog?” I thought I knew her from Tony Robbins.
“You’re in
People
magazine, sweetie.”
I couldn’t believe it. She gave me the nicest, newest car on the lot.
The journey had taken a toll on all of us, but Jorge seemed espe-
cially drained from the pressure. He just wanted to go home. Tim,
Leland, and I got into the car and raced up the I-5 freeway toward
L.A., where our loved ones were waiting for us. We were doing at
least a hundred miles an hour to make the two-hour trip as fast as
we could. Somewhere in Orange County, about halfway there, I saw
flashing red lights in my rearview mirror. I didn’t want to stop. All I
could think of was getting to Beth. The cop pulled up alongside the
car and motioned for me to pull over.
I pulled off the highway onto the median. The cop was pissed. I
could tell by the way he approached the car he didn’t appreciate our
short-lived chase. I opened the car door and got out. I was wearing
a suede poncho someone gave me on the beach in Puerto Vallarta,
my dark glasses, jeans, boots, and a leather cowboy hat. I looked
like a mix of Zorro and Pancho Villa!
“Stop right there. Fucking freeze! First, you’re smoking. Second-
hand smoke is known to kill, so now, you’ve already tried to kill
me.” The cop took a minute to look me over. The he squinted and
said, “Dog?” The cop hugged me on the spot. The boys got out of
the car. He hugged them, too. He was so excited to see us. The re-
action we were getting from people was startling. We had no idea
how big a story this had become.
“Do you want an escort?” By now, two other California High-
way Patrolmen had pulled up. I thought an escort would bring too
much attention to the fact we were home. I wanted the chance to
see Beth before the media got ahold of us.
“Thanks guys, but if it’s all the same, I think we’ll take a pass on
the escort.”
The cop radioed ahead to be on the lookout for our car. “Under
no circumstances are you to pull this man over.”
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Roger that.
I pulled up in front of the Le Parc Hotel in West Hollywood.
Beth and I had used that hotel as our headquarters for most of the
hunt for Luster. I knew she’d know to meet me there when I called.
The entire hotel staff stood with Beth and Tim’s wife, Davina, wait-
ing to welcome us home. Leland’s wife, Maui, stayed in Hawaii.
Beth, my honey, came running toward the car in her high heels. I re-
member drinking her in, smelling her perfume, feeling her heart
beat next to mine. It was the strongest love I’ve ever known. It was
pure joy. We held one another for more than ten minutes before let-
ting go.
While I was in Mexico, Beth, my Rock of Gibraltar, had shown
signs of cracking. When she told me she wasn’t sure I was going to
make it this time, I wept at the thought of never holding, kissing,
and being with her again. I worried she felt helpless. I was sure she
was in a lot of pain. I can’t imagine how she must have felt while I
was incarcerated. Seeing her now, in this moment of pure bliss, was
better than I dreamed. It was just me, D-o-g, and Him, G-o-d, down
there in Mexico. Now that I was home, I would never be alone
again.
C h a p t e r F i f t y - t w o
Thirty-six hours after
I was reunited with Beth, she and
I found ourselves thrust into a media feeding frenzy, the likes of
which we had never experienced. We scheduled our first press con-
ference to answer as many questions as we could. Beth was adamant
the lawyers do all the talking, but I had a lot to say. I still had a
black eye from fighting in jail, so I wore my sunglasses to hide my
battered face. I was flanked by two lawyers, one on each side—Les
Abell and Jim Blancarte. These are two of the best defense attorneys
in the world. Forty cameras pointed directly at me, with a multitude
of journalists waiting to hear firsthand what happened in Mexico. I
began to speak. Twenty minutes later, the press was still mesmer-
ized by my story. My lawyers were so taken by what I was saying,
they forgot to stop me from talking!
The media asked some very poignant questions. Some I could
answer, others I still wonder about.
“Dog, why did the FBI abandon you?”
I said, “Did you hear what the FBI was doing the night I got ar-
rested? I’m sure they had bigger fish to fry.” I had no way of know-
ing what the FBI was doing or not. I had to believe it was something
more important than helping me since they left me in Mexico to
fend for myself.
“The FBI said they had no idea what you were doing. Is that
true?”
J u s t i c e D e n i e d
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I laughed. “They’re the FBI. The have to say that.”
“Would you ever go back to Mexico?”
“Never.”
“Do you feel the government tried to trap you?”
“Yes, I do. I communicated everything I knew. The FBI told me
nothing. Despite their claims, I received no help. They were in the
loop every step of the way.” At one point, after I was arrested, Beth
told me she received a call from a prominent FBI agent saying they
had to disassociate themselves from us. They couldn’t let it leak
that they were always in the know.
The press conference was a success. My goal was to let the world
know the truth about Andrew Luster, Mexico, and the Dog. Tim
hung in there, staying in L.A. to face the press with Beth and me for
a week. Leland was uncomfortable with all of the attention, so af-
ter the press conference, he caught the next flight back to Hawaii to
be with his family.
There was additional unexpected fallout from capturing Luster.
A small group of bounty hunters from New Hampshire began to
campaign against me. I have been dealing with these guys repeat-
edly over the years. The more recognition I received, the more they
resented me. Their distaste for my unique, nonconformist, untradi-
tional way of doing business makes them terribly uncomfortable.
They have tried to run me out of the business more times than I
can count. In their effort to discredit us, our Mexican mug shots be-
gan popping up all over the Internet. “These men are Wanted.” Sud-
denly, everywhere I went, there were Wanted posters of Tim, Leland,
and myself. As part of their well-organized smear campaign, the
four guys from New Hampshire did a television interview—faces
hidden, of course—saying we were immoral vigilantes and danger-
ous, hardened criminals. They claimed I was a bad example, a bounty
hunter who did not reflect the rest of the industry in my practices
and therefore was damaging their good names and reputations. It
was laughable.
One of the guys even threatened me during an interview. He
held up an eight-inch metal pipe, looked right into the camera, and
said, “You see this, Doggie? You see this, Chapman? This is going
right up your ass when I see you. Oh, yes. You will have my babies!”
He was surrounded by what appeared to be six Ku Klux Klan mem-
bers, who all laughed at the thought of this jerk sodomizing me.
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Yo u Ca n R u n , b u t Yo u Ca n ’ t H i d e
That threat is a stone-cold felony, but I can’t get anyone to take ac-
tion. In the eyes of the feds, all it would do is bring more attention
and publicity my way. That’s the last thing they’re looking to do.
One thing is certain. That footage has never and will never air
again.
The New Hampshire bounty hunters have made it their per-
sonal mission to get an arrest warrant to send me back to Mexico
to stand trial for the charges against me. To be clear, I am not a
wanted man in the United States of America. In order for me to
stand trial, I would have to somehow end up back in Mexico. There
are only two ways that will ever happen. Someone would have to
kidnap me and somehow get me over the border into the hands of
the Mexican authorities. Or, the United States government would
have to extradite me to Mexico. At the time, the idea of either of
these scenarios ever happening was beyond comprehension.
Beth did her best to shut down the attack, but the four New
Hampshire bounty hunters were attempting to destroy me at a time
when I was already quite vulnerable. In fact, to this day, they are
still gunning for me.
After the interviews and media attention died down, Beth and I
flew back to Hawaii to reunite with our family. We had spent our
last dollar chasing Luster and getting me out of jail, and now the
harsh reality was sinking in that, once again, we were completely
broke. A couple of days later, the electric company shut off our
power. We couldn’t even scrape together enough money to pay the
overdue bill. I checked our family into a hotel until we could finan-
cially get back on our feet. We lived off our credit cards, hoping