When Legendary Bank Robber Pretty James
Preston Made The Bankers Squeal-And All The Women Sweat-With Bruce Willis,
Billy Bob Thornton And Cate Blanchett’s “Bandits” (2001) In Mind-A Special
Guest Commentary
By Special Guest Scott Allen, contributing
editor North Adamsville Ledger
Bandits, starring Cate Blanchett, Billy
Bob Thornton, Bruce Willis, 2001
The legendary Pretty James Preston,
bank robber, solo bank robber, would have had the so-called “Sleep-over
bandits,” Terry and Joe, a couple of cons, a couple of holy goofs really,
masquerading as bank robbers in the film Bandits,
for lunch and had time for a nap. And I am just the guy who knows that hard
fact for after all I was the guy who put together the legend, wrote up Pretty James’
exploits right up until the end. See I was nothing but a young cub reporter, a
clog in the back- room police beat death march for the heralded North Adamsville Ledger in the 1970s
when Pretty James was robbing, arms in hand, every bank and department store
not entombed in concrete around Eastern Massachusetts when I saw my chance for
a by-line in maybe the Boston Globe,
maybe television. anything but that stinking police backroom that smelled of
stale coffee and staler donuts. My “in” was that I knew Pretty James in high
school and once I connected with him, once he knew he could trust me as far as
he could trust anybody I became essentially his publicity flak, his press agent
to make that legend that he always craved deep down inside. Don’t get me wrong
Pretty James wanted the dough, and plenty of it fast and easy but that legend
business was never far below the surface when we would meet in downtown Boston
across from the JFK Federal Building which he insisted on to put a thumb in the
government’s eye just for kicks, because he could do the deed.
(By the way Pretty James’ mode of operation,
modus operandi okay, was always to show plenty of firepower when on a job. One
night over beers at Shacky’s he told me that was the only thing, other than surprise,
that will keep everybody afraid to breathe, including bank guards and
department store security. Somehow he got some M-16s, AR-15s which are
semi-automatic assault rifles they used in Vietnam where they were not worth
crap, would jam up in the mud, and would go into with one in every hand. Although
people still don’t believe it thinking I made it up as part of the Pretty James
legend on an early job he did actually fire the guns, in the air, after he left
the building just to prove that he was willing to do what was necessary to get
the dough-easy or hard. For a long time, almost ten years he never had to do
any more shooting, so he probably was right to “show the colors” early on. All
I did was verify with a witness on the street that he had fired the weapons
when I did my report on the action, nothing more.)
In lots of ways touting Pretty James was
a piece of cake, easy once he started consulting me, always theoretically to be
sure, about what actions would draw some attention to him, what the world
wanted from a lone gunman essentially in the days when bank robbing still had
some cache. Pretty James had plenty of advantages-one being that he was a
stone-cold bank robber whose instincts until the end were unerring, knew what
would draw and what would not. Big granite-etched banks which in those days of
symbolic show were pictures of safe harbors for a depositor’s money were prime
targets. As the banking industry went suburban, went to cheapjack trailers and
small storefronts they were not although as Pretty, lets’ just call him Pretty
from here on in to save space since you know who I am talking about, kept telling
me even I could stick-up, his term, half of them. When he decided to vary up
his game and hit department stores he avoided the ones that had kids’ clothes
and toys as too dangerous while, as will become apparent in a minute a women’s
clothing store was the cat’s meow. Hell, some women, and I still have my notes
and still have my disbelief would go shopping just to see if Pretty was going
to hit their shopping spree place that day. As already noted, better unlike
Terry and Joe who were something out of the late Jimmy Breslin’s The Gang That Couldn’t Shoot Straight
worked alone, didn’t have to deal with informers who got caught, sharing plans
that might go awry-or the dough. Even better, from a commercial legend point of
view and a newspaper’s as well Pretty went into the bank or store in broad
daylight with no ruse just plenty of nerve and firepower. He could lead off the
late edition or the 6 o’clock news and jump ratings. Best of all he really was
“pretty” a wiry good- looking guy in the mold of the bad-ass biker criminal
that Nick Nolte and Eddie Murphy chased in 48
Hours so all the women would sweat over him, and in the real contact cases
cover him and hide him out. I remember in high school girls who were supposed
to be social butterflies, who were on the top of the totem pole, who wouldn’t
dream of even noticing a low-rent biker were known to show up at Pretty house
and get taken whatever way they wanted. You didn’t go to Pretty’s at midnight
for anything else but to curl his toes. Sweet.
Sure, I will get to the two deadbeat
amateur bank robbers Terry and Joe, along with their collective squeeze, their
so-called hostage, Kate and how they took a page from the late George V.
Higgins’ The Friends of Eddie Coyle
caper that Jimmy Skaggs started way back when grabbing the bank manager and
holding his or her family hostage while they brought the manager to his little
bank and grabbed the cash-no sweat. The only thing they did, a variation if you
will, was grab the bank personnel the night before. Big deal. But first let me
explain how I worked my Pretty legend magic once I got his go ahead.
Every reporter, hell, maybe everybody
who can write more than a sentence or two knows that half, maybe more, of what
you put out in print, in behalf of making a legend is pure bullshit, crap. Here
is what most of those who can write don’t know though people, the great
unwashed masses, lead such dull existences that they will believe almost all of
what they read or heard about-if it makes them feel good, if they connect. Like
I said I already had a running start with the women, young and old as it turned
out because of Pretty’s looks to make the clincher though I needed the guys. I
will say that Pretty, determined, single-minded Pretty, was hard on his women,
those who protected him, and those who wanted to. I won’t say at this late date
he was a “love them and leave them” guy but he surely was no hearts and flowers
to the ladies guy, except that last gal, that Sally something and here I will
be on safe ground not giving a last name because even a “simp” knows that once
she blew town she changed that moniker more than once. Toward the end I would
get letters from some disheartened women who tried to protect Pretty, hide him
out and while none of them finked on him to the coppers they also didn’t think
he was that great in the sack, seemed preoccupied with the next hit, the next
target, what it would take to keep the trail hot. That is when I knew I would
have to double-down on his reputation, advise him a little to get even more
daring with his exploits.
I played the old Robin Hood gag that writers
have been using forever-taking from the rich and giving to the poor. What a
laugh if you knew Pretty. Maybe he left a fifty- cent tip for some diner
waitress he was looking to screw, looking to have play his flute as he called
it, but the guy was nothing but a self-indulgent fool, would go through the
dough living high off the hog at the Ritz for months at a time with a different
woman, maybe two, every night, stuff like that. But giving dough away was not
his thing, he told me so flat-out and I kind of knew from my own family that he
hungered for a lot of things he didn’t have as kid. I made his giving a hundred
here, two hundred there to his women like charity with a little twist of paying
off the whole of Babylon thrown in. Pretty never paid for his women, never paid
for sex and you can believe than, huh, take it to the bank. I had him giving
dough to the families of those in “the projects” over in Adamsville where he
grew up and also to the Sacred Heart Church where he went once, maybe twice as
a kid. Pure gold, although don’t go to either location looking for examples of
how much he gave to anybody. Zilch. Still an easy sell especially once he
branched out into an occasional department store heist and people would be
waiting in line, especially older women, older meaning then in their thirties,
maybe with a couple of kids, a tired ass of a husband and a bleak future to see
if he was going to show up and rob that place that day and maybe they would get
some of his largesse.
That is the public bullshit, the crap
for public consumption but go back a bit to where I described Pretty as a
stone-cold bank robber, a guy who robbed whatever he robbed in broad daylight,
armed to the teeth and taking no prisoners as the saying goes. I don’t know if
Pretty knew about Willie Sutton, an early famous bank robber who was credited
with the observation when asked later about why he robbed banks-that is where
the money is. I never mentioned Willie or
his observation you don’t crowd one legend with tales of another, especially if
you are tasked with making the new guy’s up but Pretty went after the dough
with something like that kind of concentration to get the dough. A few people,
a few heroes who tried to stop him took the fall and early on I used the old
gag that being a hero was for cops and professionals leave Pretty alone, get
out alive. In the end though I couldn’t save him “rep” when on that last caper,
the big Granite National Bank job over in Braintree he wasted four customers
who tried to rush him after a silly bank guard who thought the bank’s money was
his or something took a shot at him and Pretty unloaded. Ran into the streets,
they say he was looking down the block, looking for that Sally who had his ride,
or maybe that is the way I wrote it was gunned down in a hail of bullets. That
Sally never did surface, never contacted me in any way to give her side of the
story but I like to think for one fucking time in his too short life Pretty
tried to protect somebody by taking those slugs without a murmur. Maybe that is
why she never peeped to me. Never did get that Globe job though. Yeah, Pretty was a piece of work while he lasted.
Now to the holy goofs, the Sleepy
Hollow Bandits or whatever they called themselves who have given me something
to whale on courtesy of site manager Greg Green who took Seth Garth’s advice
and hired me to do this one-shot special guest reviewer job. I didn’t know Seth
then back when Pretty was tearing up the place but met him later when he
mentioned that he had read everything I had written about Pretty being a
hometown North Adamsville boy. He is the one who encouraged me to tell the tale
about a real bank robber not some misplaced schoolboy antics which went out
with Bonnie and Clyde. And I have but part of the deal was to tell what was
seriously wrong with the legend these dopes Terry and Joe were trying to put
together.
You already know about their stealing
Jimmy Skaggs’ playbook move to ease the way on getting into the bank. That though
was old even back in the 1970s because the coppers through an informer, the guy
who sold Jimmy’s guys the guns, were able to wrap that caper up without a muss
or fuss. The worst thing though was maybe the guys had heard of Willie Sutton,
its hard to say because their first freaking bank robbery was done without
plan, without thinking things through and Pretty would tell you, Willie too,
you need a plan, plan, plan plan, especially if you are going to last for ten
years like Pretty did without catching day one of jailtime. I won’t even go
into the double-dipping, actually triple-dipping since they had a third guy as
a driver to split the dough with. Pretty would have freaked big time on that
shares stuff. He told me once he actually took a cab from a bank robbery scene
in Stoughton, the car was across from the bank, he got in, where to and that
was it. Gave the cabbie ten bucks and thought he was a great guy for doing so.
His haul one hundred thou not bad for a day’s work minus that ten bucks. (I was
always careful about how much the bank takes were since it was in the coppers
and banks’ interest to jack up the take to make the “perp” look harder than he
was and for the bank to grab some easy fed insurance money. I also took a
skeptical eye to whatever Pretty said his haul was since in the interest of his
legend he might jack up the heist price. On the Stoughton caper, for example,
the take was fifty thou not one hundred so maybe that ten bucks to the cabbie
really was big to Pretty)
You know how hard Pretty was on his
women, except maybe that last one, mainly us them to hide him out, fuck them
and then move on, no strings around him, no revealing plans or ideas. The
cardinal sin of these holy goofs, this Terry and Joe comedy act if you think
about it was grabbing that weirdo Kate, not because she wasn’t a good-looking
little redhead but because when you throw a woman in the mix you get nothing
but trouble with a capital “T.” You know this Kate stirred both men, and she
played them on that seesaw. Got them crazy for no good reason. Let me tell you
what Pretty told me about the one time he thought about taking a woman along,
some twist he met at a gin mill in New York while he was on “vacation.” She was
maybe nineteen and build for trouble, big trouble if a guy let himself get
involved with her. Well Pretty did for a while. Got hot as nails for her.
Decided that he needed a look-out (probably what he expected Sally to do on
that last doomed caper I don’t know since the last time I saw him was in a
morgue) and so he brought the twist along. When showtime came she vanished,
went long gone and the caper depended on that look-out job she was supposed to
perform since this bank was across from a police station. He barely got out
alive with twenty-five thou (actually ten and some change) and never went that
route again. You know I could go on and on about these goofs, about Pretty but
you can see by now that Pretty would have had them for lunch. Maybe dinner
too.
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