Mara Shalhoup is a decorated journalist and a senior editor with Creative Loafing, the preeminent alternative newsweekly serving the South. She started her writing career as a crime reporter at the Macon Telegraph, and has gone on to earn such honors as a Clarion Award, two nominations for a Livingston Award, and recognition from the Atlanta Press Club as the city's Journalist of the Year. BMF is her first book. She lives with her husband in Atlanta.
Mara Shalhoup is a decorated journalist and a senior editor with Creative Loafing, the preeminent alternative newsweekly serving the South. She started her writing career as a crime reporter at the Macon Telegraph, and has gone on to earn such honors as a Clarion Award, two nominations for a Livingston Award, and recognition from the Atlanta Press Club as the city's Journalist of the Year. BMF: The Rise and Fall of Big Meech and the Black Mafia Family is her first book. She lives with her husband in Atlanta.
BMF: The Rise and Fall of Big Meech and the Black Mafia Family
eBook
(First Edition)-
ISBN-13:
9781429958424
- Publisher: St. Martin's Press
- Publication date: 03/02/2010
- Sold by: Macmillan
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 320
- Sales rank: 189,022
- File size: 401 KB
Available on NOOK devices and apps
Want a NOOK? Explore Now
In the early 1990s, Demetrius "Big Meech" Flenory and his brother, Terry "Southwest T," rose up from the slums of Detroit to build one of the largest cocaine empires in American history: the Black Mafia Family. After a decade in the drug game, the Flenorys had it all--a fleet of Maybachs, Bentleys and Ferraris, a 500-man workforce operating in six states, and an estimated quarter of a billion in drug sales. They socialized with music mogul Sean "Diddy" Combs, did business with New York's king of bling Jacob "The Jeweler" Arabo, and built allegiances with rap superstars Young Jeezy and Fabolous. Yet even as BMF was attracting celebrity attention, its crew members created a cult of violence that struck fear in a city and threatened to spill beyond the boundaries of the drug underworld. Ruthlessness fueled BMF's rise to incredible power; greed and that same ruthlessness led to their downfall.
When the brothers began clashing in 2003, the flashy and beloved Big Meech risked it all on a shot at legitimacy in the music industry. At the same time, a team of investigators who had pursued BMF for years began to prey on the organization's weaknesses. Utilizing a high-stakes wiretap operation, the feds inched toward their goal of destroying the Flenory's empire and ending the reign of a crew suspected in the sale of thousands of kilos of cocaine -- and a half-dozen unsolved murders.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
-
- The Infiltrator: The True…
- by Robert Mazur
-
- The Sinatra Club: My Life…
- by Sal PolisiSteve Dougherty
-
- The Butcher: Anatomy of a…
- by Philip Carlo
-
- American Kingpin: The Epic…
- by Nick Bilton
-
- The Last Narco: Inside the…
- by Malcolm Beith
-
- Original Gangster: The Real…
- by Frank LucasAliya S. King
-
- The Westies: Inside New…
- by T. J. English
-
- Vagos, Mongols, and Outlaws:…
- by Charles FalcoKerrie Droban
-
- Gangster Squad: Covert Cops,…
- by Paul Lieberman
-
- Wasted
- by Suzy Spencer
-
- Get Capone: The Secret Plot…
- by Jonathan Eig
-
- The Accountant's Story:…
- by Roberto EscobarDavid Fisher
-
- Shattered Justice: A Savage…
- by John Philpin
-
- The Good Rat: A True Story
- by Jimmy Breslin
Recently Viewed
Formed in mid-1990s Atlanta by ambitious, Detroit-born hustler Demetrius "Big Meech" Flenory, the Black Mafia Family controlled most of the American cocaine trade for the better part of a decade. Interviewing members from all levels of the national organization, including now-imprisoned Big Meech, Atlanta-based journalist Shalhoup delivers a stunning exposé of a crime empire that collapsed under the weight of its own success, rising and falling on its charismatic founder's desperate desire for success, popularity, and, ultimately, music-business legitimacy. Shalhoup examines each character in the federal prosecution's comprehensive case, tracing their activities over many years, revealing a lifestyle of over-the-top glamour punctuated by random, brutal violence. Shalhoup quickly, and graphically, dispels the air of hip-hop romance that Big Meech cultivated first through crime and, later, by playing a supporting role in the careers of up-and-coming rappers like T.I. and Jeezy. With superb pacing and a thorough handle on her extensive cast, Shalhoup's true crime debut makes a highly addictive read. Color photos.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
"A first rate read." On Wax Magazine
“An instant classic.” — AllHipHop.com
“…deftly tracks the fortunes of multiple BMF associates and their pursuers in law enforcement… her journalistic chops convey two inescapable messages: The cocaine industry is bigger and more entrenched than most people suspect; and sooner or later, no matter how glamorous, everybody goes down.” –Kirkus Reviews
"A wild ride rivaling anything you’ve seen in a Hollywood crime movie.” — MOG.com
A first rate read.
An instant classic.
A wild ride rivaling anything you've seen in a Hollywood crime movie.