Sunday, January 25, 2026

A Prophet from the Supermax: Carlos Lehder’s Grim Warning to Nicolás Maduro.

The legend of Carlos Lehder—the man who once turned a Bahamian island into a cocaine fortress—is no longer written in blood and high-altitude logistics.  Today, it is written in ink. In his interview on Más Allá del Silencio, Lehder speaks with the haunting clarity of a ghost who has returned from a world meant to swallow men whole.
Here is the story of his descent into the "Dark Planet" and his improbable resurrection.

The Encounter: The Priest and the Permit:
The turning point of Lehder’s life reads like a scene from a magical realism novel. Imagine the most dangerous drug smuggler in the world, buried alive in an Illinois tomb, when suddenly the "Dark Planet" is pierced by a visitor.
Father Rafael García Herreros,  an 82-year-old Colombian priest and "apostle," traveled to the heart of the American prison system to find Lehder.  Through the small food slot of the steel door, the priest reached in and touched Lehder’s hands. Lehder describes the sensation as a "shipwrecked man finding a lifebuoy".

But this wasn't just a spiritual visit; it was a high-stakes negotiation.
Lehder wanted to cooperate with the U.S. government against Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega, but he knew that in his world, "snitching" meant a death sentence for his family. In a surreal moment of cartel bureaucracy, the priest acted as the intermediary. He brought word back from Pablo Escobar, who was then in his private prison, La Catedral. Escobar’s message was chillingly pragmatic: "Tell Carlos I’ve settled my own problems... let him do what he must to get his freedom". With the "permission" of the kingpin and the blessing of the priest, Lehder signed his deal.

The Prophecy: A Warning for Maduro:
Lehder’s narrative now turns to the present, casting himself as a grim prophet for Nicolás Maduro. He speaks of Maduro’s current situation with the cold eye of a veteran. He describes the New York winters where a prisoner is taken to a roofless cage at 5:00 AM to "recreate" in sub-zero temperatures.
He warns that Maduro is headed for Florence, Colorado (ADX Florence)—a fortress where the cells are buried four floors underground. Lehder envisions Maduro living in a "living tomb" just a floor away from "El Chapo" Guzmán, monitored by cameras every second of every hour until his body finally gives up. His advice is blunt: Plead guilty now. To Lehder, a trial is a vanity that leads only to the abyss.

The Resurrection: From Kingpin to Author:
Today, the man who once commanded fleets of Cessnas and an army of smugglers sits in the Colombian countryside, promoting his autobiography, Vida y Muerte del Cártel de Medellín.
The most captivating part of his transformation is his shift in values. The man who once sought power through the "Light Planet’s" vices now finds his greatest joy in a signature. He speaks with a newfound "virtue of humility," marveling at the fact that people now ask him for photos and autographed books rather than favors or fear.

He has traded the "Dark Planet" for the written word, claiming that while the judge sentenced his body to life behind bars, he never gave them permission to lock up his mind. He is, as he told his interviewer with a bittersweet smile, "a dog alive rather than a lion dead".

The narrative begins not with a roar, but with a cold silence. Lehder describes his 1987 extradition as a sudden shearing away from reality. One moment he was a titan of the Medellín Cartel; the next, he was being flown to the Marion Penitentiary, a place built to replace the cruelty of Alcatraz.

He calls the U.S. Supermax system "El Planeta Oscuro" (The Dark Planet). It is a world where the sun never rises. For decades, Lehder lived in a concrete box, a 3-by-3-meter universe where the only human face he saw was a guard peering through a slot to deliver food. He describes the psychological horror of "Planet Light"—the world we live in—becoming a torment. To survive, he had to murder his own memories of beautiful women, the laughter of his children, and the Colombian sun, because those memories were "afflictions" that could drive a man to the edge of the razor.





Saturday, January 24, 2026

Ryan 'White' Wedding Captured

Ryan Wedding was captured in Mexico City and is now in U.S. federal custody as of Friday, January 23, 2026.
His arrest marks the end of a massive international manhunt for the former Canadian Olympic snowboarder, who had been on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted list with a $15 million reward on his head.

The Details of the Capture:
Wedding was apprehended in Mexico City. Reports on the specific nature of his capture vary slightly: Mexico’s Security Minister, Omar García Harfuch,  stated that Wedding surrendered voluntarily at the U.S. embassy on Wednesday, while U.S. officials described it as a high-risk operation involving international cooperation.

He was flown to the United States on Friday morning and is scheduled to make his first court appearance in Los Angeles on Monday, January 26.
FBI Director Kash Patel noted that Wedding's capture is the 500th arrest in the history of the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list.


Authorities allege Wedding underwent a dramatic transformation from an elite athlete (2002 Winter Olympics) to a "modern-day El Chapo."
He moved up to 60 metric tons of cocaine annually from Colombia through Mexico and into the U.S. and Canada.

The most serious charges involve his alleged orchestration of multiple murders. Specifically, he is accused of ordering the November 2023 killings of a couple in Ontario in a case of mistaken identity and the January 2024 assassination of a federal witness in Medellín, Colombia.
The "Dirty News" Link: Prosecutors claim Wedding used a Canadian website called The Dirty News to post a photo of the federal witness so his hitmen could identify and kill him.

Friday, January 23, 2026

Unprecedented Interference: Why the Sheriff's Post-Homicide 'Stunt' Faced No Charges

In most American jurisdictions,  the moment a death investigation is ruled a homicide,  a firewall is erected.  Any attempt to breach that wall is typically met with the full weight of a Public Integrity Unit or a State Attorney General’s intervention.

The decision by DA Stephen Hatchett not to charge Sheriff Tommy Jones for his "grilling" of the Medical Examiner (ME) in the Lester Isbill homicide is considered unique—and highly controversial—because of how it contrasts with standard prosecutorial behavior across the country.



The Felony Threshold: Witness Coercion:
In other states, the Sheriff’s actions would likely have been categorized not just as "bad optics," but as a felony.

The Stand-Alone Offense: Under Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-507 (Coercion of Witness), a person commits an offense if they attempt to influence a witness to testify falsely or withhold information.

The DA’s Standard: Most DAs would argue that a Sheriff—the ultimate figure of authority—"grilling" the state’s lead forensic witness after she issued a homicide ruling is a textbook example of attempting to "influence" testimony.  In many counties, the recorded phone call alone would have been enough to bypass a grand jury and file a direct information charge for Obstruction of Justice.

Official Misconduct, The "Private Benefit" Argument:
Other DAs often pursue Official Misconduct (T.C.A. § 39-16-402) when an official uses their badge for personal or political gain.

The Benefit:  By attempting to overturn a homicide ruling, the Sheriff was seeking a "benefit"—the removal of criminal liability from his office.

The "Unprecedented" Factor:  Prosecutors nationwide are trained to protect the independence of the Medical Examiner. When a Sheriff publicly attacks that independence, most DAs view it as an assault on the integrity of the government,  an offense that usually carries a "zero-tolerance" policy to prevent a total collapse of public trust.

The "Conflict of Interest" Protocol:
In many jurisdictions, if a Sheriff were even a potential subject of a homicide investigation, the local DA would recuse themselves immediately.

The Special Prosecutor:  Rather than presenting the case themselves, a DA in a different county might have requested a Pro Tem Prosecutor from a neighboring district or asked the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI) to present directly to the grand jury.

The Digital Weapon:  Sheriff Jones recorded the call/interrogation and posted it online, using his public platform to broadcast a challenge to the state's lead forensic witness.

The Message:  By publicizing the confrontation on social media, critics argue the Sheriff wasn't seeking clarity;  he was attempting to intimidate the ME into recanting her finding before the case could reach a courtroom.

The Missing Charge: Would Other DA's Have Acted?
In most legal jurisdictions across the United States, a "stunt" of this magnitude—performed by the head of the agency under investigation—would have triggered immediate criminal scrutiny.

Coercion of a Witness:  Most District Attorneys would argue that "grilling" the state's primary medical witness in an active homicide case constitutes Witness Tampering or Coercion. Under Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-507, attempting to influence a witness's testimony in an official proceeding is a felony.

Official Misconduct:  Other DAs often use Public Integrity Units to charge officials who misuse their badge to interfere with investigations for their own "benefit"—in this case, the benefit of clearing his own name and office.

Obstruction of Justice:  In many high-profile "death in custody" cases (such as those overseen by federal prosecutors or state-level AGs), any act by a superior to "bully" the forensic record is treated as a textbook case of Obstruction.

Why it Matters:  This removes the "intimidation" factor.  A District Attorney  who works with the Sheriff every day has a "compromised loyalty."  An outside prosecutor would have no reason to shield the Sheriff and would likely have pushed for an Obstruction charge to ensure the "Isbill Seven" didn't become the only people held accountable.



 

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Eyes Wide Open: The Nightmare Keeping Tommy Awake


The fog rolling off the Tellico River into Madisonville carries a distinct chill this January 2026—the scent of a regime facing an inevitable sunset.  For over a decade, the political architecture of Monroe County has rested on a single, precarious pillar: the ironclad silence of 
Brian “Wormy” Hodge. But as the "Three Amigos" legacy begins to crumble, the man who once famously "took the hit" for the machine is staring into an abyss where his old protectors can no longer reach.

To understand why the lights may be burning at the Justice Center at 3:00 AM, you have to look back to 2017.  Federal Prosecutor Bart Slabbekorn stood in a Knoxville courtroom, his frustration palpable.  He had Hodge dead to rights—caught on a secret FBI recording sitting in a Monroe County Sheriff’s cruiser, in full uniform, bragging about orchestrating an absentee ballot-buying ring for the 2014 election.

Slabbekorn knew Hodge wasn't the architect; he was the engine. The Feds wanted the names of the those who paved the way for Tommy Jones to ascend.  But Hodge stunned the DOJ:  He chose five years of federal probation and a witness tampering charge over betrayal.  He looked the FBI in the eye and became the ultimate "fall guy," shielding the very foundation of the current administration.

The EMS Paycheck "Protected Asset" Exposed:
The machine’s reward for Hodge’s silence wasn't just a pat on the back—it was a spot on the public ledger.  In a move that defines the county’s "administrative track record,"  Hodge didn't just fade away after his federal conviction.  He was remarkably re-integrated into the county payroll,  serving as an employee at the Monroe County EMS Station.

This wasn't just a job; it was a statement of immunity.  However, that immunity shattered on October 2, 2024, when the TBI arrested Hodge for Sexual Battery—an assault alleged to have occurred right there at the EMS station while he was on the county clock. This is the "Catch-22" haunting the courthouse:

The Slow-Walk: The case has been noticeably sluggish. If the local system buries this felony, they confirm a decade of "state-funded corruption" to federal investigators.

The Breaking Point: If Hodge realizes he is no longer "untouchable," he becomes a legal nuclear option.

The Warning from a Neighbor, Dan Rawls and the 3-Minute Clock:
The refusal to see the writing on the wall was put on full display in August 2025.  Former Bradley County Commissioner Dan Rawls—a man who spent his career sounding the alarm on police misconduct—crossed county lines to offer a prophetic warning to the Monroe County Commission.
Rawls knew exactly what was coming.  He had watched neighboring Bradley County endure a mountain of lawsuits and federal scrutiny following the corruption-heavy term of former Sheriff Eric Watson.  He came to warn Mayor Mitch Ingram and the commissioners that Monroe was on the exact same trajectory.

But the reception was icy. The "ringleader" of the commissioners, Paulette 'So' Summey, begrudgingly allowed Rawls a mere three minutes to speak.  As the clock ticked down, the disrespect was palpable—no "thank you for visiting," no acknowledgment of his expertise,  just a cold silence as he was ushered away.  They treated the messenger like an intruder, ignoring the fact that his warning was a road-map for their own survival.

The Isbill Catalyst and The End of the Old Guard:
While the Hodge case is slow-walked and Rawls’ warnings are sidelined, the Lester Isbill tragedy has ripped the doors off the Justice Center.  In late 2025, the grand jury indicted seven jail staff members—including nurses Courtney Woods and Greg Mills—for the death of a 74-year-old man in a restraint chair.  As these seven defendants head toward their 2026 court dates, the "administrative track record" Hodge was paid to protect is being dismantled in public view.  The eyes of the national media, led by the MSNBC "Silver Fox" Keith Morrison, are no longer looking for a "Secrets in the Smokies" story—they are looking for the "Truth in the Tunnels" of a system that has finally run out of excuses.

The Eyes Tell the Story:
In Madisonville, the most powerful person isn't the one wearing the badge—it’s the man who knows how that badge was bought.  Just as 23 yr. old YouTube vlogger Nick Shirley leveraged a digital lens to expose massive corruption in Minnesota,  the digital and legal paper trail in Monroe County is now a global record.

Monroe County is staring at a nightmare it can't wake up from.  If Brian Hodge decides that his EMS paycheck wasn't worth the prison time he’s now facing,  the silence of a decade is about to become a roar.

The cat is out of the bag. The silence is screaming. And in Monroe County,  the eyes are finally wide open.

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

THE HATCHETT-RUSH PARTNERSHIP & THE BRIAN "WORMY" HODGE PROSECUTION

 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE DATE: January 13, 2026 LOCATION: 10th Judicial District (Bradley, McMinn, Monroe, and Polk Counties)

OVERVIEW

The current leadership of the 10th Judicial District District Attorney’s Office faces significant legal and ethical scrutiny.  The partnership between District Attorney General Stephen Hatchett and his hand-picked ADA,  Paul Rush, may appear to some as inheriting and perpetuating the "administrative track record" of the Steve Bebb era—a period characterized by the protection of law enforcement and the public dismissal of crime victims.

POINT 1: THE "HATCHETT ATTACK" VIDEO (2014)

  • The Evidence: A televised news interview features Stephen Hatchett (then Chief Deputy under Bebb) attacking the credibility of an alleged crime victim, ADA Cindy Schemel, before any investigation into her assault allegations against Bebb had concluded.

  • The Present-Day Link:  Hatchett’s documented habit of labeling victim allegations as "just politics" creates a direct conflict in the Brian "Wormy" Hodge case.  Hodge, a former Monroe County reserve deputy, is currently facing sexual battery charges. Critics argue Hatchett cannot impartially prosecute a former deputy when his own record shows a history of shielding law enforcement "bosses" by discrediting their accusers.

POINT 2: THE "GOLDEN BOY" ADA PAUL RUSH (DISCIPLINARY HISTORY)

  • The Evidence: Despite being rejected by nearly 70% of local voters in a recent judicial bid, Paul Rush was appointed by Hatchett as a lead ADA in September 2024.

  • The Censure: Rush was publicly censured by the Tennessee Board of Professional Responsibility (TBPR) for intentionally withholding exculpatory evidence from the defense in a previous criminal case.

  • The Present-Day Link: Entrusting the "Wormy" Hodge prosecution to an ADA with a history of suppressing evidence risks a massive waste of taxpayer funds.  Any verdict reached could be easily challenged or overturned due to the office’s lack of discovery integrity.


POINT 3: THE NEED FOR OUTSIDE PROSECUTION AND VENUE

  • The Argument:  To ensure a fair trial for both the victim and the state, the Hodge case should be removed from the 10th District entirely.

  • Neutral Venue:  Moving the case to a different venue separates the proceedings from the dense political web and local "loyalty culture" of the Bebb-Hatchett lineage.

  • Institutional Recusal:  The combined history of Hatchett (attacking victims) and Rush (suppressing evidence) suggests that the conflict is not individual, but office-wide, necessitating the appointment of an outside prosecutor (Pro Tem) to ensure the standard of justice is met.

  • Public Perception:  In the "Bible Belt" region where family values are paramount, Hatchett's defense of a man accused of using the DA's office to subvert custody battles for friends is a significant point of contention.  The "Hatchett Method": This early instance of Hatchett dismissing serious allegations as "just politics" establishes a pattern.  For those following prior cases, it suggests that his first instinct as a prosecutor may be to protect the "administrative track record" of the office rather than investigate the claims of victims.
  • The Pension Preservation:  The fact that Bebb resigned early to save his pension is a well-known local detail that reinforces the "good old boy" narrative. Hatchett’s televised defense of Bebb during that same period is often viewed as his "loyalty test" that helped launch his own political career.  This context reinforces the point:  if the leader of the office (Hatchett) has a history of publicly discrediting victims and spinning the circumstances of high-level corruption,  then the integrity of current sensitive cases—especially when handled by an ADA like Paul Rush with his own disciplinary record—is naturally called into question.

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Sheriff Jones was Willing to Hire an Individual Accused of Soliciting a Witness to Lie to the FBI

Case No: 24282-CRM | State of Tennessee v. Brian Keith "Wormy" Hodge

TO: The Honorable Andrew Freiberg
Subject: Persistent Pattern of Impropriety

This letter serves as a formal demand for your voluntary recusal from Case 24282-CRM. Under the mandatory standards of Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 10, Canon 2.11, your continued adjudication of this matter presents a significant conflict of interest based on the following:


1. Deep-Rooted Conflict of Interest: This Court is well aware that the Defendant, Brian Keith Hodge, is a former reserve deputy and a long-standing political operative for the Monroe County Sheriff's Office (MCSO) hierarchy. Mr. Hodge’s history of "dirty politics"—including his federal conviction for buying votes to secure the Sheriff’s seat for your political circle's preferred candidate—demonstrates a relationship that is neither casual nor distant.

2. Pattern of Favoritism for the Jones Family: The appearance of bias is compounded by Your Honor’s prior dismissal of felony charges against Tommy Jones Sr., the patriarch of the very administration Mr. Hodge was considered for employment as a reserve deputy and operative. The public cannot be expected to believe that a judge who cleared the legal path for the "boss" (Jones Sr.) can impartially adjudicate the "operative" (Hodge).

3. Impossible Claim of Remoteness: It is impossible for the Court to claim the relationship between Judge Freiberg and the Defendant is "too remote" for recusal. Brian Keith "Wormy" Hodge was effectively a "soldier" for the very administration (Jones/White) that Judge Freiberg has favored in the past—most notably through his dismissal of felony charges against Tommy Jones Sr.

4. Drawn Out Proceedings: The indictment for Sexual Battery (Case 24282-CRM) has been drawn out for 16 months. Maintaining this case at a standstill until the February 24, 2026 docket—and potentially beyond the May 5th Primary—serves as a de facto political favor to the MCSO, keeping the Defendant’s trial testimony out of the public record during an election cycle.


5. Public Advocacy by Sheriff Jones:  In April 2017, while Brian Keith "Wormy" Hodge was under federal indictment for vote-buying, Sheriff Tommy Jones personally testified on Hodge's behalf before U.S. Magistrate Judge Clifford Shirley.Attempt to Subvert Firearms Ban:  Sheriff Jones lobbied the federal court to lift the firearm restriction on Hodge so that he could immediately place Hodge on the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office payroll (specifically to work in the jail and operate a cruiser).


6. Judicial Rejection:  The federal court denied the request, with Judge Shirley noting that the Sheriff was willing to hire an individual who was not only under indictment but accused of soliciting a witness to lie to the FBI.


7. The Conclusion:  This 2017 squabble proves that Hodge is a protected asset of the Jones administration. Because Judge Freiberg has already granted the "boss" (Tommy Jones Sr.) a felony dismissal, he cannot impartially adjudicate the "soldier" (Hodge) whom the Sheriff has historically gone to great lengths to protect.





Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Judicial Conflict Concern: Judge Andrew Freiberg

A developing judicial ethics crisis in Monroe County has significant implications for the upcoming 2026 Sheriff’s Election.

A sexual battery indictment against Brian "Wormy" Hodge (a key member of the "3 Amigos" and associate of Sheriff Tommy Jones) is being adjudicated in Judge Andrew Freiberg’s court.

Recent developments have moved this from a local issue to a matter of statewide concern: 
Under Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 10, Canon 2.11, a judge must disqualify themselves in any proceeding in which their "impartiality might reasonably be questioned." > "When a judge has a history of clearing the Sheriff’s family and then presides over a felony case involving the Sheriff’s 'best friend' ... that judge’s impartiality isn't just questioned—it’s compromised."
  • The "Family Favor" That Won't Go Away

    The public outcry centers on one question: Why won’t Judge Freiberg recuse himself? Court records show that Freiberg is the same judge who famously presided over the case of Tommy Jones, Sr. (the Sheriff's father), which ended in the dismissal of eight felony counts, including drug delivery and official misconduct.

    Now, the same judge is presiding over one of the Sheriff’s closest political allies, "Wormy" Hodge. The optics are undeniable:

    • The Judge: Dismissed felonies for the Sheriff’s father.

    • The Defendant: A "Three Amigos" associate of the Sheriff.

    • The Goal: Keep the trial out of the headlines until the May 5th Primary is over

  •  Tennessee Code of Judicial Conduct, Canon 1 (Integrity/Impartiality) and Canon 2 (Rule 2.11 - Disqualification).

    1. Prior Relationship: Judge Freiberg presided over the criminal case of Tommy Joe Jones, Sr. (father of Monroe County Sheriff Tommy Jones), resulting in the dismissal of eight felony counts. This history creates a reasonable question of impartiality regarding the Sheriff’s associates.
    2. If Judge Freiberg used the same tactics AGAIN--blaming the DA while the trial dates slip further into 2026, critics argue the court is granting Sheriff Tommy Jones a "political shield."  If the "Three Amigos"—Jones, Hodge, and Randy White—can successfully kick this case past the May election, they effectively rob Monroe County voters of their right to know the truth before they cast their ballots.
    3.  Election Interference: By allowing delays, the Court would prevent the public from seeing evidence in a high-profile case involving a Sheriff's associate prior to the May 5, 2026 election.  The appearance of a 'judicial shield' for the 10th District’s political elite is a direct threat to the integrity of the judiciary."

  • Despite facing several felony charges in March of 2014, Monroe County TN Constable Tommy Jones Sr. won re-election before his case went to trial...if you are wondering whether justice was served, all the charges were dismissed and he remained in his elected constable position...As of 2026 he is R.I.P.

  • The presiding judge Andrew Freiberg pointed the finger at the DA's office for taking too long to bring the case to trial, and the DA's office claimed they had been ready all along.

    Regardless of where the blame lies for Tommy Jones Senior not having to answer to the serious felony charges; one can only imagine the difficulty involved in the district attorney's office prosecuting Monroe County TN Sheriff Tommy Jones' father--had Daddy Jones been prosecuted, it may have created a 'humbug chaos' with other pending criminal cases: deputies not showing up for court, contraband being lost or mishandled, and other obstructionist tricks and tactics...simply put, it could have been a worst case scenario for the legal system. 

    Seen here during a video interview admitting that... "he shouldn't comment" -- Even those who should know better than to make public comments during pending litigation often make incriminating remarks.

Sunday, January 4, 2026

Sheriff Tommy Jones Slumbers While the County Teeters on Ruin

The "Watch List" of court dates for the Isbill case is now the most-read document in the county. 

To the residents, every hearing represents a ticking clock. They see a sheriff who remains in power while the people who followed his department's culture face criminal charges—and the taxpayers are the ones expected to foot the bill for the inevitable civil "monetary damages."

Sheriff Jones, a man once known for his folksy charm, now appears increasingly out of touch. His public statements often downplay the severity of the situation, attributing the complaints to
No Problem, I Got This

"a few bad apples" or "political maneuvering."
 
Tales of unanswered calls, dismissive attitudes, and a general feeling that the sheriff's department is more concerned with its own internal politics than with protecting and serving the community.

One particularly damning report surfaced from a former deputy who, under condition of anonymity, revealed a culture of impunity within the department. He spoke of inadequate training, a lack of disciplinary action for serious infractions, and the sheriff's tendency to promote loyalty over competence. "It's a ticking time bomb," the former deputy had said, "and Monroe County is going to pay the price."

The consensus at the local diners is grim: if the lawsuits don't bankrupt the county first, the property tax increases required to pay for the "misconduct insurance" surely will.  Sheriff Tommy Jones recently avoided a direct indictment from the grand jury regarding the death of Lester Isbill, but the "no true bill" for the man at the top didn't stop the bleeding for the county. 

The haunting details of Isbill’s final nine hours—restrained in a chair, denied water, and left with a hood over his head—have paved a clear path for civil litigation. In a small county, a multi-million dollar civil rights settlement isn't just a line item; it’s a potential bankruptcy trigger.


Saturday, January 3, 2026

The 3 Amigos: The $4 Million Crack in the "Teflon" Sheriff’s Shield

In the high-stakes theater of Monroe County politics, the "3 Amigos" have spent decades mastering the art of the narrow escape. But as the 2026 election cycle ignites, the taxpayer's checkbook is finally telling the story that Sheriff Tommy Jones tried to bury. 




To understand the current crisis, one must understand the brotherhood that has gripped Monroe County’s throat for over a decade. They are a trio bound by loyalty, scandals, and an uncanny ability to survive administrative wreckage:  Who are the "3 Amigos"?


  • Tommy Jones (The Teflon): The "luckiest" of the bunch. He rose from a humble double-wide trailer to a million-dollar mansion in a gated community, avoiding the legal shrapnel that hit his partners.
  • Randy White (The Tethered): The man who won the Sheriff’s seat in 2014 only to be disqualified by a judge. Now the EMS Director, Randy is rumored to be bound by a "blood promise" to Mayor Mitch Ingram never to leave his post to run for Sheriff again.
  • Keith "Wormy" Hodge (The Target): The operative who took the fall for the 2014 vote-buying scandal.
  • Today, Wormy faces his darkest chapter yet: an indictment for rape allegations involving an incident at The Madisonville EMS Station—the very department overseen by his fellow "Amigo," Randy White. 

  • As of April 21, 2025, the Hodge case (Number: 24282CRM) was still active in the Monroe County Circuit Court. According to the court docket:

    • Current Stage: The case was listed for a Plea/Assignment hearing.

    • Status: This stage typically involves the defendant either entering a plea or the court setting a future trial date. Update: Trial Date set for 2/24/2026

    • Representation: Hodge is represented by attorney Robert L. Jolley, Jr


Nothing exposes the "Amigo" double standard like the case of Josh Woods. In Tommy Jones' Monroe, loyalty is a one-way street reserved only for the inner circle.
  • The Veteran: Woods gave 17 years of his life to the badge, maintaining a spotless record.

  • The Axe: In late 2025, following an off-duty DUI, Woods was immediately fired.

  • The Bite: While "Wormy" Hodge was protected through years of scandals, a career deputy was cast aside in a heartbeat. This summary firing—denying a nearly two-decade employee the 14th Amendment due process hearings afforded to political allies—sets the stage for a wrongful termination suit that could bankrupt the county further.

The "Amigo Tax" is no longer a metaphor; it is a line item in a failing budget. The taxpayer is bleeding for the brotherhood's mistakes:

  1. The McCreary Verdict ($2.25 Million): A jury recently slammed the county with a multi-million dollar judgment for the death of Joshua McCreary, who was denied life-saving medication. $250,000 was ripped directly from the county’s fund balance—money for your kids’ schools and your neighborhood roads, gone.

  2. The Ghost of Lester Isbill: 74 years old. Strapped to a restraint chair for nine hours. Dead.
  3.  With seven former employees indicted for homicide, the civil lawsuit "around the corner" is a ticking time bomb. The Knox County Forensic Center reclassified the death as a homicide, and the settlement will likely be the largest in Monroe history.