But after serving as a facilitator for a few years, Smith said, he began to encounter more and more competition in the field. He realized there was a new market for turnkey companies that had already been created and were “established”—at least on paper.
“Think about it,” Smith said. “Let’s say you’re an entrepreneur or you just came into some cash. What makes more sense—to put the money in a bank and declare the income so it can be taxed, or to ‘invest’ it into the ownership of a company with all the benefits a small business owner had at the time? Like expense accounts, travel, tax credits, and the like?”
Joe nodded and said,
“Exactly.”
He’d learned over the years in interrogations that using the word
exactly
seemed to encourage his subjects to keep talking.
“Then it hit me,” Smith said. “Because it was so easy to create shell companies and bank them away, why not look ahead in the economy and create limited liability companies with names that investors and entrepreneurs might want to buy outright? I mean, wouldn’t it be more valuable for a guy to approach the bank if he had just acquired a two- or three-year-old company with a paper track record than to go into the meeting with all kinds of highfalutin ideas about a start-up?”
“Exactly,”
Joe said.
“So that’s what I did,” Smith said proudly. “I started coming up with company names that sounded great and applying for incorporation and filing them away. I tried to figure out what was hot and what was coming down the pike and tailor the names for that. I’ve always had a genius for names, you know.”
Joe nodded.
“Some company names were plays on words: ‘Nest Egg Management,’ ‘Green Thumb Growth,’ like that,” Smith said, getting more and more animated. “Then I realized how many of these folks out there liked company names that sounded cool and modern but didn’t really say anything, like ‘PowerTech Industries,’ ‘Mountain Assets,’ ‘TerraTech,’ ‘GreenTech, ‘TerraGreen’—anything with
green
or
tech
in it was golden, man . . .”
Smith went through dozens of names and Joe recalled the short list Marybeth had read to him over the phone. He hadn’t actually heard of any of the companies, but it
seemed
like he had. He conceded to himself that Orin Smith
did
have a way with names.
“So you were kind of like those guys who went out and bought all kinds of dot-com names in the early days of the Internet,” Joe said. “You locked up common names so when folks came around to wanting to use them they had to pay you a premium.”
“Right, but then it all came to a crashing halt,” Smith said, his mouth drooping on the sides.
“What do you mean?”
“Apparently, some less-than-upstanding folks out there figured out how to buy and use these companies for unscrupulous means.”
“Like what?” Joe asked.
Smith glanced toward the mirrored window, where Coon was no doubt listening closely.
“Apparently,” Smith said, choosing his words carefully, “it’s a lot easier to launder illegal money through a corporation than it is by other means.”
“Like drug money?” Joe asked.
“Apparently,” Smith said. “Or other kinds of cash. From what I hear, the Russian mafia and Mexican drug cartels discovered they, too, could set up cheap corporations in Wyoming and use them as a front for financial transactions.”
“Not that you did that or knew anything about it,” Joe said.
“Of course not,” Smith said, acting hurt. “Not until the secretary of state started a campaign to shut me down and say that limited liability companies in Wyoming had to have all kinds of new restrictions, like street addresses and boards of directors and crap like that. It just wasn’t fair.”
“Exactly,”
Joe said.
“So I had to divest what I had, and fast,” Smith said. “If the secretary of state would have just stayed out of my business, I’d still be doing it. I never would have gotten involved in this thing the Feds said I did. Not that I did it, you understand,” he said with another glance toward the glass.
“Rope the Wind,” Joe interjected.
Smith paused and sat back. “One of my best,” he said. “It could be used for a dozen kinds of industries or products. I have to honestly say I wasn’t thinking wind energy at the time I came up with the name. Nobody was.”
“So that’s how you met Earl Alden,” Joe prompted.
“Not quite yet. That came later.”
“Later than what?” Joe asked.
Smith squirmed in his chair, and rubbed his hands together.
“I saw the writing on the wall,” he said, “a new president, a new administration. Their big talk about ‘breaking our addiction to oil,’ renewable energy, solar and wind. I could see it coming because it was right out there in front of us. They were talking about it all the time during the campaign.
“So by then,” Smith said, “I couldn’t create any more new companies without all the hassle, but I still had all the company names I’d already registered. I did a little research and figured out where the windiest places in the state were located. So instead of waiting for entrepreneurs to knock on my door, I decided to get proactive. To hit the road and talk to businesspeople and landowners about what was coming down the pike. You see, I could see it plain as day. Those fools in Washington earmarked eighty-six billion dollars for ‘green initiatives,’ including forty billion dollars in loan guarantees and grants for renewable energy projects. But convincing anyone—that’s where I just . . .
failed
.” He spat out the last word, and dropped his head to stare at something on the top of the table between his hands.
Joe shook his head, confused. “But Rope the Wind . . .”
“One guy actually showed some interest for a while, but he was just an ignorant rancher and he couldn’t make a decision. He strung me along for months and then he stopped taking my calls. I hadn’t heard anything from him for a couple of years and then he calls me a few weeks ago out of the blue and said he wished he would have done it. He tells me he was sick and going over what he’d done in his life and he realized not pulling the trigger on the wind project had been a mistake.
Now
he realizes, the dumb son-of-a-bitch.”
Joe asked, “Was his name Bob Lee?”
Smith shook his head. “I remember Bob Lee. He wasn’t interested at the time and told me to get the hell off his property.”
“Who was it?” Joe asked.
“His name was Bud,” Smith said. “Longstreet, or something like that.”
“Bud Longbrake?”
“That sounds right.”
Joe just shook his head. “Where was he calling you from?”
Smith waved Joe off. He said, “It was Calvin Coolidge who said the business of America is business. You ever heard that?”
Joe nodded.
“Not anymore,” Smith said. “It’s a thing of the past. That’s what I found out when I took my concept out on the road. Nobody wants to take a risk or work hard. Nobody wants to own a business anymore because if they succeed they become a target of the politicians. Everybody’s sitting back, scared, keeping their head down and waiting it out until the storm passes. If it ever does.”
“So,” Joe said, trying to get Smith to refocus. “No one was interested in investing in your companies?”
“That’s what I’m saying,” Smith said, annoyed.
“So why not do it yourself?” Joe asked. “Why not use Rope the Wind yourself? Or why not start your own business and provide something people want to buy? You seem to have a gift for all this stuff.”
Smith simply glared at him. He said, “Don’t be so simpleminded. Where have you been? That’s for suckers. That’s not how people make money these days. Owning a company is for suckers. Employing people is for idiots. Making money in the free market means you’re a douche bag ripe for plucking.”
Joe sat back, confused.
Smith said, “Today it’s about winners and losers, determined by folks in Washington. The winners—God bless ’em—are cleaning house. If you’re a winner, you get the money funneled to you and you can’t fail. And if you do fail, they’ll bail you out. But if you’re a loser, well, you end up in the hoosegow wasting your time talking with a damn game warden.”
“Bud Longbrake,” Joe said. “The one who told you he’s sick? Where did you say he was calling from?”
After the questions and answers
continued throughout the morning—Earl Alden came up in a lot of them—Joe excused himself by asking Orin Smith to “hold that thought.”
Joe found Chuck Coon in the hallway where he’d been observing the interview from a stool.
“Can I borrow a legal pad or something from you?” Joe asked. “I filled up my notebook.”
“I’ve never heard him talk so much,” Coon said, shaking his head. “You’re actually pretty good at this.”
“He’s proud of his achievements,” Joe said. “He wants someone to know about them. He’s kind of a twisted genius in his way and he’s done a lot, and it frustrates him that all anyone asks him about is the Ponzi scheme that brought him down.”
“Are you getting what you need?”
Joe rubbed his temples with the tips of his fingers. “More than I bargained for,” he said.
“This Earl Alden he keeps talking about,” Coon said. “He’s your murdered father-in-law?”
Joe nodded.
“I heard about that. Man, he really hated that guy.”
“Nearly as much as the secretary of state,” Joe said. “Were you aware of what he was saying, that it used to be legal in Wyoming to register companies by the dozen?”
Coon nodded. “Yeah. That’s how Orin Smith got on our radar in the first place a few years ago. We kicked it over to the state since it was a state issue, but, yeah, we were aware of it.”
Joe whistled. “This is going a direction I didn’t anticipate.”
“I take it you know this Bud Longbrake fellow?”
“My ex-father-in-law.”
“Quite a family you’ve got.” Coon whistled. “Let me get you a pad. But keep in mind Smith has a hearing this afternoon. You’ll need to wrap it up after lunch. Speaking of . . .”
“Thanks,” Joe growled, “but I’m not hungry.”
“Okay,” Joe said,
reentering the interrogation room with a fresh yellow legal pad. “You were starting to tell me about your connection with the wind turbine remanufacturer in Texas.”
At first,
Joe didn’t pay any attention to the rapping at the interrogation room door. He was busy scribbling, and trying to process what he was being told by Orin Smith. Finally, Smith quit talking and chinned behind Joe.
Coon and a U.S. marshal stood there. The marshal said, “Mr. Smith has an appointment upstairs before the judge.”
“I think I’m through with him,” Joe said. He thanked Coon for the opportunity and shook hands with Orin Smith as the marshal escorted him out of the room.
“I appreciate your cooperation,” Joe said.
Smith nodded. “Just make sure to put in that good word—and to let Gov Spence know.”
“I will.”
As Smith left the room, he paused and turned. To Joe, he said, “If you get the son-of-a-bitch who did it, give him a big wet kiss from me.”
Joe nodded that he understood.
Joe sat
in his pickup outside the Federal Building and flipped through page after page of notes, rereading his shorthand and committing names, dates, and the players to memory. He shook his head and absently stared at his cell phone display. Marybeth had called twice but hadn’t left messages. Her single text read,
“Is everything all right? Call when you’re able.”
She answered on the second ring. He could tell from the hush in her voice that she was working behind the desk at the library and couldn’t talk long.
“Joe—what’s going on?”
“It’s complicated,” he said. “I’m sorting it all out in my mind and it’ll take a while to get it straight. But I hope you’re sitting down.”
“I am. Just tell me one thing. Do you know who killed The Earl?”
“No,” Joe said. “But the list of people who wanted him dead just got real, real long. That’s if we can trust what this guy Orin Smith just told me.”
He filled her in and she listened without comment. When he was through, she said, “Earl was a real son-of-a-bitch, wasn’t he?”
“Seems like it. And if all this is true, everybody needs to rethink this whole trial.”
Marybeth said, “Do you think Dulcie will drop the charges?”
“I doubt it,” Joe said. “That would be too much to ask at this point. But she may want to ask for a delay in the trial so she can investigate this.”
“My mother . . .” Marybeth said with a sigh. “She’s going to be rewarded for her bad behavior.
Again.
”
“Let’s not get ahead of ourselves,” Joe said. “Nothing may work out like we think it will. For the time being, we need to let everyone know what Orin Smith claims. If you’ll call Marcus Hand and tell him what I found out, I’ll call Dulcie Schalk.”