Serving as an undercover agent sounds thrilling -- creating a fake identity, running around with criminals, infiltrating secret organizations. But everything we think we know about the trade of being an undercover agent comes from TV and movies. In order to better understand what it's like to actually work undercover, we asked Jay Dobyns, the ATF agent who successfully infiltrated the Hells Angels (and wrote a book about the experience), and Jack Garcia, who very nearly became a made man with the Gambino crime family, to help separate myth from reality and tell us what it's really like.
Creating a Cover Identity
There are various styles for creating a cover identity, but neither Dobyns nor Garcia suggests treating it like you're rolling up a D&D character.
"Some guys are pure method actors," Dobyns says. "But I was never able to do that. I've always been a what-you-see-is-what-you-get sort of guy. I'd talk to the suspects in the case the same way I'd talk to anybody."
Garcia concurs, for the most part: "I didn't do any outlandish background creation," he says, though entering the Mafia ranks, where most members grew up in the same neighborhood and have long family ties, required some specific details to be in place. "I was supposed to be a guy who just came in from Miami, so I found a cemetery that had a husband and wife with the same last name I was using, in case I was in Florida and the subjects in the case wanted to test me by going to visit their graves."
So, while it's important to have a few details in place to add veracity to your story, keeping your personality in place is equally key.
"I never was very good at switching back and forth," Dobyns adds. "Even playing the hardass, I still had a smile on my face. I was operating in a very brutal, violent world, but I'd just be who I was. I'm kind of a goof and I never tried to tone that down. It made me very real. There are guys who that annoyed -- they viewed me as being immature -- but if I tried to play a straight-up, hard-guy hitman, that'd just wear on people. Staying very true to who I am made me more believable. I don't need to show up in a black trench coat and black gloves with a frickin' assassination kit in a briefcase."
How to Get InGarcia, who's described as the best undercover agent in FBI history, explains: Either you have a cold hit, where you go in on your own, or you get an introduction through an informant.
When going the latter route, the way the informant is perceived is going to deeply impact the way the undercover agent is perceived. To that end, Garcia says that the first step is to figure out who the informant is and why he's flipped: "You have to find out why this person's joined Team America. What's that all about? If he's a good, well-regarded informant, then you don't need much to get in."
When infiltrating the Gambino crime family, Garcia says, "I knew the mob would do their homework," hence all of the family details. And, with the help of Miami-based informants who could hook him up with references, he was able to bring "Jack Falcone" into the family.
For Dobyns, the key to getting in was keeping his character straight. "I had a persona that was all-encompassing. I could take this character and put him in the middle of traditional Crips and Bloods gangbangers or into high-level, high-money kingpin types and make that person play across the board. I let the imaginations of the suspects take me there."
Making Friends
There are a few tough challenges once you're in a deep-cover situation, Dobyns and Garcia both noted. It can be hard not to become friends with some of the suspects in a case, and there are times when people in the group you're in with expect you to do something that's illegal, immoral or unethical. Dealing with these challenges is one of the more interesting parts of undercover work.
"It's human nature, when you go into a group, to find that there are people you like and have compassion for," Dobyns says. "And I don't think there's a way to act your way through being human."
So, how do you bust the same people you've grown to like?
"I'm not allowed the discretion to make street decisions on who's accountable for their crimes," Dobyns explains. "If I have two people in front of me, and Person One is someone I like, and Person Two is a nasty person I don't care for, I don't have the ability to say, 'I'm not going to hold Person One accountable, but Person Two, I don't like you. You're going to prison."
"I took an oath," explains Garcia. "We're in the business of preventing crime, not creating crime. In the event that I had to whack somebody, I was going to feign a heart attack, and that'd give me enough time to make a phone call and get these guys arrested, or at least get the guy out. We don't have any business crossing the line. Ultimately, this is just an investigative technique to put bad guys in jail."
Dobyns, who concurs with Garcia's assessment, also points out another reason not to break the law in the course of an investigation: "One of the most common defenses in court is 'outrageous government conduct.' The defense attorney will argue, 'My guy might be bad, but this government agent was worse than my guy. Why is my guy on trial and this guy's allowed to act like this?'"
Talking to Dobyns and Garcia, one thing becomes clear: TV and movies may offer a slightly exaggerated view of the life of an undercover agent, but the reality of the situation is anything but boring.


























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Comments:
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Sunday 08 August
By Kevin
A rat is a rat. A rat belongs in a rat trap! I hope they print the story on the top 9 when the rats get what a rat gets! Give it time.
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Sunday 08 August
By robyn
How can you even beleive a rat? I mean if they lie to get in the club and keep up the lies to stay, how do you know they are not going to lie in court. These guys entire lifes are made up of lies. How can the courts even be sure they can seperate the lies any more? You can tell Jay enjoyed the thrill of being with the club, so how can we beleive anything he says as the truth?
Sunday 08 August
By WminPhoenix
Hells Angles are big and tough when they are all together but when they are alone, a much different story. Ya'll that think they are modern day Robin Hoods's are confused. The HAMC are nothing but a group of punk a$$ed meth dealers. All outlaw MC gangs should be shot on sight because all they do is keep the Mexican Cartels in business. Death to narco-terrorists!
Reply
Sunday 08 August
By joseph
this guy is a b-itch so hes a hero being one of us bad guys please you people need a life what loser .
Reply
Sunday 08 August
By Junior
Now he'll hide in a hole for the rest of his life, just like a weasel.
Reply
Sunday 08 August
By D sisco
support red and white
Reply
Sunday 08 August
By Tom
Joseph would be peeing and pooping his pants and crying for his mamma just having a dream about doing what these two brave cops did.
Reply
Sunday 08 August
By Chris
Hopefully their undercover and investigating the new Black Panthers.
Reply
Sunday 08 August
By Wolfman
I am 67 years old and a Veitnam Vet and have more respect,loyalty and trust for the American Hells Angeles Motorcycle Club than our own corrupt government and politicians and undercover set-up rats.
Reply
Sunday 08 August
By Lazarus Long
These guys are both professional liars.
They are also lying about not breaking laws. Commiting a felony in front of witnesses is entrance level stuff to make sure you aren't a informer.
How they get away with it is by dropping some charges or promising early release/no jail time for the witnesses.
Reply
Sunday 08 August
By Wolfman
I am 67 years old and a Veitnam Vet and have more respect,loyalty and trust for the American Hells Angeles Motorcycle Club than our own corrupt government and politicians and undercover set-up rats.
Reply
Sunday 08 August
By ted
Its Vietnam for God's sake!
Sunday 08 August
By robyn
You have my respect. my son is serving his country now in iraq, he is a marine. pretty sad that everyone who has someone or knows someone who was in nam knows all the lies the government put out to keep our boys dieing in that land for no reason. funny people think the bikers are bad, all they need to do is look in washington and see the real criminals. its only ok to be a criminal if you have the government backing you. support and respect to all the men fighting to keep the free free. that is our military who fight for our freedom abroad, and the bikers who fight to keep freedom here. they fight the government to be allowed to live without restraints, to be able to ride without restraints, to be able to dress, talk, live how they wish without the government saying how they can do it. BTW all the haters out there, my son, who is a career military and is an outstanding solider, is a son of a biker from an 1 percent club. His father and the club his father belongs too is very proud of him. When he graduated from boot camp 3 years ago the club was there to show their respect to him. Your outlaw bike clubs started with soliders coming home from war and wanting to be with others who had been through the same as they have and wanted to ride.
Sunday 08 August
By g perry
a narc is a narc
Reply
Sunday 08 August
By willyboom
dick yourself
Reply
Sunday 08 August
By Wolfman
WminPhonex----------I am 67 years old and a Veitnam Vet and have more respect,loyalty and trust for the American Hells Angeles Motorcycle Club than our own corrupt government and politicians and undercover set-up rats. I would love to meet you in Phonex in October ok.
Reply
Sunday 08 August
By kerrie droban
Excellent article. I applaud the operatives' sacrifice and bravery. -Kerrie Droban, award winning author of Running with the Devil
Reply
Sunday 08 August
By OnePercenter
Riddle me this, You infiltrate an organization with the sole purpose of collecting evidence to convict. You spend over 2 years with that organization to earn their trust. You "supposedly" collect enough evidence to convict. Then explain to me why almost all those trials ended in acquittals? Not many reasons why. Not enough evidence after all that time? Not likely. Trumped up glamorization by a somewhat talented actor? More likely. Nothing was going on? Yep that is the most likely scenario. Yes I am a 1%er, and have personally witnessed the lengths that law enforcement will go to try and get a conviction. The general public are nothing but sheep, intent on going with the flow. Oh protect us from the big bad wolf. Sorry to tell you folks, your "protectors" are much more crooked and dangerous than a group of motorcycle enthusiasts.
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Wednesday 11 August
By robyn
Totally in agreement with you.... The governement throughs out to the people the worst they can for them to see. Yes there is bad in the bikers world, but in the sheeps world dont you have serial killers and rapist? I have never seen a serial killer or rapist that was a biker. So if the biker world was to sit in judgement of the world we see, well you all would be the ones we wanted to be protected from. The point being, every side has good and bad in it. The bikers good well any where they live tends to be safe, they do alot of charity runs for the soliders, for kids and for the needy. I actually see them give so much more then i see the common people give. Most bikers have done military service also. I will remind everyone again, the whole biker culture begin when the pilots and the soliders came back from war and did not feel welcomed here in longer. they felt like outcast of society and felt nobody could understand the things they had seen in war. They came together and bonded with each other and started their own sub culture of riding and being free. Hollywood has gotten rich off of it. I say dont cast the first stone if you dont want someone looking in your closet to what your so called culture does.
Sunday 08 August
By Tom
ay said:
"You might go in with the best intentions, but undercover sucks. You go out feeling like a loser. And you did not change anything and did things that degraded others."
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That would be in your experience, which I doubt seriously you've had anything close to that. In under cover,you do change things and do so for the better because you know you can and so you do. If others,like the bad guys are degraded, so much the better.
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