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Outlandish Nicknames

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July 20, 2004, 11:25
Kelley McCormick
Outlandish Nicknames
A guy did time in our county jail and his nickname was "Poohknocker". Still can't figure out how he got it.
July 20, 2004, 13:34
Lucky G
We had a male serial hot check writer whose primary occupation was entertainer, and he went by the nickname "Coyote."
July 20, 2004, 15:45
Amy Alaniz
Forgot to mention this one: 52 S.W.3d 268 (Corpus Christi 2001, no pet.), which is actually entitled, Jesse Hernandez, A/K/A "Bumpy" v. State of Texas (affirming Bumpy's murder conviction for helping Trece ("13"), Rhino and Chino Boy whack Huicho for disrespecting Sapo ("Toad"))
July 21, 2004, 09:25
Shannon B. Flanigan
I prosecuted another character in southwest Texas named Jackass Andy. No, not a nickname...it was really his name. He would quickly pop out his DL if anyone had any question about that. (Docket calls were always fun.)

And, yes, he was...
July 21, 2004, 11:10
Stephanie Stephens
While a prosecutor in Waller County, I tried a drug dealer named Bean Poppa. His girlfriend had his name tattoed on her back above a depiction of couple participating in an sexual act. Must have been true love. He's doing 20 years now...maybe she'll wait for him.
July 21, 2004, 11:21
AEB
My two favorites:

hamburger pimp (aka arthur hubbard)

cup o' sugar (aka michael dwayne williams, deceased)
July 21, 2004, 11:29
JB
Hey, lawyers have nicknames, too. Everyone knows a prosecutor nicknamed "Mad Dog." What else?
July 21, 2004, 13:05
Clay A.
The shortest meanest in Lubbock got named "stickhorse" Hobson. The "racehourse lived further north. He actually put it on his business cards as well as instructions to policwe to quit questioning the holder of the card.

Some defense lawyers picked up the moniker amoung prosecutors of "V-6". (A walking talking violation of the 6th ammendment right to effective assistance of counsel.)
July 21, 2004, 13:08
Ken Sparks
Bert "Golden Eyes" Graham (his glasses)
Terry "Highway Patrol" Wilson (as in Broderick Crawford)
Ted "Steelhead" Busch (for being so stubborn)
Ted "Toothbrush" Poe
July 21, 2004, 13:55
Elizabeth G.
I saw a booking screen recently indicating that one of my little crack dealers is going by "Dead Homey" (I assume he was still alive when he was booked in). Off-subject, but speaking of booking screens, the best job description I ever saw was, verbatim, "I babysit for my baby's mama". Aww...what a liberated guy.
July 21, 2004, 15:03
Lucky G
I have recently had the displeasure of dealing with an attorney in Grand Prairie who calls himself "Hurricane." It is even on his letterhead, in quotes.
July 21, 2004, 15:06
Tim Cole
Does "a**hole" count? I've been referred to by that affectionate moniker from time to time.
July 21, 2004, 16:04
Amy Alaniz
Don't believe we have any actual Mad Dogs in this office, but we do have a Mad Hatter, a Bosley and a Ghost . . .

I am pretty sure mine was #$%!RASHUM*FRASHUM?@#*! recently after causing an appellant's brief to be struck, but only until defense counsel realized he could bill for the rewrite too; he was actually quite jovial when I next saw him. My colleague was flipped off by this person several years ago over some appellate tussle, and I was certain that I too would become a member of the Fickle Finger of Fate Club, but no . . .

There is another defense lawyer hereabouts nicknamed La Lievre (not sure about the spelling), which supposedly means "The Jackrabbit," and another who used to have big billboards up near the checkpoint at Fal displaying a rabid-looking Rotweiler that proclaimed him to be akin to a junk-yard dog. There is also an out-of-town PI lawyer who touts himself as "The Strong Arm" in his many, many, MANY annoying TV ads.
August 04, 2004, 09:12
lance larison
In the last Drug Roundup I did with the Feds, We had a few pretty good nicknames. We of course put them in the indictment.

Lawrence "Onion" Borens
Quentin "Pooh" Brown
Tyrone "Scooby" Brown
Arrick "Pie" Hillard
Karlos "Zeus" Moore
Clifford "Dummy" Nelson
Roderick "Big Dummy" Nelson

But, none is a colorful in court or on the street as Joanne "Chicken Wing" Sanders
August 04, 2004, 10:17
Terry Breen
In a county I once worked in, there was a def. atty. who was quite aggressive about taking his clients to trial. He turned down an offer of 5 years, saying, "you can't make that case," and went to trial. Our office did make the case, and the jury gave his client 50 years. After that he was known in our office as Maximum Mike.

When I prosecuted in Zimbabwe, I had a witness called "Fearless Fang." I looked forward to calling out, "the State calls Fearless Fang to the witness stand," but the case pled out.
August 04, 2004, 12:28
WDiepraam
Sorry, these are real names and not nicknames. They were also codefendants:

Dat Bich and Phuoc Vu.
August 04, 2004, 12:55
JohnR
Maximum Mike--there's probably one named that in every county. Razz
August 04, 2004, 17:11
Neel McDonald
Since the ice has been broken now, I will post this- the surgeon who did my brother's vasectomy, as printed on his card: Dick Chop. Joke in there somewhere about assumption of risk.
August 05, 2004, 17:49
Tuck
Kinda embarrassing ..but, early in my career, I tried a two time loser named Leon for Possession of Cocaine. The jury acquitted him. Several months later, I tried him for Delivery of Cocaine.....The jury hung. I was not at all happy. But then the jail inmates christened him "Teflon Leon" because "Mr. McLain couldn't make nothing stick to him". That was almost more than I could stand. "Teflon's" third trial netted a guilty verdict and 65 years in TDC. Teflon went out telling me "Keep your head up. You're gettin pretty good at this."
August 05, 2004, 21:03
P.D. Ray
Ok, I laughed pretty hard at that!