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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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<text id=90TT1092>
<title>
Apr. 30, 1990: American Scene
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Apr. 30, 1990 Vietnam 15 Years Later
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
AMERICAN SCENE, Page 11
Hogan's Valley, Virginia
Crime Is This Town's Job
</hdr>
<body>
<p>But the good guys always get their man
</p>
<p>By Nancy Traver
</p>
<p> Life in Hogan's Alley (pop. 200) is exceedingly slow--so
slow, in fact, that there is no need for a stoplight on Main
Street. On one recent morning, a Gomer Pyle look-alike loafed
on a sidewalk outside the post office. Another resident slogged
his way to the Pastime Bar for a morning pick-me-up.
</p>
<p> Suddenly the silence was broken by the boom of a shotgun.
Three police cruisers, their tires squealing, encircled an old
faded green station wagon idling at a curb. A pack of
fresh-faced young men and women in navy blue polyester jackets
dashed around the corner of the Dogwood Inn motel. Each
brandished a drawn revolver and a look that said, One false
move, and you're dead.
</p>
<p> As the earnest gang of gun-wielding do-gooders closed in on
the station wagon, its driver--scruffy and overweight, with
a menacing air--lunged out the door. The lawmen forced him
to the pavement, pointing their weapons at his head. Two young
men shouted in unison, "Freeze! This is the FBI!"
</p>
<p> Another case closed at Hogan's Alley, training academy for
would-be G-men and G-women who dream of becoming agents for the
Federal Bureau of Investigation. This year about 500 trainees
will attend classes in frisking, lectures on handcuffing,
armed-arrest laboratories and seminars on interrogating
witnesses at the 20-acre academy site, nestled amid the pine
and birch trees of rural Virginia, 40 miles south of
Washington.
</p>
<p> The $1.5 million mock-up of small-town America opened in
1987, after the FBI decided its fledgling agents needed more
true-to-life experience before they dealt with dangerous
criminals. Says the make-believe town's make-believe mayor, Jim
Pledger, a 24-year FBI veteran: "Crime doesn't unfold in a
classroom. We realized we could no longer limit ourselves to
a square brick building."
</p>
<p> So the FBI built itself a Potemkin village, complete with
a bank, drugstore, barbershop, pool hall, Greyhound bus
station, coin-operated Laundromat and quiet residential
streets. Several double-wide trailers and late-model
automobiles, all seized from real-life crime scenes, sprawl
around the town. Even the movie theater, the Biograph, is a
monument to real-life crime. Its main attraction, Manhattan
Melodrama (starring Clark Gable and Myrna Loy), was showing at
the Biograph in Chicago when the bank robber John Dillinger was
shot dead outside the theater by FBI agents in 1934.
</p>
<p> A huge billboard at the town limit warns that DISPLAY OF
WEAPONS, FIRING OF BLANK AMMUNITION AND ARRESTS MAY OCCUR. IF
CHALLENGED, PLEASE FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS. HAVE A NICE DAY! And
true to its admonition, mock bank robberies, kidnapings and
drug busts take place like clockwork. Mayor Pledger brags that
Hogan's Alley is the most crime-ridden town in the world. Says
Pledger: "The next crime wave is usually just around the
corner. Fortunately for us, though, we've got a 100% success
rate at catching criminals."
</p>
<p> The felons who menace the streets of Hogan's Alley are more
polite than the hardened crack dealers, pimps and prostitutes
that lawmen face in real life. Hired from a role-playing
company called Day By Day Associates, these make-believe
meanies are paid $8 an hour. The company's roster of 60 role
players includes part-time students, the wives of Leathernecks
stationed at the neighboring Marine Corps base at Quantico,
retirees and off-duty firemen and policemen.
</p>
<p> None of them has had previous acting experience--or any
experience as criminals. They are carefully screened to make
sure that their records are clean. Explains Pledger: "We don't
want real felons on the job. This is not a training ground for
bank robbers or dope dealers. Also we don't accept anybody from
the Soviet embassy."
</p>
<p> The impersonators seem to love their work. Suzanne McGohey
of Dumfries, Va., was a schoolteacher until she started
impersonating a hooker at Hogan's Alley. Given the alias Wanda
Lust, she swaddles herself in a mink coat and pearls that the
FBI seized in a drug raid. Says she: "Where else can you act
like a sleaze and get paid for it? It enables you to be deviant
in a healthy way."
</p>
<p> Across town at the pool hall, three crooks sat around a card
table playing a desultory game of seven card no peek, while
waiting for the fuzz to arrive. In between dealing hands and
looking for ways to cheat, Brett Langenderfer, 27, of
Woodbridge, Va., explained that he was pretending to be wanted
on a charge of interstate theft. When the agents stormed the
building, Langenderfer tried to flee down a back stairway.
"They call me the `Rabbit' because I always run. It really gets
the adrenaline going when the cops arrive, almost like rushing
out of the locker room for a big game."
</p>
<p> Most of the trainees are in their late 20s and look toward
the FBI as a second career. Few have previous law-enforcement
experience. Although the agency once tried to recruit lawyers,
Pledger says the emphasis now is on hiring accountants. Their
main mission: to track the drug trade. "We use financial
investigative techniques to audit books and seize assets," says
Pledger. "It's the best way to put the dopers behind bars."
</p>
<p> Each class of about 46 agents moves through an intensive
14-week training course that begins with lessons in
surveillance. They track a suspect from his home, then observe
him at a shopping mall as he sells a small bag of phony
cocaine. Next comes a class in simple arrest, when agents burst
into a fleabag motel to capture an unarmed John as he lies in
bed with a make-believe prostitute. Agents learn how to frisk
suspects, read them their rights, and complete arrest forms.
Instructors, all of whom are former agents, carefully critique
every arrest, providing pointers on how best to subdue a
struggling suspect or slip on handcuffs. No detail seems to go
unnoticed. At one recent training session, a future agent was
told he should go home, stand in front of his mirror and
practice shouting in a forceful voice "Freeze! This is the
FBI!"
</p>
<p> Nine weeks into the course, trainees practice arresting an
armed felon. They then investigate an assault on a judge and
conduct a court-authorized wiretap. Their final lessons are
held in a mock courtroom, where they face actors who pose as
a tough team of defense lawyers. "We really let the sharks go
after them there," says Pledger. "Having to eat your paperwork
and watch the criminals go free teaches you to do everything
by the book."
</p>
<p> On average, three fledgling agents in each class flunk out
of Hogan's Alley. The standards are exacting. Says Pledger:
"Anyone who shoots a fleeing felon in the back doesn't have
what it takes to be in the FBI."
</p>
<p> The work at Hogan's Alley is enough to make most role
players swear off a life of crime. Says Ronald Grayson, 33, of
Triangle, Va., who plays a dope peddler: "You get to see how
the law works without being on the wrong end of the stick. When
they twist those cuffs on you, boy, it makes you think."
Hogan's Alley has a similar sobering effect on its students.
Says Raymond, an agent-trainee whose last name was withheld to
protect him from the genuine criminals he will encounter after
he graduates: "When you arrest someone, it hits you: you're
going to change someone's life forever. My hands started to
shake. For the first time, it seemed real."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>