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Todd Parsons, the manager at Billy's, takes him aside, asks him to leave. " 'You don't want to do this,' " Parsons remembers Jack saying. " 'You don't want to put me out of here. I'll kill you and your family for this. I've got enough money now to where I can have y'all killed and nobody would ever know.' " Parsons, twenty-eight, who has a wife and two young kids, takes this rather personally. He tells Jack he can either go now or talk to the law. Jack swings. Parsons puts him out. The cops come and charge Jack with assault; according to a police report, a security-camera tape backs it all up.

Jack, meanwhile, is still driving the Navigator.A couple of weeks after the Billy's incident, he leaves $100,000 in a bank bag in the Navigator in his driveway, and naturally, someone takes it. The cops are getting sick of telling Jack to put his money in the bank. They've been spending half their time either writing him up or hunting down his loot. Jack installs security cameras overlooking his front porch (bare but for brass planters full of cigarette butts) and over the driveway and garage (silver Rolls, an Escalade, a muscle car missing a wheel or two).

So Jack's starting to become everybody's favorite joke, but while they're laughing they're also crying, because it seems unfair that God or whoever had handed a life-altering sum of money to a guy who not only already had plenty but who leaves it lying around like trash.

Eight days after the $100,000 goes missing, the state police report finding Jack slumped over the wheel on the side of I-64, not far from the Pink Pony. They wake him up and give him some DUI tests. He fails the follow-the-finger, the walk-and-turn, then he blows nearly twice the legal limit on the Breathalyzer. It's 5:30 in the afternoon.

But this snowball's still rolling.Weeks later, someone breaks into Jack's office and swipes $2,000. That same afternoon, Jack gets sued.The plaintiff is Charity Fortner, a young floor attendant at Tri-State Racetrack & Gaming Center, a greyhound track and slots casino down the road from the Pink Pony. Jack is a regular in the High Rollers Room, where the bet limit is $5. Charity's job is to change out the empty coin hoppers. Jack was gambling one day alongside a "lady friend," and when Charity bent to refill the hopper, Jack grabbed her ponytail and shoved her head toward his crotch. So alleges her suit. Fortner declines to comment, but her lawyer, Scott Segal, says, "The fact of the matter is, if someone doesn't take on men who act this way, it becomes acceptable conduct. Will it be an easier verdict to collect [because he's rich]? I hope it will be. But the way the man's behaving, he may lose every last cent before this case is over. He might as well be throwing it in the river."

It didn't take long for Jack to lose some more dough.Two days after the lawsuit is filed, another $85,000 disappears from the Navigator, again from Jack's driveway. The new security cameras record a man and a woman calmly taking the stash before driving off in a van. The cops begin the hunt for a whole new batch of missing money. Jack tells a local TV news crew: "I'm ready to kill somebody."The feeling is now rather mutual."There's been a lot of unfortunate things," says Raymond Peak, the soft-spoken mayor of Hurricane, where Jack scored his lucky ticket. "Carrying around so much money entices people to want to rob him. People think he's nuts. As a public official, it makes it difficult to condone. But it's his money. I guess he can do what he wants."

By now there's no telling how many people are embroiled in the seamier side of Jack Whittaker's good fortune.This fall, a dead guy was found in one ofJack's houses. His body was discovered around the time police were investigating a burglary of the house by two other men, one of whom committed the crime in drag.The dead guy had been a friend of Brandi's, but apparently the Whittakers didn't have anything to do with his death. This is one of the sadder facts of Jack's life now:The trouble he used to invite now sort of lurks in the shrubs. He was even thinking of polling county residents on their opinion of him to see if he could get a fair trial there.

To be sure, a whole tragicomic parade of formerly anonymous people have lined up to testify for or against him in the criminal and civil courts of West Virginia. In addition, several adultentertainment professionals have lost their jobs, and little roadside churches have had to defend themselves for accepting tithes from a guy who's been treating metropolitan Charleston like his private saloon. His own granddaughter has lost friends because she can't decide whom to trust. "She's the most bitter sixteen-year-old I know," Jack told the Associated Press.

At last check, Misty and Jeff and two separate trios of accused thieves were awaiting trial; the cops were still trying to track stolen Whittaker dough; prosecutors were preparing assault and DUI cases against Jack; two more women had sued, alleging that Jack had sexually affronted them between slot pulls; the owners and managers of Billy Sunday's had hired lawyers to defend themselves in a suit Jack Whittaker brought against them; two other, completely different fellows had now sued Jack over another incident at another club (Jack supposedly became enraged over losing a coin toss or something); bartenders dreaded seeing him walk through the door; and Mike Dunn was still trying to get the Pink Pony's liquor license back.

Robby, the Pony's former cook, wound up behind the bar of another gentlemen's establishment, in a mini-mall next door to a boarded-up adult bookstore. He looks a little wistful there one afternoon as he tends the empty club and its trio of strippers, who alternately work their poles and holler at him to turn up the fucking jukebox and to get them another Wild Turkey, goddammit. Robby misses the Pony. He liked his job, liked his boss, and probably would have kept on there if not for Jack's shenanigans. Like most everyone else, Robby doesn't say too much, because nobody cares to bad-mouth a guy with a load of lawyer money. "Besides," Robby says, "in West Virginia, rats get hurt." He did offer this, though: "People think money gives them power. But it don't."

The huge sign over the C &L Super Serve (the big one sold here!) now seems less celebratory than ironic. Even Jack's preacher, whose little Tabernacle of Praise is $7 million richer, doesn't defend Jack so much as pretend he doesn't exist. When asked about the drinking and fighting and strippers, pastor C.T. Mathews said, "I don't know what you're talking about."Then,"What he does is his business. Here, we talk about our business and the Lord's business."

Lots of people around Scott Depot wish Jack had taken his business elsewhere. "I'll tell you what he should have done: He should have taken that money and gotten the hell out of West Virginia," one bartender said."That's what I'd have done. I'd have bought me an island."

Jack's biggest mistake, though, was probably a gross deficit of subtlety. In flashing his cash, it's almost as though he wanted people to take it. Maybe he felt he didn't deserve it. Or maybe the money made him feel invincible, like the badass he always suspected he was-or wasn't. Maybe he was trying to simultaneously redeem and punish himself. Maybe he broke beneath the burden of divine good luck. But here's the thing. Even though he has been arrested, sued, banned from bars, robbed, and ridiculed, is down $155,000 in Navigator losses alone, and stands to lose thousands more in legal fees, Jack Whittaker has another $100 million or so to lose. So if he should decide to go ahead and blow everything, he'll have a hell of a long way to go.

God help West Virginia.

***

Paige Williams is a nomadic writer who currently lives in New York. Her story "The Accused" appeared in The Best American Crime Writing 2003.