As seen on Hollywood Heat
on November 18, 2004. Josh
Herman Bail Bonds 3rd generation
bondsman to Hollywood elite.
See a day in the life of
Josh Herman. When celebrities
go to jail, who bails them
out? Meet Josh Herman, whose
grandmother started this
family business. He’s put
up the money to get stars
such as Robert Downey, Jr
and several rap artists
out of the slammer.
Newsweek
Magazine
Photo by Michael Grecco - Sygma
Friends in low places:Herman
at L.A. city hall
Bringing the
Loot 24/7
_____________________
He's the bail bondsman of
choice for jailed rap stars
_____________________
By Tara Weingarten and
Sarah Van Boven
Newsweek Magazine Dec 1,
1997
ASK JOSH HERMAN IF HE CAN
remember the moment he realized
he was a success, and the
burly 26-year-old doesn't
hesitate. It was Feb 21
1996 the night he attended
his client Snoop Doggy Dogg's
party at Monty's restaurant
in Los Angeles, a celebration
of Snoop's acquittal on
murder charges. Handed a
bottle of Cristal champagne
as he entered the rooftop
eatery, the white boy straight
outta middle-class West
L.A. strolled over to chat
with rapper Tupac Shakur
and producer Suge Knight.
Surveying the many rap stars
munching on filet mignon
and lobster, Herman realized,
as he tells the tale, that
"everyone in there was out
on one of my bail bonds."
Among the cast of thousands
of agents, attorneys, personal
assistants and other staffers
who keep L.A. celebrities
in the money and out of
trouble, Herman has created
a lucrative role: bail bondsman
to the hiphop stars. Even
though rappers are less
than half of his prosperous
bond business, Herman has
made more than $500,000
over the past few years
springing the big names
from jail, bundling them
into his Mercedes (license
plate; BAIL 4 u) and driving
them straight to the studio
or video set. He estimates
he's posted bond for rap
artists "at least 100 times,"
promising to pay the full
bail if a client skips town--and
pocketing 10 percent of
that amount as his fee.
Herman says he made $50,000
in commissions from Tupac
alone; Shakur was out on
one of Herman's bonds when
he was kilied last year
in Las Vegas.
How did Herman land such
an odd gig? Pure nepotism
cut with street smarts.
His grandmother started
the family bail-bond business
in the 1940s; father Mark
Herman spent the '7Os and
`80s rescuing stars like
Ike Tinner from the slammer.
In 1990, when record-industry
attorney David Kenner called
Mark Herman to go rescue
rapper Eazy-E, Dad decided
19-year-old Josh was ready
to drive on down to the
jail. Josh even got a little
bonus; on Eazy-E's next
album, one track had lyrics
about being freed from a
Compton jail by a bondsman.
"He didn't mention me by
name," Herman says modestly.
But the reference certainly
made for a good reference.
Kenner, who represents Death
Row Records and supplies
Herman with many of his
celebrity clients, is impressed
with Herman's work ethic.
"He's there when you need
him," says Kenner. Herman
knows he has to be available
24/7: "If I'm at dinner
and I get beeped, I'm leaving.
If I'm out of the country,
I'm coming home." And neither
Josh nor his father sees
any downside to spending
so much time around accused
felons. "I don't really
worry too much about him,"
says Dad. "He's got a license
to carry a concealed gun."
Besides, says Herman, having
famous a customers gives
him an advantage. While
other bondsmen wait for
calls from cons flipping
through the Yellow Pages,
Herman is beeped by record-company
lawyers. And the best part
(besides the parties) is
that he doesn't have to
worry about a client like
Dr. Dre's fleeing the country
and forfeiting Herman's
bail money. For one thing,
he says, "Where are they
going to go and not be recognized?"
Plus, "Snoop is probably
worth $100 million to Death
Row," he says. "That record
company is going to make
sure he's in that courtroom."
Newsweek Magazine
December 1, 1997
Los Angeles
Times
Stars'
Bail Bondsman Is
Soul of Discretion;
Celebrity: Josh
Herman has gained
fame through clients
like Tupac Shakur,
Snoop Doggy Dogg
and Dr. Dre. But
he won't divulge
names of most of
his high-profile
clients.:[Bulldog
Edition]
DEBORAH
HASTINGS. The
Los Angeles Times. (Record
edition). Los Angeles,
Calif.: Feb
8, 1998. pg. 35
Josh
Herman, bail bondsman
to the stars, is
barreling down the
Santa Monica Freeway
in his big green
truck to meet a
man named Bubba.
Bubba.
Not rapper Snoop
Doggy Dogg. Not
one of Herman's
other celebrity
clients whose names
he safeguards like
a family secret.
"You
don't want to mess
with Bubba," says
Herman, who has
the unnerving ability
to drive, bark into
a cell phone and
read court documents
all at once.
Charles
"Bub" Flowers, according
to his business
card, is an investigator.
He's a nice guy.
But if you skip
on a Herman bail
bond, Bubba is the
man who comes after
you. And Herman
is looking for a
missing client.
Bubba
is big. He has a
gun. And he isn't
always nice.
In
Herman's universe,
musclemen, bounty
hunters and career
felons coexist with
hip-hop artists,
Hollywood producers
and movie stars.
Until
recently, Herman
lived in obscurity,
which is the way
he and his well-known
clients liked it.
Then Newsweek ran
a little story about
"the bail bondsman
of choice for jailed
rap stars." Now
Herman has a Hollywood
manager to handle
callers professing
interest in book,
TV and film deals.
That's
Hollywood. "Jackie
Brown," Quentin
Tarantino's new
movie featuring
a bail bondsman,
is hot. So, by the
logic of show biz,
Herman is hot.
His
manager envisions
a TV series. Fast
cars and fetching
women? "Yeah," says
Herman, who is 6
feet 3 and tops
200 pounds.
"But
Bubba and I couldn't
both fit in a Ferrari."
Herman
says he finds the
hype surreal and
silly. That doesn't
explain why someone
who claims to hate
hype hires a manager
to stir it up.
"I
don't know why,"
he says. Then he
laughs.
Perhaps
he is just used
to peculiar characters.
This is a man who
gets people out
of jail for a living
and counts some
as friends.
"There's
nothing wrong with
them. They've just
been to jail," he
says.
In
his eight-year career,
Herman has written
thousands of bonds
pledging to pay
the entire bail
if a defendant fails
to appear in court.
His fee is 10% of
the bail amount.
He
has built a client
list--mostly from
referrals of criminal
attorneys and record
company lawyers--that
is about 70% celebrities,
he says.
A
middle-class white
guy from West Los
Angeles, Herman,
26, learned the
business from his
father, Mark, and
grandmother, Flo.
Mark bailed out
Black Panther leaders
and musician Ike
Turner.
"My
grandmother was
tough," says Josh
Herman. "And she
didn't drive. She'd
say 'You need a
bond? Come get me.'
"
Now
father and son work
together. Their
toll free number:
1-800-7Get-Me-Out.
Josh
Herman won't say
how much he earns.
He has a Beverly
Hills office but
never uses it. He
works out of his
truck or his Mercedes-Benz,
driving from court
to court, jail to
jail, constantly
answering his beeper
and cell phone.
He is on call 24
hours a day, seven
days a week.
He
divulges the identities
of rapper clients
Snoop Doggy Dogg
and Dr. Dre, he
says, because they
don't mind talking
about their well-publicized
brushes with the
law.
"Look,"
Herman says, "I
do a lot of famous
people, not just
the rappers. Movie
people, TV people,
you name it. But
I can't talk about
those people. I'd
lose my business."
Beverly
Hills
attorney Jeffrey
Brodey handles wealthy
clients and high-profile
murder cases. He
uses the Hermans
to bail out his
clients.
They
are "very different,"
Brodey says, from
"scummier" bondsmen.
"I'm
looking for somebody
who's going to be
there right away,
who treats my clients
with a velvet glove,"
Brodey says, seated
behind a marble
desk in his high-rise
office.
"Josh
will pick up somebody
from jail and bring
them home. That's
just unheard of."
Tupac
Shakur is one other
client Herman will
discuss. The rapper
and film star died
in 1996, six days
after being shot
on the Las Vegas
Strip. His killer
hasn't been caught.
"Tupac
was a good friend,
and a good guy,"
says Herman.
Dead
at 25, Shakur lived
a scarred life of
fighting, shootings
and prison sentences
that filled his
gangsta rap lyrics.
Many
of Herman's bonds
involve assault
and drug charges.
"If
they're rappers,
they're beating
somebody up," Herman
says. "If they're
rock stars, it's
heroin."
Famous
people rarely skip
bail. It isn't that
easy for them to
fade into the woodwork
or blend into a
crowd. About 3%
of the others do,
Herman said. That's
when he calls Bubba.
Herman
often goes with
him, taking the
.40-caliber Glock
handgun he is licensed
to carry. Bondsmen
and their agents
have broad arrest
powers. They don't
need warrants. A
person who signs
a bail bond contract
agrees he is subject
to seizure if he
fails to appear
in court.
If
the job is big--say,
the fugitive has
well-armed friends--Herman
calls in his bounty
hunter, who assembles
his own well-armed
friends.
"Look,"
says Herman, "This
is all I know. I'm
my own boss. There
is action. I like
action."
PHOTO:
Bail bondsman Josh
Herman, 26, walks
his talk in a corridor
of the Beverly Hills
Municipal Court.;
PHOTOGRAPHER: REED
SAXON / Associated
Press
Credit:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Miami
Herald
BAIL
BONDSMAN OF CHOICE
FOR STARS \ HYPE
TURNS PROFESSIONAL
INTO HOLLYWOOD COMMODITY DEBORAH
HASTINGS Associated
Press
JoshHerman, bail
bondsman to the
stars, is barreling
down the Santa Monica
Freeway in his green
truck to meet a
man named Bubba.
Bubba.
Not rapper Snoop
Doggy Dogg. Not
one of Herman's
other celebrity
clients whose names
he safeguards like
a family secret.
You
don't want to mess
with Bubba,'' says
Herman, who has
the unnerving ability
to read court documents,
bark into a cell
phone and drive
-- all at once.
Charles
``Bub'' Flowers,
according to his
business card, is
an investigator.
He's a nice guy.
But if you skip
on a Herman bail
bond, Bubba is the
man who comes after
you. And Herman
is looking for a
missing client.
Bubba
is big. He has a
gun. And he isn't
always nice.
In
Herman's universe,
musclemen, bounty
hunters and career
felons co-exist
with hip-hop artists,
Hollywood producers
and movie stars.
Lived
in the shadows
Until
recently, Herman
lived in obscurity,
which is how he
and his well-known
clients liked it.
Then Newsweek ran
a little story about
``the bail bondsman
of choice for jailed
rap stars.'' Now
Herman has a Hollywood
manager to handle
callers professing
interest in book,
TV and film deals.
That's
Hollywood. Jackie
Brown, Quintin Tarantino's
newest movie featuring
a bail bondsman,
is hot. So by the
logic of show biz,
Herman is hot.
His
manager envisions
a TV series. Fast
cars and fetching
women? ``Yeah,''
says Herman, who
is 6-feet-3 and
tops 200 pounds.
``But
Bubba and I couldn't
both fit in a Ferrari.''
Herman
says he finds the
hype surreal and
silly. That doesn't
explain why someone
who claims to hate
hype hires a manager
to stir it up.
``I
don't know why,''
he says. Then he
laughs.
Perhaps
he is just used
to peculiar characters.
This is a man who
gets people out
of jail for a living
and counts some
as friends.
``There's
nothing wrong with
them. They've just
been to jail,''
he says.
In
his eight-year career,
Herman has written
thousands of bonds
pledging to pay
the entire bail
if a defendant fails
to appear in court.
His fee is 10 percent
of the bail amount.
70
percent celebrities
He
has built a client
list -- mostly from
referrals of criminal
attorneys and record
company lawyers
-- that is about
70 percent celebrities,
he says.
A
middle-class guy
from West Los Angeles,
Herman, 26, learned
the business from
his father, Mark,
and grandmother,
Flo. Mark bailed
out Black Panther
leaders and musician
Ike Turner.
``My
grandmother was
tough,'' says JoshHerman. ``And
she didn't drive.
She'd say `You need
a bond? Come get
me.' ''
Now
father and son work
together. Their
toll-free number:
1 (800) 7Get-Me-Out.
JoshHerman won't
say how much he
earns. He has a
Beverly Hills office
but never uses it.
He works out of
his truck, or his
Mercedes-Benz, driving
from court to court,
jail to jail, constantly
answering his beeper
and cell phone.
He is on call 24
hours a day, seven
days a week.
He
divulges the identities
of rapper clients
Snoop Doggy Dogg
and Dr. Dre, he
says, because they
don't mind talking
about their well-publicized
brushes with the
law.
``Look,''
Herman says, ``I
do a lot of famous
people, not just
the rappers. Movie
people, TV people,
you name it. But
I can't talk about
those people. I'd
lose my business.''
`Velvet
gloves'
Beverly
Hills attorney Jeffrey
Brodey handles very
wealthy clients
and high-profile
murder cases. He
uses the Hermans
to bail out his
clients.
They
are ``very different,''
Brodey says, from
``scummier'' bondsmen.
``I'm
looking for somebody
who's going to be
there right away,
who treats my clients
with a velvet glove,''
Brodey says, seated
behind a marble
desk in his high-rise
office.
``Josh
will pick up somebody
from jail and bring
them home. That's
just unheard of.''
Tupac
Shakur is one other
client Herman will
discuss. The rapper
and film star died
in 1996, six days
after being shot
on the Las Vegas
Strip. His killer
hasn't been caught.
``Tupac
was a good friend,
and a good guy,''
says Herman.
Dead
at 25, Shakur lived
a scarred life of
fighting, shootings
and prison sentences
that filled his
gangsta rap lyrics.
Many
of Herman's bonds
involve assault
and drug charges.
``If
they're rappers,
they're beating
somebody up,'' Herman
says. ``If they're
rock stars, it's
heroin.''
Calling
Bubba
Famous
people rarely skip
bail. It isn't that
easy for them to
fade into the woodwork
or blend into a
crowd. About three
percent of the others
do, Herman said.
That's when he calls
Bubba.
Herman
often goes with
him, taking the
.40-caliber Glock
handgun he is licensed
to carry. Bondsmen
and their agents
have broad arrest
powers. They don't
need warrants. A
person who signs
a bail-bond contract
agrees he is subject
to seizure if he
fails to appear
in court.
If
the job is big --
say the fugitive
has well-armed friends
-- Herman calls
in his bounty hunter,
who assembles his
own well-armed friends.
``Look,''
says Herman, ``This
is all I know. I'm
my own boss. There
is action. I like
action.''
Illustration:photo:
JoshHerman
talking with Charles
`Bub' Flowers (BAIL
BOND)
London
Sunday Times
London
Sunday Times
Feb
15, 1998
Cell mate;Interview;Josh Herman
CHRIS GOODWIN
FEATURES
When Hollywood's finest
get into trouble, they call
JoshHerman,
bondsman to
the stars. But woe betide
those who skip bail, as
CHRIS GOODWIN reports.
JoshHermanis
not the kind of guy to make
moral judgments about his
Hollywood
clients - he wouldn't have
much work if he did - but
there is one thing he
stipulates before he'll
do business with anyone:
they must be in the slammer.
Not on some two-bit drink-
driving charge - Herman
won't even get out of bed
for that - but for murder,
assault with a deadly weapon,
rape or a serious
drugs charge, especially
if they're a celebrity.
Then Herman will drop whatever
he's doing, wherever he
happens to be.
JoshHerman
is bail bondsman to the
stars.
Here's the deal. You're
a well-known movie star
and you've just been caught
on
Santa Monica Boulevard with
a gun, 2oz of Bolivian marching
powder and a
transvestite hooker. After
the cops charge you, the
court agrees to release
you
on bail of, say, $100,000.
Perhaps you just don't have
that kind of cash lying
around at home on a wet
Saturday night in February.
Perhaps you don't feel comfortable
asking the wife
to come and bail you out
when it's the nanny's night
off. So you call JoshHerman,
a beefy 26-year-old who
packs a .40-calibre Glock
handgun, and talks like
the dialogue
coach on a Quentin Tarantino
movie.
If he agrees to be your
bail bondsman, Herman stumps
up 10% of that $100,000
bail to the court on your
behalf and, before you can
say "O J Simpson", you're
a free man.
There are just two catches:
Herman charges you 10% of
whatever he puts up and,
if you're dumb enough to
leave town or fail to turn
up for your court
appearance, he forfeits
the whole $100,000. Which
could mean trouble for you.
"If you skip on me I will
do every f***ing thing I
can to find you," says
Herman quietly. "You are
not going to get away from
me. That's just the
reality. I am going to find
you and I am going to drag
your ass back to jail."
If the "skip" is someone
Herman knows, he goes after
them himself. "They're
gonna see me at the door
with handcuffs, that's for
sure," he says. "It's a
little personal to me."
If he doesn't know the person,
Herman sends his muscle,
Bubba. "Bubba is
huge," says Herman, "and
mean-looking. If I ask him
to do something for me
he'll do it."
These days, 70% of Herman's
work involves celebrities.
"If we bail out someone
famous," says Herman, "it's
a done deal, it's easy.
Where they gonna go? You
tell me." He's right. Not
only are celebrities just
too recognisable to skip,
but they're worth far too
much money to their record
companies, studios,
lawyers and agents to be
allowed to.
Herman's confidentiality
agreements prevent him from
naming most of his
clients, who include some
of Hollywood's best- known
figures, but he will hint.
"I've dealt with the biggest
actor in Hollywood, I mean
the biggest, and
nobody knows he went to
jail," Herman discloses.
"It was kept out of the
papers. When I got to the
jail, he was sitting there
with a coat over his head.
Even my file doesn't have
his real name on it."
Herman has a special fondness
for rap stars. You can understand
why. They are
great business for him.
His toll-free number, 1-800-7GET-ME-OUT,
is on the
cell-phone speed dial of
every rap artist in Los
Angeles. He is virtually
the
in-house bail bondsman for
Death Row records, the leading
rap label, and counts
the late Tupac Shakur, Snoop
Doggy Dogg, and former Death
Row chairman Suge
Knight not just as clients,
but as friends.
Despite their reputations,
they are, he insists, good
people. What of Shakur,
who served time for rape
and gun possession, and
died in a hail of bullets
in
Las Vegas in 1996? "As friendly
as could be."
And Knight, now serving
eight years for assault
with a baseball bat? "Suge
never does anything but
nice things for me, my family
and a million other
families out there, including
giving away turkeys on Thanksgiving."
But then Herman was brought
up with a soft spot for
those who prefer to live
by their own rather than
society's rules.
It started with his grandmother,
Flo, who began the family's
bail-bond
business in the 1940s, getting
mafia men out of jail.
"She was 5ft tall, weighed
70lb, was wafer thin, and
smoked like a chimney,"
Herman remembers fondly.
"And she was mean." Every
Friday night Flo would have
a card game. "She'd have
cat burglars and armed robbers
playing with her," he
recalls.
"I'd be sitting there watching
TV and the biggest fence
in LA would be there,
mafia guys, just about everybody.
It was a different time.
People were
friendly, they were happy,
and at night they would
go out and rob people.
That's just the way it was."
During the 1960s Herman's
father became a bondsman
too, doing a lot of
business with the marijuana
cartels then operating in
California, the Black
Panthers, and some rock
and soul stars, including
Ike Turner. So it was only
natural that Herman went
into the business when he
was 19.
On his first day he had
to pick up a heroin dealer
in east LA. Soon after that
his dad sent him off to
bail out rapper Eazy-E,
which is how he got into
the
celebrity game.
"You learn how to determine
what type of person somebody
is in 30 seconds on
the phone," he says. "I'm
not saying that there are
people out there who are
not strange or dangerous,
but I make my own choices."
Following the release of
Tarantino's Jackie Brown,
in which Robert Forster
plays a bail bondsman, Hollywood
is now sniffing round him
to see if his life
story could make a movie.
Herman, however, remains
steadfastly unimpressed
by
their approaches.
"You might think I deal
with some slimy people in
my business," he says, "but
I'll tell you this: these
Hollywood people are a whole
lot worse than the guys
I deal with. A whole lot
worse."