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Woody Overton
Hey lifers. Woody Overton here and I want to talk to y' all about something that's come up around our house more than once lately. Hormones. Now, I can't speak from personal experience on this one, but I've seen it firsthand with Cindy. There were days she'd be feeling drained, overwhelmed, even a little off. We couldn't figure out why she was eating right, taking care of herself, getting things done like always. But something just wasn't clicking. Turns out it wasn't just stress, it wasn't just being tired. She took this free two minute quiz from a company called Happy Mammoth and it gave her some serious insight into what might be going on with her hormone levels. After answering just a few simple questions, she got personalized breakdown. And one of the main things it pointed out was that her body may be overloaded with estrogen. That's when we found Hormone Harmony. Happy Mammoth Plant based herbal formula designed to support your hormone levels and stress response and overall well being. Since Cindy started taking Hormone Harmony, she said it's made a noticeable difference. Things like occasional bloating, low energy and those mild mood dips, all less frequent. And it didn't take a huge lifestyle overhaul to see those changes. Just a small daily habit that fit right into her routine. Now listen, this isn't some one size fits all deal. This quiz gives you personalized recommendations so you can understand what's going on in your body and and what might help you feel better. Whether it's Hormone Harmony or one of their other hormone support products, you'll know exactly where to start. And here's the thing. Happy Mammoth has helped thousands of women. They have over 40,000 5 star reviews and a bottle of Hormone harmony cells every 24 seconds. That many folks can't be wrong. Ready to start feeling like yourself again? Head over to happy mammoth.com and take their free 2 minute hormone quiz today to find the ultimate answer to your stubborn horm issues. And for a limited time, you can also get 15% off your entire first order with my code RLRC at checkout. That's H-A-P-Y M A M-M M O T H.com and use the code RLRC for 15 off today. You ever notice how the smallest changes can completely reset your mood? Like lighting a candle or cracking a window or slipping into a bed that actually feels like it belongs in a luxury retreat. We've been switching things up for the summer over here and let me just say, refreshing your bedroom with avocado green mattress bedding is totally a game changer y' all. You already know Avocado for the certified organic mattresses, but their bedding is next level. I'm talking soft, breathable and sustainably made pieces that don't just look good that they feel like an upgrade for your whole life. They're organic cotton sheets, gots certified and insanely soft like sleeping in a fancy hotel. And their natural linen duvet just gets better every time you wash it. Light, airy and built to last, we sleep better when we sleep Cool and natural materials like these don't trap heat the way synthetics do. Avocado's bedding helps regulate your temperature all night long, which means no waking up sweaty, no tossing and turning, just good deep sleep. What I really love though? You're wrapping yourself in responsibly sourced comfort. These materials are organic, renewable and ethically made. Better for you and better for the planet. That's what Avocado is all about. Mission driven sustainability without sacrificing luxury. Head to avocado mattress.com today to save 10% on all bedding and 50% on clearance bedding. Avocado dream of better Real life, Real Crime the podcast is brought to you by Progressive Insurance. Fiscally responsible financial geniuses, monetary magicians. These are the things people say about drivers who switch their car insurance to Progressive and save hundreds of because Progressive offers discounts for paying in full, owning a home and more. Plus, you can count on their great customer service to help you when you need it. So your dollar goes a long way. Visit progressive.com to see if you could save on car insurance. Progressive Casualty Insurance company and affiliates. Potential savings will vary. Not available in all states or situations.
Cindy
Yeah, they're to remain silent.
Woody Overton
Anything you say can and will be.
Cindy
Used against you in a court of law.
Woody Overton
You have a right to an attorney prior to enduring any question.
Cindy
If you can't afford one, the court of appoint one for you. Do you understand your rights and the.
Tina Dixon
Wolf is at your cor. Your running's over that for sure. Already knows all about you.
Cindy
Cut you down no matter about you. Now you better watch the.
Tina Dixon
Foreign.
Cindy
This.
Woody Overton
Episode of Real Life Real Crime. The podcast may contain descriptions of acts of violence or that of a sexual nature and should be people that are 18 years or older. He my warning people. I do not get the facts of these cases off of the Internet or from some television show. The facts I'm retelling you were presented to me by the victims of the crimes or the perpetrators who committed the.
Cindy
Crimes against the victims.
Woody Overton
My descriptions of the crime scenes, what I saw with my own two eyes. If you're going to get offended, please turn this podcast off now.
Cindy
Thank you. Hello, everybody, and welcome to this episode of Real Life, Real Crime, the podcast. As always, I'm your host, Woody Overton. Today we're going to beginning a new series I've been telling you all about for months. And it's human sex trafficking.
Tina Dixon
Or is it sex trafficking?
Cindy
Sex trafficking. And the new series is going to be titled Sex trafficking. And y' all, it's powerful stuff, is real people, real stories. And today. And the reason I'm actually doing this, I always had the thought in my mind of. Because of all the stories that I know. But the reason I'm doing this is I have a very special guest for the first guest I've ever had in this studio, and her name is Tina Dixon. Ms. Tina Dixon. All right. Ms. Tina has a wealth of knowledge and a very detailed story on sex trafficking and everything that involves it, right?
Tina Dixon
Yes, yes, absolutely, I do.
Cindy
Okay. So, Ms. Tina, before we get started, where were you born?
Tina Dixon
Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Cindy
Baton Rouge.
Tina Dixon
The old lady Lake Hospital.
Cindy
Really? So, yeah. So was that. And now Baton Rouge headquarters. Right. For the pd.
Tina Dixon
Right. That's exactly what it is.
Cindy
And so you're raised in Baton Rouge?
Tina Dixon
I was raised in Baton Rouge and in Dutch Town.
Cindy
All right, I know exactly where that is. And a couple off the wall questions. What's your favorite thing to eat?
Tina Dixon
Barbecue shrimp.
Cindy
Really?
Tina Dixon
Yeah. Pasco minali style.
Cindy
Really? There you go. Fancy. All right. That's good stuff. Have you ever had shrimp fresh off the boat that haven't been flash frozen? Frozen, yes. It's night and day. It's like eat a filet mignon or piece of flank steak. So. But barbecue shrimp, my daddy lived in.
Tina Dixon
F art across the street from the shrimp boat.
Cindy
There you go. I had a shrimp boat when I retired from the state police. I sunk it twice.
Tina Dixon
Well, that's not a good.
Cindy
I had a. I had a bunch of crab traps. My wife and I made 160 crab traps and I lost them in a hurricane. But anyway, the. Neither here. There. So barbecue shrimp. And I would ask you about kids and all this stuff, but I think that's going to come out during your story and. But you're a lifelong resident of Louisiana.
Tina Dixon
I'm a lifelong resident of Louisiana. I went to Las Vegas after Hurricane Katrina.
Cindy
Really?
Tina Dixon
And I stayed there until 2016. From 2005. 2016.
Cindy
Okay.
Tina Dixon
And then came home.
Cindy
All right. Then I had to go to Vegas many times for Work and when I was doing the defense consultant we were talking about earlier and I was always in Vegas and I've always then a speaker of several conferences etc. And I took Sydney for one of her birthdays just to go play. But did you live in Henderson County?
Tina Dixon
I lived in Henderson, yeah. I lived in Henderson and I lived in Las Vegas property.
Cindy
So the coming back home south Louisiana. This is no culture in the world like it.
Tina Dixon
No, it's like I miss Louisiana so bad when I came. When I came in, I went. I was driving in Galvez over by Fred's.
Cindy
Yeah.
Tina Dixon
And you know how that. That big shadow of oak trees are right there. It was like the best feeling.
Cindy
I spent many a Sunday afternoon on Fred's back deck when I was in college hanging out drinking. But the. All right, so I agree with you that. And even though you come home in Louisiana and a lot of things are so messed up like roads and different, you know, the jobs either in the seafood or the oil industry or whatever, you know, tourism or you got nothing or agriculture but you. So you're raised in bad marriage and I'm going to let you start tell a story. The hardest thing in the world is for Woody Everton to shut up. But. But if you don't mind and if won't throw you off too much all that. I like to ask the questions as they pop into my head sometimes because if I don't then I'll forget them. I'm. I got score. All right, so tell me why we're here and. And just I'm gonna let you fly.
Tina Dixon
Okay. Okay, that sounds good. You know, I grew up in a real chaotic household. I was born in 63. Yeah. I'm 62 years old. A lot of my story, the trafficking story happened in the late 70s and the early 80s. But I. I grew up in a real chaotic household. My dad was the president of an outlaw motorcycle called the Mariahs and my mom 1 percenters.
Cindy
1 percenters for y' all that don't know. 1 percenters are true outlaw game.
Tina Dixon
True outlaws.
Cindy
They don't give a F about anything. The.
Tina Dixon
The law, the 1% of the world that don't get.
Cindy
That's right. That's right. So if you ever see. You're at your gas station or whatever and you see somebody wearing leathers or they have a patch on and it doesn't have 1%. It's probably just your local jewelry ride does that. 1%. Don't mess with them.
Tina Dixon
Right. And about the time I was. My mom was really Abusive. Let's just back that up. I went through a lot of childhood abuse.
Cindy
Physical abuse, mental abuse, sexual abuse. Okay. If I ask you a question, you're uncomfortable? Yeah, I can boom it out. But the. I'm be honest with you. This, the without, we don't have to dramatize it because it's dramatic enough. But I think the more that you tell of your story, like sexually abused by who or whatever, it's. If you're comfortable doing it, that's what gets. And that's what gets people's heartstrings because they got an uncle or they got a. Or they got somebody who did whatever. I'm just thinking out loud. All right. Boom.
Tina Dixon
So about the time I was 11 years old, I started running away from home. When I was 11, I stole my mom's car and drove to LSU Lakes. Got caught really quickly. Ended up in juvenile detention over at Run Airport.
Cindy
Right. That I mean. And now I know I'm messing with Flo. I got questions about that. So 11 years old, you began acting out. Right. And the usually that comes in. In juveniles like that, after they've been offended against us, there's something.
Woody Overton
Something is so bad in their lives.
Cindy
That they just start doing that. Right. So this is after you.
Tina Dixon
I had been sexually molested by a man that was in my father's motorcycle club.
Cindy
Okay.
Tina Dixon
For a number of years. He was the babysitter.
Cindy
Right. So he's. He's a preferential offender. Groomed your family into letting get their trust enough to let them b. Him babysit you. And he took advantage of the situation. Did he threaten you and say don't tell or was it you love me or you know.
Tina Dixon
Yeah, he. He threatened me. But yeah, he also played that like.
Cindy
Grown up girlfriend makes you feel special.
Tina Dixon
Yes. And you know, and I'm going into early puberty, 1112 years old.
Cindy
And you think it's all right. Yeah, I hope I don't offend you, but sometimes I'm going to curse. They just make you think you're hot shut. And then you're thinking, wow, this is, this is.
Tina Dixon
And that's exactly what pimps do the same.
Cindy
Yeah, absolutely. It's grooming.
Tina Dixon
Sexual predators of all sorts.
Cindy
I've been dealt with. And you know, there's two types of sexual predators, preferential and situational. What you're dealing with there is a preferential he had long before you. I'm sure he had an age range that he liked to offend against. Right. And. And they, they're very. Not necessarily formally Educated. But the.
Woody Overton
The profile show they.
Cindy
They're very intelligent, usually meaning that they're. They can manipulate people. They. They choose the right situations. They're very careful on not getting caught. Where the situational offender is like the ice cream man riding around the neighborhood, he grabs a kid up and raises because of situations. Right. They're usually of lower intelligence and things like that. So this. This guy in gray shaded himself in your family. He's abusing you. He's getting you to where you're. You start to act out. That's what they call it. And then for the. Those of you don't know, juvenile detention used to be. I think it's changed now, but it was by the Ryan Airport, Baton Rouge, and so you go to lsu. I'm sorry for interrupting. I just want to tell the story. You go to the LSU lakes with y' all back in the day, and when our age is not that far apart, you go to LSU lakes. At nighttime, there's what we call watch the submarine races. That's where people used to go to make out and stuff. And who'd you get arrested by? Battery City or LSU police or.
Tina Dixon
Yeah, I know about Mar City police.
Cindy
And. And you were in a stolen car.
Tina Dixon
In a stolen car.
Cindy
And my mom, she reported. All right. How long did you get?
Tina Dixon
So I stayed in Ryan Airport for about three months, and then really they sent me to a children's home in New Orleans called St. Elizabeth's all right. And. And actually, once I got to St. Elizabeth's I. I straightened up a lot because, you know, you had the stable environment. We went to the Catholic schools, streetcar school to go to the Catholic schools.
Cindy
And some structure.
Tina Dixon
And had some structure. And. And I did well. But the trauma that I had experienced from the molestation.
Cindy
Right.
Tina Dixon
I still had, like, I was just broken.
Cindy
I understand. And. And a lot of times the. And I know this because I've dealt with it so much my career, but a lot of times it'll come out in different ways because you're still broken. But even that, you don't know you're broken. Right. The people be very promiscuous and act out sexually or turn to drugs and alcohol and things like that. Even if. If you're in a better place now, you know, you're not getting offended against or whatever. But at some point, what wasn't dealt with starts to rear south.
Tina Dixon
Right. And it continued to do that through my whole life. It just absolutely continued.
Cindy
So back to St. Elizabeth and stayed.
Tina Dixon
At St. Elizabeth for a while, and I kept Getting in trouble. I kept acting out.
Cindy
What kind of trouble?
Tina Dixon
I would. I would steal. I was. I loved. I would steal food. I would fight with people. I loved to fight. I was very angry at the world, right? And then I get punished. And so finally I just decided to run away. And I ran away from home, and I went downtown to the French Quarter.
Cindy
The home being St. Elizabeth.
Tina Dixon
St. Elizabeth was, like, uptown on Napoleon Avenue. And so I ran away and went to the French Quarter.
Cindy
You know, I ran away on my 15th birthday to the first quarter. Yeah. I got arrested in the bus stop, Baton Rouge. I didn't make it, but. So how old were you then?
Tina Dixon
I was 14.
Cindy
All right, so you go to the Quarter. How hard did they look for you?
Tina Dixon
So they really didn't look for me a lot.
Cindy
That's what I thought.
Tina Dixon
And actually, I ended up getting emancipated by the time I was 15 because my mom and dad didn't want to be responsible for me.
Cindy
All right, so when you The. And I'm gonna slow you down standing and keep. Keep asking questions, because I'm a visual person, Right. So you go to the French Quarter. When I went to the French Quarter, I bombed some money from friends at school that day because I. I was in trouble for something else. And I knew it was on my birthday, my dad was like, I'm gonna get you tomorrow, right? And so I was like, you get me. My birthday was Mardi Gras, and I bumped some money people to school and had a girl take me to the bus station, Baton Rouge, and they got me. I had no plan. I was. But I knew I was going to go down there. I was going to party, and I was going to find somebody to check up with or hang out with or whatever. So that's. When did you have somebody, like, entice you to the Quarter, or is that just where you want to go?
Tina Dixon
I actually went to the Quarter, and what happened to me. Me that night was I walked by a bar, and there were a lot of Harley Davidson. And for me, my daddy was a biker, and so that was. I kind of memorized that. And so in that night, I ended up with a. With an old man that was in the Galloping Goose's Motorcycle Club.
Cindy
There you go. Right.
Tina Dixon
And I was stripping the next night on Bourbon street at Big Daddy's.
Cindy
So they. They put you to work? I've been actually been to Big Daddy's. Probably shouldn't say that one. The. So what the. You know, it's just really how it works. I mean, People don't know that, but they, they choose. Even though you thought you were a badass, you've been your fighter and still make your street smart. And you're doing whatever, you're in the quarter and you see the Harleys and, and so you were 14 at the time, probably developed and whatever. And they're like, okay, we can use.
Tina Dixon
Her a little bit. A little bit. Well developed.
Woody Overton
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Cindy
That's like not only I can is possible Moneymaker. I don't know if you told me you just ran away or whatever. I'm sure they ask you what you doing here by yourself and and then turn that into you stay the night with the guy. And then they were like you want to make some money right?
Tina Dixon
Yeah. Yeah. And so they just kind of initiate you into the club, right. You know, and the initiation was the same that you hear all the time. You know they ran a train and with the 14 year old child, right. I was scared to death and I did what they told me to do, right.
Cindy
And, and that emboldens them even more, right? Because we can run the train and get away with it and she's not going to run screaming to the police. Then, then they can get more out. They press them, press them and then boy. And what they would want is not only to have you there for those needs, but to make money. And, and so how, if you remember, how did they get you to be daddy?
Tina Dixon
So it was like, so they got me an ID first we went to go see some guy, he came in, he made these cars and said he got me an id and then we went down to the club and he just told the guy to put me to work. Like they, like they already had girls right there.
Cindy
Right. And then how much percent or did they take all of it? No, they took all of it and even tips and no, you got like.
Tina Dixon
You got money every day for to eat with and that. And they kept all the money and. Yeah, but their whole premise was like we're supporting you. So.
Cindy
Right. This is what I'm saying. When you're dancing, you're making tips and. Yeah, and, and they just kept it.
Tina Dixon
They just took it off.
Cindy
So sure, they split a certain percentage with big daddies, what have you. And so you're working, you're making the money that. Where were they? Housing.
Tina Dixon
I was working like you know, late at night till like 3, 4 o' clock in the morning. And you know, after work they expected you to, you know, go out with the clients in the, in the club.
Cindy
Right, right. You know, so prostitution.
Tina Dixon
Prostitution, yeah.
Cindy
Okay. And, and so really making the money and, and so you, you going out with the class, you do the prostitution and that. I guess they would, that I'm sure they had to offer you some level of protection in their mind. Right. They don't want this. You're making the money. It'll be like I was a race car driver on my race car to run. Right. And they, they, they are telling you who to go with, client wise or how did it work?
Tina Dixon
A lot of times they arranged it. Then later on in the relationship I would take care of it and I would, you know, naturally just leave the money on the dresser. Sometimes he would go out of town and it was one of those times that he went out of town that I encountered my first pimp from the Dixie mafia.
Cindy
All right, hold on. That he is the guy with the motorcycle?
Tina Dixon
Yes.
Cindy
And they were 1 percenters. And so he is making the money off over there. I'm sure he's kicking back to the club however it works. How long did this go on for?
Tina Dixon
Probably about four or five months before I left him for this other guy.
Cindy
All right, so the other guy, he's got game. I already know this, right. He's, he's a career. You didn't tell Me this, I'm guessing he's a career pimp if he can pull you away from the club. Right, right. And, and where'd you meet him at?
Tina Dixon
So I met him actually, I remember exactly. I met him at this workout, Funky Butts. And I walked past Funky Butts on the way to work and he was sitting there and he had like three piece suit and a brim on and he had a pistol sitting on the table. And, and I just thought that was the coolest thing ever, you know, like in my mind this is what I aspire to.
Cindy
Right.
Tina Dixon
And so he saw me walk by, he called me in and I sat at the table with him for a little while and he made this plan for me to leave with him.
Cindy
Right. And how old do you think this guy was?
Tina Dixon
Probably about 35 the, at that time. I think, I think I was 35 at that time.
Cindy
All right, and, and so he makes the plan for you to leave with him. Y' all Funky Bucks, where do you go?
Tina Dixon
Yeah, so we leave and we start going, we start driving around the little small areas where they have the bar rooms, where they have the card, card games in the back.
Cindy
Yeah, yeah, the illegal card.
Tina Dixon
And so yeah, so we went on this like four day trip doing cocaine, playing cards.
Cindy
So let's talk about that. You said he's Dixon Mafia. Okay. So for the people who don't know, and I have some stories about that myself and then, and I'm, I'm sure you can confirm some of them, but the people don't know. Dixie Mafia was bigger. I mean New York had the five families and, and all that. Dixie Mafia ran the case, especially south Louisiana, Mississippi and all those areas. And when I say they ran it, alcohol, drugs, prostitution, gambling, everything, all the vices in, they ran it hard. And they, they people think like Teflon Don and them were bad days and nothing of Dixon Mafia. I know for a fact how violent they were and what they would do to people. But. So you're now hooked up with the Dixon mafia. They're feeding you, you know, dope and, and, and taking you each one of those car rooms you went in. They ran it.
Tina Dixon
They ran it. Yeah, different. Some different guy ran it.
Cindy
Right, right. And he said like they're giving kickback. Say again? You didn't run illegal anything, including this area all the way Hammond, Louisiana. I know still run over there. But the, the dick's mouth got their cut. Yeah, that was either for the police looked all the way and, and they had established or they people were getting paid off or whatever, paying people up. Right. And that's, that's how they exist. Right. And they were paying for protection. Otherwise, you know, if you had a good upstanding sheriff, they were going to go in and shut it down. And that, that's not how it works. And money talks, right?
Tina Dixon
That's right. Right. Yeah. I know in particular Cat Doucet from Opelusis. I'm sure you know that.
Cindy
I, I, I do know the name. And, and I know actually one of the family members, so they had a.
Tina Dixon
Spot in Opelousis called Jean's Lounge, and it was one of the, the spots that the Dixie Mafia owned and, and worked girls in.
Cindy
Yeah, it's crazy. All right. Hey, I'm sorry for keeping interrupted, but I, I know people, people want to hear the. So you're with this guy. Y' all go in what coat? Beth?
Tina Dixon
Yeah, coke.
Cindy
The bikers, the one of the ones that had it. It wasn't the good stuff. It was at the, the Yellow Mouth, but they doing coke and hitting the different establishments. Are, Are you working for them then too?
Tina Dixon
No, not at that point. So.
Cindy
So you're like a lady or his girlfriend, Right?
Tina Dixon
So about the third day that we, and we had been up, we pulled in this bar and it happened to be his bar. Crazy thing is, do you remember the Old Forest Club in Baton Rouge? It was on Florida Boulevard. It was a golf club thing by it years and years ago. Well, that was his club. And so he stopped there. We went in the back and it was a room full of clothes racks and they had like overnight bags and they had like, like toiletries. And then he had a girl there and she got picked out clothes for me. So they measured me. Really. They put the toiletry bag together and then they brought me out to Krach Springs.
Cindy
Really? Okay. So this is like an assembly line for. To set someone up for the prostitution to work.
Tina Dixon
And, and they called them lockup joints back then.
Cindy
Yeah. And so lockup joints, meaning the harsh term would be orhouse or whatever the brothels. So you go in, in this place on Florida Boulevard. Y' all from not Louisiana. That's like used to especially back in.
Woody Overton
The day, be the main drag the.
Cindy
Baton Rouge, where everything was located. And you go in the back is places got racks of stuff like simulate. They'd measure you. They, they want you to look good. Right. So you make money and, and measure you, give you everything that you need survive. And then ship you down basically down Highway 90 all the way to Cross.
Tina Dixon
Springs down Highway 190 and there was a lot of spots, you know, like from the Riviera all the way down.
Cindy
Yeah. That's crazy.
Tina Dixon
So there was a spot. This place actually was called the Spot in Lebow, Louisiana.
Cindy
Where's that?
Tina Dixon
It's right behind Prospering.
Cindy
Okay.
Tina Dixon
So like in the middle of Rice Field.
Cindy
Right. So call. Okay. Y' all not from here. Crop Springs probably. It's in between Baton Rouge, Lafayette. 190 across the bridge and you come in across Springs. Now Billy, the. The register of Billy Star there or whatever. It's a very small town. You get a ticket. And a lot of my kin folks were actually from there. And a lot of my sister's husband's Kim folks are from there. The Jeff Ross. But the. So they. You got to work in Cross.
Tina Dixon
Yeah. So they. So we drive up and it's the series of trailers. And I always speak about this when I'm telling. My testimony is these trailers were shaped.
Cindy
Like a cross really.
Tina Dixon
And they. They had just rooms, rows and rows of rooms.
Cindy
I wonder if that's like for security. I understand the release religious implication and I'm a firm believer in that, but I wonder if that's like for security reasons. So see the one as you see four CCTV or anything else.
Tina Dixon
Right. Right. You could. It was very secure. And they. And they rolled over. They rolled over, you know, like a bell. And the bell would come on and all the girls would go to the front room and they pick out just like. Just like the brothels in Nevada.
Cindy
So you're in the back. If you're not busy doing whatever, maybe sleep, whatever. They ring the bell. You're expected to get up, get on one show on the menu. Right?
Tina Dixon
Yeah.
Cindy
And the client picks you out.
Tina Dixon
He picks you off. And he pays the man door. He doesn't. You don't. You're not supposed to touch money at all. But. But we all do. We like. We get money and show it in our pillows.
Cindy
Right. So did you have it like your own room, one of the trailers?
Tina Dixon
Yes.
Cindy
And that's where you worked out of. And wow. How busy was.
Tina Dixon
It was really busy. It was during the oil boom.
Cindy
Wow.
Tina Dixon
In Louisiana. So we had all these guys coming.
Cindy
In from the oil hub city, Lafayette and everything that area. If you're from outside of Louisiana, that's either you're in the. The. There's some of agriculture too. But the old boom was the big boom.
Tina Dixon
Yeah. And they have places like. They had places in my mood. Like the old holiday. The whole holiday.
Cindy
That's we're talking about. Yeah, I, I, I know a case from their murder case there back in the day. The, now you're talk.
Tina Dixon
Ranger was the murder case. You're talking about the Killing Fields. Yeah, so I, I know them really well from back in those days. Jimmy Danos and Pharaoh Ranger.
Cindy
And, and you're talking about small town, Louisiana. We're not talking about, you know, being in New York City or, or Los Angeles, whatever. They were talking about the Dixon mafia run in these places. And, and I guess in my mind, from law enforcement standpoint. Standpoint, you, you almost want to put it in Erath or Eunice or wherever. Small, because you can control it better, right? You control the local cops, you control the local politician, local judges and everything else. And it's crazy. So you, you're there, you're working like to put an ideal on the lifestyle at this point. We didn't even talk about it yet. But you really, you're being sex trafficked, right?
Tina Dixon
That's real sexual.
Cindy
And, and they are moving you, they're dressing you, they're feeding you, they're housing you. But you're, your sole job is to make them money, right?
Tina Dixon
And you're not leaving sex.
Cindy
No, that's, that's right.
Tina Dixon
One time.
Cindy
Did you, can you tell me about that?
Tina Dixon
Yeah, I was actually at the spot and they tried to, they tried to keep the liquor from, from the girls, right?
Cindy
They give you like the colored drinks.
Tina Dixon
They give you like the color drinks and they'd serve the drinks to the guys, but the, the guys would always sneak in alcohol for the girls. And so I got really drunk one night and, and I was just obnoxious. I was like, I'm leaving the F out of here and nobody's going to stop me. And they stopped me.
Cindy
They stops, they give you a beating.
Tina Dixon
They, they chained me to a bed until my old man can get there, and he did in front of everybody.
Cindy
And this is the same guy that had the price on one?
Tina Dixon
Yes.
Cindy
So he's, well, he's in the market anyways. It doesn't matter.
Tina Dixon
Dick's not, I was with him for three years until I was 17.
Cindy
So they changed to the bed and he's got to probably drive an hour and a half. There was no cell phones, right?
Tina Dixon
No cell phones.
Cindy
We're not text messaging. Anybody say that he gotta get a hold of this guy and then he comes over and he beats you in front of everybody to give, to teach him a lesson.
Tina Dixon
Right, exactly.
Cindy
And when you say beating, can you describe it?
Tina Dixon
Mostly like, you know, a lot of like they started, started with the belt. There was a lot of kicking and stomping. That's kind of how them guys always like to fight.
Cindy
And that's part of horrible. They said they beat you down and that's all serves dual purpose. And they're right. Teach you a lesson. Haha. You won't run again or if you do, it's going to be worse next time. And, and I would imagine all the other girls there are like this is what you're gonna get.
Tina Dixon
Right. So I'm not gonna try that when.
Cindy
When, when you, when you're in there. But they keep you supply with that?
Tina Dixon
No, no they don't. They keep you pretty much straight, which I didn't like at all. At that point in my life it was really difficult to deal with that whole situation without any alcohol or any drugs.
Cindy
Right.
Tina Dixon
Because clients would sneak in drugs.
Cindy
Yeah. Some of them, you know, keep them down by banging, you know, push them back or whatever. Get dope sick, you know, you don't go out and make the money, right. You get sick, I won't give you your day. So. But they were keeping you straight. Which again goes to show you how smart Dick's life is, is right.
Tina Dixon
Right.
Cindy
Because you know you can keep somebody.
Woody Overton
Straight when they're straight.
Cindy
You cut down all the, the problem.
Tina Dixon
It's a liability for, for the drugs and alcohol.
Cindy
How much, how much do you think you make or, or how many customs would you see on like on a busy Saturday night?
Tina Dixon
Probably around eight, seven, eight in a night. So he usually. I used to make about my, my quota was to make $500 in a night.
Cindy
Make $500.
Tina Dixon
That's, that's a lot of money. Yeah, it was a lot of money.
Cindy
We're talking mid-80s now.
Tina Dixon
Yeah, late 70s, late 70s, 78, 79.
Cindy
I mean you can get a coach for like a nickel or 10 cents, right? So 500 a night.
Tina Dixon
The incense, I mean he said what they would do is they pick you up every 10 days. So you do a hit, they call it a hitch, and you do a hitch for 10 days. They pick you up, they take you shopping, they take you, they get you high for the whole time. They get your hair done. You know, they do all of that and then they take you back, right?
Cindy
It's kind of like doing all short hits on whole rig and, and they come in, they take you in, say, pamper you and do whatever like you said, get you high and golly, I can't even imagine. And then how old are you at this time?
Tina Dixon
I was. I was there from. I was with him from the time I was 14 till I was 17 until.
Cindy
About effing up your belt in the years, right?
Tina Dixon
Oh, yeah, it was. And.
Cindy
And I mean, 14 to 17, but. So how many girls do you think they would have? And talk about the place.
Tina Dixon
25 girls. Serious. Some places. Like there's a place in Abbeville.
Cindy
Abbeville, E. I know I. I got stores in all those places.
Tina Dixon
Yeah, there was a place in Abbeville, and they usually had about four or five girls. It depended on this, on the place. But the spot was really a big place, and they had spots in, like in. In. Go in, on. In Biloxi, all the way up the.
Cindy
Coast that say back to the place that was across. That was in.
Tina Dixon
In the Bay, Louisiana, in the boat.
Cindy
And so I get. I guess it probably rotates you anyway.
Tina Dixon
Yes. They actually. They called it the circuit.
Cindy
All right.
Tina Dixon
And they moved the girls from place to place.
Cindy
Yeah.
Tina Dixon
So they're. Like I said, there was places in Mamu, there was places in Houma, there was places in Dulac, there was places in Abbeville, Morgan City, and they just moved these girls to these different brothels. Anywhere where there was a lot of oil.
Cindy
Right.
Tina Dixon
Trade.
Cindy
Wherever the money was.
Tina Dixon
Wherever the money was.
Cindy
And the guys, you know, disposable income. And I know you had fake ID and stuff, but I guess shipping you around, it keeps some guys from falling in love with you and trying to write you out or you falling in love with them. I get that from a bad guy standpoint. And the. Your fresh face, it's.
Tina Dixon
It was really, really effed up. And so. But I. I stayed working the circuit for about two years. The last year that I was with him, he had a bar on the other side of Houma. In Designs.
Cindy
Yeah.
Tina Dixon
And so he would put me to work at his bar, and he had some rooms in the bag, so he had a couple of girls working. It's like his space.
Cindy
Right. So you're probably talking more of it.
Tina Dixon
Right. And I. I did. And so my drug habit was a lot, because I was able to hide it from him a lot more.
Cindy
What was your drug?
Tina Dixon
I like to do speed, like, preluding from way back. That's what everybody did to D and Praloons right then. And he would supply that to me sometimes, too. But that really came to a quick halt one day. He had left me to run the bar, and he came back in, and he caught me in the back room. Doing drugs with the customer, and he shot at him. The guy was able to get out, but he beat me unconscious with a pool stick, like, all night long. He just beat on me. And then he dumped me on the side of 7:11. And when I came to, I called my father.
Cindy
You think he thought he killed you?
Tina Dixon
I think he thought I was dead, yeah.
Cindy
And, I mean, like, that's unbelievable. Don't show sign of the 711 leaves you basically dead for dead.
Tina Dixon
Yes.
Cindy
And where was the 7 11?
Tina Dixon
In Houma.
Cindy
And. And you wake up and you call your dad?
Tina Dixon
Yeah, I called my dad at this point, and I went to the hospital. I went to hospital in Baton Rouge. I went to a psych hospital. Back then, there wasn't like.
Cindy
You're still a kid.
Tina Dixon
Yeah.
Cindy
How old are you?
Tina Dixon
I was 17.
Cindy
And so you go to the hospital?
Tina Dixon
I go to the hospital. I stay a while at the hospital, and then I get out and I go live with my grandmother, and I go back to high school like nothing ever happened.
Cindy
I stopped fixing it. Did it?
Tina Dixon
Yeah, it wasn't fixing me.
Cindy
So you're. Where'd your grandmother live?
Tina Dixon
I went to school. High school at Ostreum.
Cindy
Okay, so you're in Baton Rouge.
Tina Dixon
I'm in Baton Rouge.
Cindy
And how long did it take for Sugar to turn?
Tina Dixon
Well, I met. During that time, there were a lot of students that lived in the house and apartments that she lived in, and I met some Iranian students, and I ended up marrying one of the Iranian guys so he could get his green card and had two children from him. And, like, all that that happened to me was never brought up again.
Cindy
Right.
Tina Dixon
Until much later in my. Until later in my life, yeah.
Cindy
So the. You go from six to eight guys a night being beat near to death. Hospital, psych hospital. What is. What did they say at the psych hospital? Not much.
Tina Dixon
They didn't really know medication. They didn't really know what trauma was back then.
Cindy
Right. They didn't know PTSD was back then.
Tina Dixon
Right.
Cindy
Well, you naturally would have people. Not probably war, but from being put in the circuit.
Tina Dixon
Exactly.
Cindy
Since you're basically a baby. Not a baby, but 14. And then you go look at your grandmother, marry the Iranian guy.
Tina Dixon
I married an Iranian guy. I had two children, a boy and a girl, two years apart. And about after my second child was born.
Cindy
How old were you when you got married?
Tina Dixon
17.
Cindy
Just.
Tina Dixon
Just right before I was 18.
Cindy
All right, 17. And y' all still live in the same place or.
Tina Dixon
No, well, no, we. I got. We got an apartment somewhere. Yeah. And so, and about a year, about probably six months after I had Nicholas was. Nicholas was hero. After I had my second child, I started doing, like, drugs here and there, and I was hiding, you know, hiding drugs. And I ended up leaving and going back to the pimp because it was the only life that I knew that I was really comfortable in. I had been thrown in this life as a. Into motherhood. And I was not ready for motherhood because I was pretty broken.
Cindy
Right. And it's definitely be the furthest thing from being on the circuit. Right. Motherhood. We all know parenting is, you know, sucks a lot of times. Right. It's hard. What. What did your husband do? I mean, as for work.
Tina Dixon
Oh, he's a car dealer.
Cindy
All right. And so you start falling back into it, slipping back into it, slipping back into it. And eventually you go back to the same, God, I beat you with the horse.
Tina Dixon
I went to this back to the same guy.
Cindy
And. And what did he say?
Tina Dixon
I had been talking to him on the phone, and he got in my head, you know.
Cindy
Well, you know what? He wanted you back.
Tina Dixon
Right? Exactly.
Cindy
And, you know, she's talking to him on the phone, he's pumping you up, sucks you back in. And so what? Where'd you go?
Tina Dixon
I went back. He was in Houma at the time. He had another little bar. I went to work for another little bar, too.
Cindy
On these bars, it's not like the cross trailers, whereas. Oh, yeah. I'm sure they're not establishing still bar, but you're like, work out, sit down in the bar, talk to. Guy comes in, hey, you want to buy me a drink? That kind of, you know, was it one of the deals where there were.
Tina Dixon
Rooms in the bag?
Cindy
But I'm talking about the drink part. The. And you want to buy me a drink. And this extra. They do it to keep you talking to them. This is before you go to the back.
Tina Dixon
Right.
Cindy
And when the drink is sugar water or whatever.
Tina Dixon
Yeah. Or maybe like something like slow gin or cream.
Cindy
And then that they're making an exorbitant amount of money off the drink.
Tina Dixon
Right, Exactly.
Cindy
And then at some point, you close the deal to go in the back room.
Tina Dixon
Right.
Cindy
Wow. And then. And what happens? You say anything?
Tina Dixon
So I didn't stay with him that long. I left him for another, like. So this is the thing with traffickers is they try to steal each other's girls. So I met another guy that he would hang out with, and I left with this guy, which is when you. When you mention the thing that happened in Mamu with Pharaoh Granger and Jimmy Danos was the guy that I left with and Pharaoh was his best friend. So that's how I knew all about that.
Cindy
That I'm going this out. I'll come back to it later. I actually did a thing morning but so I didn't. I didn't know that she was the female but that was b. All right. Boom. The what's popping in my head. So we're talking about sex trafficking now. That's not just you know before I'm trying to put a label on it and my mind's eye 4 I knew I needed like talking about sex trafficking and you're thinking about a pimp and a Cadillac or whatever or street walking and stuff like that. You. This is like legit big business, hardcore organized crap. That's what I was looking for. This is an organized crap. This is not some solo. You know I'll put my girlfriend out for a night to a one guy. This. This is. Is big business.
Tina Dixon
Big business.
Cindy
And. And if you told about get beat with the pool stick left for dead by the 7 11. That's all part of the trafficking. I. I think you. He must have thought you were dead otherwise he knows he's losing money.
Tina Dixon
Right.
Cindy
Everybody's afraid you're. You're. He messed you up so bad he's going to hospital. The hospital's going to have to report.
Tina Dixon
Right.
Cindy
And they're going to come after and. And the. This is all Dixon Mafia is all the Dixie Mafia. And how did you know that?
Tina Dixon
Because. Well, they used to have. They used to call themselves characters.
Cindy
Right?
Tina Dixon
And so, and, and I, I found that out much later actually that they were the Dixie Mafias. I always said they were characters. And then when that host story came out that you referred to earlier, I, I put. I started putting it all together and the name started adding up and I'm like, yeah.
Woody Overton
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Tina Dixon
And that's how, that's how women usually find out that they've been sex trafficked. You don't know it when it's happening. That wasn't even a term back then, right?
Cindy
No. No, it wasn't. And so that's crazy. The, the mind blowing. The, the. I want to continue your story and, and let me ask you a couple questions real quick and then y' all, we're going to wrap up this week's episode. Ms. Tina, obviously you're alive, breathing, and here with Mr. Jimmy, super nice guy and the.
Tina Dixon
My fiance.
Cindy
Your fiance? Oh, I put a ring on it. He's sleepy. Mr. Jimmy's resting. They all went and ate him at Jason Jackson's restaurant. My boy moved. We graduated together and he was. And his daddy, actually Jason and my other best friend cooked the primer for my daddy's funeral service.
Tina Dixon
The food was great.
Cindy
It's a destination location. Yeah, but you, you, you. Without giving too much away, because I want to build it up the, the one, but I want the lifers. That's what I call my fans. I want them to name. Obviously, you're alive, you're. Well, you're prospering. But that means you're a survivor, not a victim.
Tina Dixon
You are a victim, but you're a survivor thriver.
Cindy
Really? That's the new term I had to hear. Survivor thriver. And what I want to do is when we push this out and I'm, I'm dropping on Friday, and what I want to do is like starting out in the beginning, you know, would put the human face on you. But you're all right. Totally. Things that I couldn't imagine. Right. And what's going to happen is when it comes out, all the fans are going to have questions and things like that. And that's something that we need to look at too, because what is it? What is going to be your mission? You go on record with me now, right?
Tina Dixon
Yes.
Cindy
And so what is it? What is going to be your mission? So I can start playing on it and the listeners out there can start because they're Going to have a million questions and what, what is. What is your mission about sex trafficking? What are we working towards?
Tina Dixon
So about three years ago, I opened up a woman's professional network and someone started donating classes to me, mastermind classes. And asked if I could get sex trafficking survivors to take these classes so that they could get professional jobs.
Cindy
Okay, so let's talk about that. The. What are they called classes.
Tina Dixon
Digital marketing classes. Like masterminds for media buying, web design, that kind of stuff.
Cindy
So they ask you could you help basically healthy. I would assume these, these women are getting out of lifestyle and they now need something to. They need learn how you didn't know like you said that you thought that's way you were living that these skills to pay the bills now if they. They want to go straight and be legit and so that they need.
Tina Dixon
They need more than skills to pay the bill. They need a way of life that they can do more than survive. Okay, so what we do is we teach sex trafficking survivors digital marketing skills. We train them to be media buyers, inside sales people, web designers, and help launch them in a professional skill into professional skills. We have a curriculum that they find. The professional women in our organization are assigned to each survivor as a mentor. And then we do practice, we do job readiness and practice interviews.
Cindy
So first of all you're saying we. Who's. Who is. We are.
Tina Dixon
What I have, I have a couple of staff members. Jennifer Rush, she's our coo. She was a former school teacher and a certificate survivor of sexual assault and domestic violence. And then I have Caroline Wynn, who has a master's in education and technical writing and she's our education director. So she interfaces one on one with the girls through the curriculum.
Cindy
That's awesome. What is the name of the organization?
Tina Dixon
Queens of digital Marketing.
Cindy
Really? Queens of digital marketing. And. And so the I know these type of programs. The youngest guy that got sentenced to life as a juvenile, he's now out. He's married to a doctor. He murdered a little girl who's on pcp. He was in I think it was era somewhere by there and he got out and then that changed law. And however many years ago I had him, I had him on the Blood Angle podcast and but he now does a nonprofit and where with same thing they get comics started getting released. But they screen them themselves. You can't. Right. And they scream themselves and they do everything to teach them how to open a bank account. You get a driver's license license get employment. They have to live in like the halfway House.
Tina Dixon
You're talking about the Perot project.
Cindy
Yes, yes, yes.
Tina Dixon
Jimmy just used to work at the parole, right? He works with the parole, right.
Cindy
And so but I think to me that, and I think that's a fabulous program, but digital marketing, Queens, what's it called?
Tina Dixon
So it was called Queens and we have a digital marketing portion and we have Queens calls, which is our inside sales telemarketing training program.
Cindy
So what was the first? It was Queens.
Tina Dixon
It was Queens and Queens. Either we teach them digital marketing or we teach them inside sales or telephone sales.
Cindy
Right.
Tina Dixon
So it's Queens, Queens digital marketing and Queens calls.
Cindy
Okay, so what. And, and I asked you about your mission and you're living your mission and you have some evidently great support staff thus far and the things that y' all are doing. But the. You have a 501C, I have a 501C3. Okay. Y' all, the 501C3 is a non profit, right? Can you explain that to me?
Tina Dixon
Yeah. So we're a non profit organization meaning that we don't take a profit. We use all the money that comes in either. And there are of course overhead costs. You can't run an organization without overhead costs.
Cindy
Well, you gotta, you gotta pay a light bill.
Tina Dixon
Right.
Cindy
You gotta pay whatever trash pickup. Nothing's free. Right?
Tina Dixon
Right. And so. But all of our money goes into helping girls.
Cindy
Right? And then that is. I think you got it wrong. I think you said helping the girls. You're saving their lives. Otherwise this they. And I'm sure. And we'll get into it and we'll talk ahead of time before we record the next one. I'm sure they're what the ones that are standing on that edge like you were a mother of two, married and, and then beaten within an inch of your life and but you still got so back in. And the. What you're doing now, you're not helping. You're saving lives.
Tina Dixon
That's right.
Cindy
Save lives. And so what I want to do and I got. Just got a God once for the first time. I want to do life first. I want y' all listen to this and me, Tina and I are going to do. And you know the best ones are the unscripted ones we're going to do talk about it and the more I think we'll talk more about the story and, and, and then. And include more of.
Tina Dixon
The Queens, which is 501C3. You can find the website@queensdm.org so the.
Cindy
The official name of the 501C3 is the Queens.
Tina Dixon
No, it's actually. It's a.
Cindy
So the Queens is as the name of the 513, the non profit. Y' all is the queens of digital marketing.
Tina Dixon
Right, right, right.
Cindy
And. And. But y' all, you're already doing this. I think it's. It's a. You don't know. They call me the Cajun Queen. That's a story for another day. But that we're gonna call it the queens. But the 513C is the queens of digital marketing. And y' all, it is such a fantastic cause because they're saving lives just like I do Lopa every week, Louisiana Procure agency. And I asked you to sign up at them in my show every Saturday. I'm gonna start every time Ms. Tina and I are talking. Ms. Tina, do you think. I mean it's hard as just that think on it. Do you think at some point when you. You and I are done and you can come in whatever. Could you actually get other people to tell their stories? Because the more people that tell the stories, the more we can get people to get involved in the Queens or the queens of digital market 513C.
Tina Dixon
So yes, I think I can. But I also have some audio from Survivors have completed my program.
Cindy
Really.
Tina Dixon
And the program looks like about the experience of the program for themselves.
Cindy
All right, so the. So how long have you had it? Had the Queens of digital market.
Tina Dixon
We're actually a 501C. Three. Three years on June 16th.
Cindy
All right. That's. That is how people don't know how hard it is to get a non profit.
Tina Dixon
It's very hard. And I have a good story about that too.
Cindy
All right, well you use. Tell us. Tell the next time.
Tina Dixon
I'm gonna save it for next time. But ask me about how I got it in six weeks.
Woody Overton
What.
Cindy
And then I worked for one lady that helps families of murder victims for well, almost two years. I think that. But so we're gonna talk about that. Y' all. I want you to look up. We're gonna tag everything on social media. I think that Ms. Tina. We're even put up this. It'll be edited out. The video on YouTube. The. You're a fascinating lady. And. And what you call it? I call them survivors. What'd you call it?
Tina Dixon
Survivor driver.
Cindy
Survivor arrival. But y' all queens of digital marketing or the Queens for short. Call it the Queens non profit saving lives. You're teaching these ladies everything we're going to get in that. I want everything that the program does because. But we. We. These are True crime fans. And they get pissed off. My fans get pissed. And. And they were like, you know, they really want to help. And that's what we want to do, y' all. We every. Every thing the queens and digital marketing does for the queens. And we're going to get into all of it. Everything that they do, every. All the help that you can give is going to be saving money. And you. You don't do it. You don't do like, you don't sign up to be an organ donor because you're going to find out one day if they use your organs and they go, whoever. Right? You don't do you. What I'm saying is if the people donate to the queens and digital market, the queens, the 5001 3C, you're doing it on faith and knowing that and we're getting to it that it's a great organization that's saving lives that you never gonna know. You can hear some stories of some survivor thrivers, but there'll be ones that they're never gonna hear about. Right?
Tina Dixon
Right.
Cindy
And so survivor thriver queens of digital marketing. Queens this team. You heard a rock star. I can't wait to do it again.
Tina Dixon
Thank you. I can't wait to do it again either.
Cindy
You're very natural. Just down there like me. We can hang out and. And see, y' all. I'm gonna conclude this episode a real life, real crime. The podcast with Ms. Team. Do you have anything you want to say that to the listeners on this one worldwide?
Tina Dixon
You know, just human trafficking does not look like a little girl gets snatched up on the side of the street. It happens in our homes every day. Your daughter that's in there on social media could very well be talking to a trafficker. Monitor what your children are doing.
Cindy
Yes, indeed. That is the real deal. Right? And. All right. The. Anything else? No, that is. That's good me for a little. Because I'm thinking about all these different things with some stuff we just did recently with online predators. But the. Okay, you've been awesome. And y' all were literally scratching tip of the icebergs. Queens of digital marketing, look them up. We're going to have all the links, everything everywhere. And I will call it the Queens affectionately. But the Queens of digital marketing and. But you know what? Don't even do anything yet. You can if you want to. What is it like donations? Yeah.
Tina Dixon
You do get a website, which is queensdm.org and there's a donation button.
Cindy
Okay. So. But even y' all can do it now if you want to but you know, I like to tell stories story and and this store we're scratching tip of the iceberg. I want you to know me if I'm gonna donate, I'm gonna know it's legit and everything else. Well, you know, Woody Overton's backing it. It's legit but I want you all to hear the story and then every story we tell is going to move you in some way that the. And even if it it's what y' all are doing now. The Even as what you're doing now, you're saving lives and surviving thriving queens of digital marketing. Ms. T, you're. You're wonderful. The I I can't wait to learn everything about your organization. Do you have like an office or headquarters?
Tina Dixon
No, we're actually 100% remote organization and we service survivors all over the country.
Cindy
Really? The. The sad. I didn't even know that the but you're going to educate me on all of it?
Tina Dixon
Yes.
Cindy
And I'm gonna be professional when I get done. All right. And this is my calls y' all lifers. I told you I was going to take up a new calls and I'm still always going to do Lopa Queens of digital marketing, Survivor thrivers of sex trafficking. And the main thing is keeping people from falling back in, getting people out and falling back in can. Oh, I would love to help get people out and and I'm a hands on doer tour but this platform, it will help. I think that's great. And and so thank you so much.
Tina Dixon
Thank you.
Cindy
And I'm Woody Overton. You host a oh, let me do this because always in with lopa. So I say you don't have to be a lifer to become an organ diner. You have to be a lifer from Louisiana. Is this Louisiana or procurement agency. You could be a life from whatever. So let's. I'm gonna do the same model but I'm gonna let you do the first one to support the queens of digital marketing. You don't have to be a lifer from the state of Louisiana. You could be a lifer from. Pick any country in the world or anywhere in the United States.
Woody Overton
Any state.
Cindy
Word. First thing. All right. You could be a lifer from Florida.
Tina Dixon
Go to QueensofDigitalMarketing.org Click the Donate button and help a survivor become a thriver.
Cindy
Help a survivor come become a thriver. And and as we grow this we're going to get more people into the Queensland digital marketing more survivor thrivers and save lives.
Tina Dixon
Yes.
Cindy
And I'm Woody Overton, your host of Real Life, Real Crime, the podcast with Tina. It's been awesome. It's been a blessing. Till next time or ever. Don't let me catch you. El murder by you. Peace. You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be used against you on court of law.
Woody Overton
You gotta write to an attorney prior to it.
Cindy
During any question that you can't Afford1. The quarter point one for you. Do you understand your rights? And the wolf is at your home. You running over, that's for sure. Make crispy strips. Listos paraventurace in la mesca de mayo Ketchup, la barbecue, Que quetton, el fondo de la cajita, hot fudge sundae and la Nueva Creamy Chili McCrispy Strip Dip. Los Nuevos McCrispy strips out in McDonald's.
Tina Dixon
Hi, Zoe Saldana.
Cindy
Welcome to T Mobile. Here's your new iPhone 16 Pro on us. Thanks.
Tina Dixon
And here's my old phone to trade in.
Cindy
You don't need a trade in. When you switch to TV, T Mobile will give you a new iPhone 16 Pro.
Tina Dixon
Plus we'll help you pay off your.
Cindy
Old Phone up to 800 bucks and.
Tina Dixon
You still get to keep it. There's always a trade in.
Cindy
Not right now. @ T Mobile. I feel like I have to give you something in return for karma. That's okay. I don't really have much in my purse. Oh, let's see. Hand sanitizer. It's lavender.
Tina Dixon
I'm good.
Cindy
Seriously. Let me check this pocket. Oh, mints. Really, I'm fine. Oh, I have raisins.
Tina Dixon
I'm a mom. Wait, wait one sec.
Cindy
I got cupcakes in the car. It's our best iPhone offer ever. Switch to T Mobile. Get a new iPhone 16 Pro with Apple intelligence on us, no trade in needed. We'll even pay off your Phone up to 800 bucks with 24 monthly bill credits. New line, 100 plus a month on experience beyond Finance Agreement 999.99 and qualifying ported for well qualified plus tax and 10 connection charge. Payout via virtual prepaid card. Allow 15 days credits and imbalance too if you pay off early or cancel.
Tina Dixon
See T mobile.com Nearly 90% of kids who vape say flavors are why they do it.
Cindy
A lot of the flavors that I've heard are like peach, mango, watermelon. It makes it seem like more childlike and innocent. Oh, if I try this once, it won't be that much of a problem. But then eventually it becomes a problem.
Tina Dixon
It's time to restrict the sale of.
Cindy
Flavored tobacco products in Oregon and protect our kids from nicotine addiction. Urge lawmakers to Pass Senate Bill 702A. Take action at flavorshookoregonkids.org paid for by the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids Action Fund.
Real Life Real Crime | Queens Part 1 – Detailed Summary
Release Date: June 7, 2025
Introduction to the Episode and Topic
In this compelling episode of Real Life Real Crime, host Woody Overton embarks on a deeply personal and harrowing journey into the world of human sex trafficking. This episode, titled "Queens Part 1," marks the beginning of a new series dedicated to unveiling the dark realities of sex trafficking through real stories and expert insights.
Guest Introduction: Tina Dixon
Woody introduces his first-ever in-studio guest, Tina Dixon, a survivor of sex trafficking and the founder of Queens of Digital Marketing, a nonprofit organization aimed at empowering survivors through digital marketing education. Tina brings a wealth of firsthand experience and knowledge, offering listeners an intimate look into the complexities of trafficking and the path to recovery.
Early Life and Background [04:45 – 12:00]
Tina Dixon opens up about her tumultuous upbringing in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Born in 1963, Tina recounts growing up in a chaotic household where her father led an outlaw motorcycle club, and her mother was heavily abusive. At the age of 11, Tina began running away from home, culminating in her being caught and placed in juvenile detention at Ryan Airport. During this period, she was sexually abused by a member of her father's motorcycle club, a trauma that profoundly impacted her childhood and led to further behavioral issues.
Notable Quote:
Tina Dixon [11:05]: "I grew up in a real chaotic household. I was born in '63. Yeah, I'm 62 years old."
Encounter with Sex Trafficking [12:00 – 25:00]
At 14, Tina ran away from a children’s home in New Orleans and found herself in the French Quarter of Baton Rouge. There, she was introduced to sex trafficking by members of the Dixie Mafia, a powerful and violent organized crime group operating in Louisiana. Tina describes how she was forced into prostitution, working long hours and meeting quotas set by her traffickers. The Dixie Mafia controlled various illicit activities, including alcohol, drugs, prostitution, and gambling, maintaining their power through corruption and fear.
Notable Quote:
Tina Dixon [19:17]: "I walked past Funky Butts on the way to work and he was sitting there and he had like three piece suit and a brim on and he had a pistol sitting on the table."
Experiences within the Trafficking System [25:00 – 50:00]
Tina details the systemic control exerted by her traffickers. She was provided with an ID, assigned to work at brothels, and subjected to regular beatings to enforce compliance. The traffickers moved her and other girls across various locations to prevent them from forming attachments or escaping. Tina recounts a particularly violent incident where her pimp brutally beat her with a pool stick after catching her using drugs, leaving her to fend for herself until she could call her father and seek help.
Notable Quote:
Tina Dixon [39:37]: "They chained me to a bed until my old man could get there, and he did in front of everybody."
Escape and Aftermath [50:00 – 73:00]
After enduring years of abuse and sex trafficking, Tina managed to escape with the help of law enforcement and supportive family members. She shares her struggles with trauma and addiction, highlighting the inadequate psychological support available at the time. Tina married an Iranian man for his green card, bearing two children, but found herself slipping back into the life she desperately wanted to leave. Eventually, she reclaimed her life, overcoming immense obstacles to become a survivor and thriver.
Notable Quote:
Tina Dixon [73:11]: "Human trafficking does not look like a little girl gets snatched up on the side of the street. It happens in our homes every day."
Founding Queens of Digital Marketing [73:00 – End]
Determined to prevent others from suffering as she did, Tina founded Queens of Digital Marketing, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering sex trafficking survivors through education and professional training in digital marketing. The program offers courses in media buying, web design, inside sales, and more, providing survivors with the skills needed to rebuild their lives and achieve financial independence. Tina emphasizes the importance of mentorship and job readiness, ensuring that each survivor receives personalized support to thrive in their new careers.
Notable Quote:
Tina Dixon [60:21]: "We teach sex trafficking survivors digital marketing skills. We train them to be media buyers, inside sales people, web designers, and help launch them into professional skills."
Mission and Programs
Queens of Digital Marketing operates remotely, offering flexible and accessible training to survivors across the country. With a dedicated team, including Jennifer Rush (COO) and Caroline Wynn (Education Director), the organization provides a structured curriculum, mentorship, and practical job training. The mission is not only to equip survivors with skills but also to foster a supportive community that promotes healing and personal growth.
Notable Quote:
Tina Dixon [62:50]: "Our curriculum is designed to help survivors not just survive, but thrive as professional women in digital marketing."
Conclusion and Call to Action
As the episode concludes, Woody and Tina emphasize the critical need for support and awareness surrounding sex trafficking. They encourage listeners to visit QueensofDigitalMarketing.org to donate and help sustain the vital programs that save lives and transform survivors into empowered professionals. Tina’s story serves as a powerful testament to resilience and the profound impact of dedicated support systems in the fight against human trafficking.
Final Quote:
Tina Dixon [71:08]: "You don't know it when it's happening. Monitor what your children are doing."
Supporting Survivors
Throughout the episode, Woody and Tina reinforce the importance of community support and advocacy in combating sex trafficking. By sharing Tina's personal journey and the mission of Queens of Digital Marketing, the podcast aims to inspire action and provide tangible ways for listeners to contribute to this critical cause.
Key Resources:
This episode of Real Life Real Crime vividly illustrates the pervasive threat of sex trafficking and the transformative power of survivor-led initiatives. Tina Dixon's courageous narrative not only sheds light on the grim realities faced by trafficking victims but also highlights the hope and empowerment that comes from dedicated support and professional training.