B+
Cornbread Mafia: A Homegrown Syndicate's Code of Silence and the Biggest Marijuana Bust in American History is the story of how Johnny Boone and a group of 70 Kentucky farmers cultivated the largest domestic marijuana crop in America's history.
James Higdon's father reported on the Cornbread Mafia for the Louisville Courier-Journal when he was a child. Higdon grew up in Marian County, Kentucky, surrounded by the Cornbread Mafia and their supporters, so it makes sense for Higdon to write this book. An outsider would have never been given access to such inside information.
Higdon traces the history of the Cornbread Mafia through the hills of Kentucky into the stills of prohibition. The federal government once turned to Kentucky farmers to produce hemp for military needs. Once the government no longer needed Kentucky's farmers, they were dropped. The only problem is that after the government was through with the farmers, it gutted the agricultural industry to the point that farmers could no longer support their families.
So, the self-dependent farmers turned to another product they knew the rich Kentucky soil could produce - marijuana. Then, the government criminalized marijuana, too.
At its heart, Cornbread Mafia is about community and how far the government will go to prevent their citizens from protecting each other.
When no jury in Marian County would render a guilty verdict against any marijuana farmers, the federal government rewrote the law, sending all the farmers to federal court. When the government was finally able to make arrests, they hoped someone would make a deal to testify against their co-defendants to invoke RICO laws.
Not a single farmer amongst the 70 accepted a plea deal.
Cornbread Mafia does get slightly fact-heavy at points, with Higdon focusing more on the who-what-when-where elements of the story instead of the personalities involved, but it's still a fantastic read.