How an Aryan Brotherhood Prison Gang General Became a Snitch
In 2014, a federal judge sentenced Terry “Lil’ Wood” Sillers, a general in the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas (ABT), to just ten years in prison, after the prosecutor outlined the valuable information he provided to take down and decimate his gang in federal court. For a career prison gangster like Lil’ Wood this is a big no-no.
The rules for prison gangs are clear, and no snitching is at the top of the list. To be called a rat in the criminal underworld is the gravest of insults and can promptly lead to bloodshed. ‘Blood in, Blood out,’ Omerta and ‘Death Before Dishonor’ are the credos, and “Snitches get stiches,” as they say in the penitentiary. So what in the world would cause a life-long, hardcore gang leader to snitch and turn on his own gang?
We see these types of stories in the media all the time and the question is usually left open. Why did the con betray his brothers, his comrades in arms, his family? Many explanations, none of them satisfactory, are offered up: He was tired of the life, he didn’t like the way things were going with the gang, he wanted to do the right thing. In reality, most times it’s about simple revenge and retribution. If you feel someone wronged you in some way and you get yourself in a situation that you can’t get out of with the law, the easiest escape is to turn informant.
This is what happened with Lil’ Wood. I met the short but stocky and tatted out convict at Federal Correctional Institution Forrest City Low shortly after arriving there in January 2011. He was one of the Texas shot-callers on the compound and I got to know him because several Texas cons lived in the six-man cell I was assigned to. As soon as I met the go hard white boy, I could tell he had done a lot of time. When you’ve been in prison for a while, it’s easy to mark others who have traveled the same path you have. Lil’ Wood was covered in jailhouse tattoos and had the arrogance and bravado associated with a prison gang member who is used to having his way. After his first appearance in my living space, I asked his homeboy about him.
“He’s a general in the ABT. He speaks for the Texas dudes,” my bunkie, B-Rad, told me. “He did a lot of time in the Texas system and was an original member of the gang. He joined them in the early 1980s and has been going hard ever since. That’s how we do it in Texas.”
I had my doubts. If Lil’ Wood was a general in the ABT, what was he doing in a low security prison in Arkansas? It just didn’t make sense to me. I had been at higher-level institutions and from what I had seen, most current and active gang members, especially ranking ones, weren’t even allowed to walk the main lines. And they were often kept in lockdown units or held in the hole.
But Lil’ Wood kept coming around. He was a little standoffish at first, but we got along okay in time. As I got to know other white boys on the compound, I heard more stories about Lil’ Wood. “I don’t fuck with dude,” a big cock diesel (this means when you are buffed out from lifting weight) white boy from Texas who went by Big G said. “I was in FCI Beaumont when he got ran off the yard.”
I had to hear more because it might help explain what a so-called ABT general was doing in a low-security prison. Big G continued, “Lil’ Wood came into Beaumont talking all that gang shit and showing his tattoos and flexing his rank and had all the young Texas guys out on the yard meeting for church and paying dues and basically doing whatever the fuck he told them to do. But guys got sick of him and a bunch of younger ABT dudes decided to beat him down, check him in, and run him off the yard. And that’s what they did.”
Disgraced and betrayed by his own gang—by men half his age and who hadn’t been through the battles that Lil’ Wood had been through—left him seething.
He carried a chip on his shoulder and wasn’t afraid to jump, which in prison parlance meant he was ready to fight at a moment’s notice. He was also known to carry a shank. Guys who feel that they have something to prove in prison are the worst, because when their backs are against the wall, they are capable of anything. I had no doubt Lil’ Wood would have stabbed someone.
I talked to him but I also kept him at arm’s length. He was not someone you wanted to let get close. I watched how he softly extorted his homeboys, coming in our six-man and just going through their lockers and taking what he wanted, always saying he was going to pay them back, but never following up. That was just how he got down.
There was this con on my unit called Johnny Savage that Lil’ Wood used to hang around. I don’t know what they were up to, but both of them had that dope fiend kind of way to them.
Still, Lil’ Wood did look out for his fellow white dudes. That was his claim to fame: A white boy prison gangster who wasn’t afraid to get busy. His homeboy B-Rad told me, “In Marianna Upper, the white boys didn’t have a TV when Lil’ Wood got there, and he went right in and just took a TV and said, ‘This is the white boys’ TV now.’ They called him out to the yard about it, but nothing came of it and the white boys in Marianna Upper got their TV to this day.” That’s what is expected of a member of the ABT, since their number one priority in prison is to look out for their racial brethren
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But what I noticed about Lil’ Wood foretold his future betrayal of the Brotherhood. He was bitter and angry, felt like he was cheated on, denied his right to something. He felt like his gang turned on him and didn’t give him the props he deserved.
And he wanted out of the life. He even talked to me about doing a book and telling his story, something that’s unheard of for a current and active gang member, especially a general giving orders and conducting gang business. So there were some cracks in the façade—the hard prison gangster front was eroding. As Lil’ Wood got older, it was probably hard for him to keep living up to the image and reputation he had established for himself.
And then he was released. He gave me an email and told me to keep in touch, that he wanted to tell his story and do a book and maybe get some money for it and go legit. I emailed him a couple of times and never heard back, but B-Rad used to call him and tell me he was doing okay.
Then we heard about the infamous motorcycle chase in June 2011. When we saw the news broadcasts at the prison, it was crazy—everyone was buzzing about it. Lil’ Wood, who had only been out a couple months and in fact was still in the halfway house, had literally gone off the deep end. An outlaw to the core, he led police on a high-speed chase—on his Harley, of course. The chase was videotaped and Lil’ Wood quickly became a YouTube sensation as his flight from the cops gathered over one million views. He was apparently wanted for possession.
I thought it was a shame that Lil’ Wood had gotten back up to his old tricks. I mean, he was a general who had done his time, so what was he doing getting his hands dirty? But he apparently found it tough going out in the real world. After the chase, the feds revoked his probation and started preparing a new case against him. By May 2012, he was facing federal charges of conspiracy to participate in racketeering, as well as charges for drug trafficking, attempted murder and murder. All that would likely mean a life sentence in the feds.
That was when Lil’ Wood did the unthinkable. After he was indicted, he made the decision to snitch on his gang, his so-called brothers, comrades and family. At FCI Forrest City, his homeboys couldn’t believe it.
“I can’t believe Lil’ Wood is going out like that,” B-Rad told me. “He talked all that death before dishonor shit and now he’s a rat.” In fact, Lil’ Wood might go down as the biggest informant in ABT history. His information led to the sprawling racketeering indictment against the ABT’s hierarchy in late 2012. Lil’ Wood gave it all up, going back 25 years to name names in unsolved murder cases from inside the Texas Department of Corrections and on the street.
His testimony has led to the convictions of 73 of his former comrades, ABT gang members who would like nothing more than to kill Lil’ Wood now. The ABT’s motto is “God forgives, brothers don’t.” So now Lil’ Wood will be living as a marked man with a price on his head. If the gang ever gets their hands on him it will be lights out.
So Terry Sillers, aka Lil’ Wood, is now officially out of the gang. At the age of 50, his career as a gangster is over and he’s hiding in the federal Witness Protection Program. He showed contrition at his sentencing and told the judge about how he grew disillusioned with the actions of the gang he helped put on the map. To Lil’ Wood, the ABT had changed dramatically and he couldn’t stomach it anymore. But the truth of the matter is that Lil’ Wood was just trying to get back at the gang that he felt didn’t give him his due rights and proper respect. It’s a clear case of self-preservation through retribution. Revenge, RICO Act style.