{"id":1373,"date":"2015-03-15T23:09:57","date_gmt":"2015-03-16T05:09:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/brutalhammer.com\/?p=1373"},"modified":"2015-03-15T23:48:04","modified_gmt":"2015-03-16T05:48:04","slug":"plot-thickens-in-wild-turkey-heist","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/brutalhammer.com\/plot-thickens-in-wild-turkey-heist\/","title":{"rendered":"Plot Thickens in Wild Turkey Heist"},"content":{"rendered":"
Having consumed lots of bourbon in my life, I feel fully qualified to speculate on the mystery of the\u00a0five stolen barrels\u00a0<\/a>of bourbon found behind a Kentucky man\u2019s house last week. Here goes:<\/p>\n 1. This isn\u2019t the first recent bourbon heist. In 2013, more than 200 bottles of rare Pappy Van Winkle valued at $26,000 mysteriously disappeared from the Buffalo Trace warehouse in Frankfort, Kentucky. The bottles were under lock and key at the warehouse, ready to be shipped, so this was obviously an inside job.<\/p>\n And yet the theft, which came to be known as Pappygate<\/a>, remains unsolved to this day. Police interviewed more than 100 Buffalo Trace employees, and the distillery conducted its own internal investigation, but no arrests were ever made. A $10,000 reward offered at the time has gone unclaimed (and remains available).<\/p>\n As it turns out, the man arrested last week in the Wild Turkey theft is a Buffalo Trace employee. Hmm.<\/p>\n 2. How the hell did they get those barrels off the distillery property? A full barrel reportedly weighs about 500 pounds. They\u2019re not just left sitting around as the bourbon ages but stored in warehouses; the windows on the lower floors of the warehouse are required<\/a> to be barred, and small enough that a barrel could not pass through even if the bars were removed. I think it\u2019s safe to say this was another inside job, and that more people than just the guy arrested last week were involved.<\/p>\n