Monday, June 11, 2012

Cobra Killer: Gay Porn, Murder, and the Manhunt to Bring the Killers to Justice by Peter A. Conway

Cobra Killer: Gay Porn, Murder, and the Manhunt to Bring the Killers to JusticeCobra Killer: Gay Porn, Murder, and the Manhunt to Bring the Killers to Justice by Peter A. Conway
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is the story of two men, both desperate for money and fame, and willing to do almost anything to get what they want. Two young men that rely on older men for support, all the while maintaining control of the strings, able to always turn the situation to their favour.

The book details how the first man, Brent Corrigan, aka Sean Lockheart, became a porn star at age 17, providing a fake ID. According to Lockheart the man who owned the company, Brian Kocis, was complicit in this cover up, but then Lockheart contradicts himself by saying Kocis kept hounding him for a physical copy of the ID, something he wouldn’t do if he knew for a fact it didn’t exist.

Lockheart had a fake ID made, provided it to Kocis, and things went along for a while with Lockheart signing a lucrative modeling contract after he had turned 18.

During this period, Lockheart’s life was in turmoil with his family and his relationships, and he would confide in Kocis, saying he needed a phone, which Kocis provided and paid for, saying he had no money and was unhappy, so Kocis gave him a place to stay and a job. Lockheart seems to compulsively perceive himself as a victim and of being used, and dismisses these gestures as self interest on the part of Kocis.

An argument between the two men led to Corrigan telling Kocis he was underage when the movies were shot, led Corrigan to ask that the movies be destroyed, and led Corrigan to go to the FBI on two separate occasions in an attempt to organize a raid on Kocis’ home and close his business. This is clearly one guy you don’t want to piss off.

Corrigan advised he was breaking his existing modelling contract and starting his own company, despite already having taken possession of the $20,000 new car. He returned to his home in California and he and his business partner/manager Grant Roy contacted other companies for work, specifically looking for ones which would provide a percentage of sales as part of the deal, unheard of in the industry.

One such company they contacted was BoyBatter and specifically it’s star, Harlow Cuadra.

The couple, Lockheart and Roy, met Cuadra and his manager/partner in Las Vegas and explained their situation, they were looking for more money, they were looking for a backend deal, they couldn’t actually film as Lockheart was still in a contract he had not honoured. Murdering Kocis was discussed at this meeting, though the sides differ on who said what. Two weeks later Kocis was dead.

This is where the second man comes into the picture, Harlow Cuadra. Also in a relationship with a much older man, he too was seemingly controlled, although he was most definitely the brains of the operation.

It’s unclear what exactly was said during the meeting in Vegas, both sides acknowledge they talked about murdering Kocis. Both sides acknowledge that after Kocis was murdered by Cuarda or his partner or both, an email was sent to Lockheart and Roy saying that they had recorded the Vegas conversation and if they went to the police that Cuardra would give them the damning evidence.

When Cuarda was arrested, his first question to police was “Are Lockheart and Roy here too?”

It will never be known definitively what happened at that Vegas meeting. Lockheart and Roy agreed to wear a wire to entrap Cuadra and testify against him in exchange for immunity. Lockheart makes much of the fact that this was voluntary and he put his life on the line for justice, both these statements are debateable. It was voluntary in exchange for immunity, and they were followed by police the entire time. As Kocis’ sister said “If he wasn’t involved at all, he should have warned Bryan of Harlow and Joe after the famous Las Vegas dinner.”

What I really felt was lost in all this was that a man was killed, and by all accounts an innocent man. It seems neither Lockheart nor Cuadra are able to get past their egos and selfish desires long enough to really let this sink in, which is sad and the murder itself senseless.

One thing I will say is I’m impressed the police put so much work into the case. A gay porn magnate is killed in a conservative town and they actually do their job, no endless insinuations of his lifestyle or that he deserved it, good for them.

As far as the book itself, we have to weigh it against the greatest crime book ever written, In Cold Blood, so if we assume that is the five star standard than this is a four. A very different approach than Blood though as Capote went directly into the field, whereas I don’t think, judging by the book itself, the authors ever left their homes. All the information provided is public knowledge.

I am glad it was all put together in a readable format, I had heard lots about the case and was eager to know all the facts. The book is well paced and researched and for the most part impartial. One note on that though, after Lockheart’s testimony the authors seemingly exonerate him (“If anyone had any remaining down about any possible involvement by the two in the murder, their detailed testimony knocked that out”). Whereas after Cuadra’s testimony it’s stated that his comments could never be proven (“No one has ever been able to verify or confirm any of the elements of Cuadra’s version of events”). Well, both their comments could never be proven for the most part. It’s a momentary slip though and impartiality does return.

One other thing, due to the nature of the book, different people appear in different lights depending on the source of the material. For example at the start of the book, which is mostly facts, and at the end of the book, where opinions are given by Cuadra and Kocis’ sister, Lockheart comes off as more manipulative and self-serving (“If his bravado and self-centred assessment passed over the fact that it was Kocis who ultimately suffered most, he didn’t seem to care.”) than he does in the middle of the book which is presented mostly from his own testimony. These differences are not really highlighted and it is up to the reader to decipher which one is the true.

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