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To: JakeStraw who wrote (20945)6/13/2000 10:06:00 AM
From: SIer formerly known as Joe B.  Respond to of 49844
 
Maybe they don't book their own shows,
none of these addresses are appropriate:

the-townhall-nyc.org



To: JakeStraw who wrote (20945)6/13/2000 10:07:00 AM
From: SIer formerly known as Joe B.  Respond to of 49844
 
Maybe the house manager could steer us in the right direction.



To: JakeStraw who wrote (20945)6/13/2000 10:20:00 AM
From: SIer formerly known as Joe B.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 49844
 
Dickey Betts Detained After Rampage
Monday June 12 07:47 PM EDT
dailynews.yahoo.com

After destroying his living room, threatening his wife and sending police on a manhunt near his Osprey, Fla., home, Allman Brothers Band guitarist
Dickey Betts was corralled and sent for a psychiatric evaluation last Saturday.

According to authorities, Betts was intoxicated and armed with a knife around 7 p.m. on June 3. The incident came just over two weeks after he was
asked to sit out the band's summer tour. His wife, Donna, called an off-duty Sarasota County sheriff's deputy and family friend who lives nearby, but
refused to provide specifics on the threats, according to a Sarasota County Sheriff's Office report.

"I'll just kill myself," Betts told his friend, Deputy John Caldwell, according to a sheriff's report. While the report does not specifically name Betts or
his wife (instead referring to a husband and a wife), Corporal Chuck Lesaltato of the Sheriff's Office confirmed Betts was the husband in question.
Also included in the report was Betts' explanation for the tirade: the guitarist claimed he "was on the edge."

Caldwell left with Donna Betts and called for help. When three other deputies arrived at the house, Betts was gone too, leaving behind a shattered
television and an overturned couch. Sheriff's deputies used a helicopter and a tracking dog to search the area, about fifty miles south of St.
Petersburg. Betts called home on a mobile phone during the search and talked with a sheriff's deputy, according to the report.

Deputies found him by tracing another phone call to his home made from a regular phone at a nearby house. The authorities took Betts to a mental
health center under Florida's Baker Act, which allows police to detain a person for up to forty-eight hours for psychiatric evaluation. The treatment
center that evaluated Betts would not reveal the results of the evaluation, but according to the Allmans' management, Betts is back at home
recovering.

The domestic troubles aren't Betts' first. In December, 1996, he was charged with aggravated domestic assault when he
allegedly placed a gun to his wife's head after she accused him of injecting heroin and cocaine.

Betts is a founding member of the Allman Brothers Band, who began in 1969. A recent statement released by the band
announced his hiatus until a fall tour: "The remaining band members have made this decision because of personal, business
and musical differences within the group. The band feels it is inappropriate to discuss these differences in public."

On May 20, an angry Betts accused the band of implying that he was suffering from drug problems. "This is totally, absolutely unfounded!" he wrote
in an online letter.

MATT MOSSMAN
(June 10, 2000)