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Billie Sol Estes

Billie Sol Estes
Born (1925-01-10)January 10, 1925
near Clyde, Texas, U.S.
Died May 14, 2013(2013-05-14) (aged 88)
DeCordova, Texas, U.S.
Nationality American
Occupation Businessman
Known for
Criminal charge
  • Swindling
  • Fraud
  • Interstate transportation of securities taken by fraud
  • Conspiracy
  • Mail fraud
Criminal penalty
  • 8 years in prison for swindling, reversed
  • 15 years for mail fraud and conspiracy, served 7 years in Ft. Leavenworth
Spouse(s)
  • Patsy Howe (1946-2000, her death)
  • Dorris Brookover (?-2013, his death)
Children 5
Parent(s)
  • John and Lillian Estes
Awards One of America’s 10 Outstanding Young Men of 1953, United States Junior Chamber of Commerce

Billie Sol Estes (January 10, 1925 – May 14, 2013) was an American businessman and financier best known for his involvement in a business fraud scandal that complicated his ties to friend and future U.S. President Lyndon Johnson.

Estes was born January 10, 1925 to John and Lillian Estes on a farm near Clyde, Texas, one of six children. Estes never attended college but nonetheless demonstrated a natural talent for business from an early age.

"At 13, [Estes] received a lamb as a gift, sold its wool for $5, bought another lamb and went into business. At 15, he sold 100 sheep for $3,000. He borrowed $3,500 more from a bank, bought government surplus grain and sold it for a big profit. By 18, he had $38,000."

He served in the U.S. Merchant Marine during World War II.

In the late 1950s, Estes was heavily involved in the Texas anhydrous ammonia business. He produced mortgages on nonexistent ammonia tanks by convincing local farmers to purchase them on credit, sight unseen, and leasing them from the farmers for the same amount as the mortgage payment, paying them a convenience fee as well. He used the fraudulent mortgage holdings to obtain loans from banks outside Texas who were unable to easily check on the tanks.

At the same time, United States Department of Agriculture began controlling the price of cotton, specifying quotas to farmers. The program included an acreage allotment that normally was not transferable from the land it was associated with, but which could be transferred if the original land was taken by eminent domain.

Estes worked out a method to purchase large numbers of cotton allotments, by dealing with farmers who had been dispossessed of land through eminent domain. He convinced the farmers to purchase land from him in Texas and transfer their allotments there, with a mortgage agreement delaying the first payment for a year. Then he would lease the land and allotments back from the farmer for $50 per acre. Once the first payment came due, the farmer would intentionally default and the land would revert to Estes; in effect, Estes had purchased the cotton allotments with the lease fees. However, because the original sale and mortgage were a pretext rather than a genuine sale, it was illegal to transfer the cotton allotments this way. Estes, however, a smooth talker revered by many of his fellow members of the Churches of Christ, asserted the allegations as politics.


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