
Photo by Michael Grecco - Sygma
Friends in low places:Herman at L.A. city hall
Bringing
the
Loot 24/7
_____________________
He's
the bail bondsman of
choice for jailed rap stars
_____________________
By
Tara Weingarten and
Sarah Van Boven
Newsweek Magazine Dec 1, 1997
ASK
JOSH HERMAN IF HE CAN remember the moment he realized he was a success,
and the burly 26-year-old doesn't hesitate. It was Feb 21 1996 the
night he attended his client Snoop Doggy Dogg's party at Monty's restaurant
in Los Angeles, a celebration of Snoop's acquittal on murder charges.
Handed a bottle of Cristal champagne as he entered the rooftop eatery,
the white boy straight outta middle-class West L.A. strolled over
to chat with rapper Tupac Shakur and producer Suge Knight. Surveying
the many rap stars munching on filet mignon and lobster, Herman realized,
as he tells the tale, that "everyone in there was out on one of my
bail bonds."
Among
the cast of thousands of agents, attorneys, personal assistants and
other staffers who keep L.A. celebrities in the money and out of trouble,
Herman has created a lucrative role: bail bondsman to the hiphop stars.
Even though rappers are less than half of his prosperous bond business,
Herman has made more than $500,000 over the past few years springing
the big names from jail, bundling them into his Mercedes (license
plate; BAIL 4 u) and driving them straight to the studio or video
set. He estimates he's posted bond for rap artists "at least 100 times,"
promising to pay the full bail if a client skips town--and pocketing
10 percent of that amount as his fee. Herman says he made $50,000
in commissions from Tupac alone; Shakur was out on one of Herman's
bonds when he was kilied last year in Las Vegas.
How
did Herman land such an odd gig? Pure nepotism cut with street smarts.
His grandmother started the family bail-bond business in the 1940s;
father Mark Herman spent the '7Os and `80s rescuing stars like Ike
Tinner from the slammer. In 1990, when record-industry attorney David
Kenner called Mark Herman to go rescue rapper Eazy-E, Dad decided
19-year-old Josh was ready to drive on down to the jail. Josh even
got a little bonus; on Eazy-E's next album, one track had lyrics about
being freed from a Compton jail by a bondsman. "He didn't mention
me by name," Herman says modestly. But the reference certainly made
for a good reference.
Kenner,
who represents Death Row Records and supplies Herman with many of
his celebrity clients, is impressed with Herman's work ethic. "He's
there when you need him," says Kenner. Herman knows he has to be available
24/7: "If I'm at dinner and I get beeped, I'm leaving. If I'm out
of the country, I'm coming home." And neither Josh nor his father
sees any downside to spending so much time around accused felons.
"I don't really worry too much about him," says Dad. "He's got a license
to carry a concealed gun."
Besides,
says Herman, having famous a customers gives him an advantage. While
other bondsmen wait for calls from cons flipping through the Yellow
Pages, Herman is beeped by record-company lawyers. And the best part
(besides the parties) is that he doesn't have to worry about a client
like Dr. Dre's fleeing the country and forfeiting Herman's bail money.
For one thing, he says, "Where are they going to go and not be recognized?"
Plus, "Snoop is probably worth $100 million to Death Row," he says.
"That record company is going to make sure he's in that courtroom."
Newsweek
Magazine
December 1, 1997