
Origin Story
"Raw. Unfiltered. Real."

Born in Caldwell, Idaho, on July 31, 1977, my life began in a fight for survival. My mother was only 14 years old when I was born, and I entered the world weighing just 4 pounds, 14 ounces. By the age of three, my biological father had left. What followed was a childhood stolen by a "stepmonster"—a man who should have been a father but was instead a predator.
From age five until fourteen, I was subjected to ongoing sexual and physical abuse whenever I was home in Idaho. To escape, my life became a blur of Greyhound bus trips, moving between the homes of various relatives. This total lack of stability led me directly into a life of crime; by age 18, I was in Spokane, Washington, selling drugs. This lifestyle eventually led to my first three felony convictions and a two-year state prison sentence.
After years of running drugs between Washington and Montana, I fled to the Gulf Coast. In 2006, I hit a devastating low point with crack cocaine in Mississippi. This period led me to a Christian-based rehab in the City of Refuge out of Lucedale. In 2007, I returned to Idaho, faced two more felonies, and served time in the Cottonwood Prison Rider program, eventually being released in 2010.
That release was the true turning point. I reconnected with my first love, Amanda. Together, we built a life rooted in stability and family, raising three boys and creating the home I never had as a child. I earned college certifications in welding and we were married in 2013.
Since then, I have channeled my life's pain and triumphs into a massive body of work. I have written over 400 poems and created 22 completed albums featuring 240 original songs spanning rock, country, and hip-hop. From engineering audio for Swamp Radio to producing ads for hunger charities, I have moved from the shadows of an overpass to the light of a studio. My story is living proof that your past does not have to be your prison—you can turn your survival into art and your history into a home.
Outlaw Dogg isn't a character created in a boardroom. It's a persona forged in the fires of real-life struggle. Born from a history of abuse, running, drugs, and prison, the name "Dogg" was carried for seven years in the streets of Spokane. It's not just a name; it's a testament to survival. Outlaw Dogg is my persona—a reflection of the life I lived and the music that saved me.

"Sometimes the most powerful notes come from broken strings."
Before the legend, there was the struggle. "Outlaw Dogg: The Younger Years" chronicles the formation of the band that would eventually shake the world. It follows three middle school misfits who discovered that their music had the power to transform not only their lives but their reality.
The mysterious pitbull with a supernatural heritage. Son of the "Wolfman," J.C. fights to control the power within him, channeling his haunting howl into the band's signature sound.
The tiger with a past darker than the night. Once a victim of the system, Phil channels his rage into blistering guitar riffs that cut through the lies of the industry.
The alligator from the swamps, Gator is the steady heartbeat of the band. His drums are the pulse that keeps the chaos in rhythm, grounding the band's raw energy.
The lion who roams the backroads, a wanderer with a voice that echoes across the plains. His bass lines are the foundation, the rumble beneath every rebellion.
Together, they formed Outlaw Demonsions—a band that doesn't just play music, they weaponize it. Their sound is a fusion of gritty rock, outlaw country, and raw hip-hop, designed to cut through the noise and speak truth to power.
This isn't about fame. It's about fighting back against an industry that silences real voices. Every song is a middle finger to the gatekeepers who told us we weren't good enough. Every lyric is a weapon against the algorithms that bury authentic art.
"We don't need your permission. We're taking what's ours."
— Outlaw Dogg