Santa Fe New Mexican

Rare bourbon hunters sometimes skirt law to get coveted bottles

- By Andrew Selsky and Damian Dovarganes

SALEM, Ore. — Buttery, smooth, oaky. These are characteri­stics of the best bourbons, and a growing cult of aficionado­s is willing to pay hundreds or even thousands of dollars to get their hands on scarce American spirits — and even bend or break laws.

The first challenge is figuring out which liquor stores have these premium bottles on their shelves — and that’s where inside knowledge can give bourbon hunters a leg up, and potentiall­y get them into legal trouble.

In Oregon, several high-ranking officials at the state’s liquor regulating agency are under criminal investigat­ion after an internal probe found they used their influence to obtain scarce bourbons.

That included the holy grail for bourbon fanatics: Pappy Van Winkle 23-yearold, which can sell for tens of thousands of dollars on resale markets. Top-end bourbons have found themselves at the center of criminal investigat­ions in at least three other states, from Virginia to Pennsylvan­ia to Kentucky.

Premium spirits were always expensive and sought-after, but interest is surging. Distillers have upped production to try to meet increased demand, but before the whiskey reaches stores and bars, it must age for years and even decades.

Each state gets a limited amount of Pappy Van Winkle 23-year-old, produced by Old Rip Van Winkle Distillery of Frankfort, Kentucky.

In 2022, Oregon received just 33 bottles.

“The average person cannot get good bottles,” said Cody Walding, a bourbon fan from Houston. He believes he’s years away from finding Buffalo Trace Distillery’s five-bottle Antique Collection, despite making connection­s with liquor store managers.

“Like, to be able to get Pappy Van Winkle or Buffalo Trace Antique Collection, unless you’re basically best friends with a store manager, I don’t even think it’s possible to get those,” he said. In a Los Angeles bar that Walding visited last week, one shot of Pappy 23-year cost $200.

Six officials from the Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission — including then-Executive Director Steve Marks — have acknowledg­ed they had Pappy or another hard-to-get bourbon, Elmer T. Lee Single Barrel, routed to liquor stores for their own purchase. All six denied they resold the bourbons.

Old Rip Van Winkle Distillery’s suggested retail price of Pappy 23-year is $299.99. Because of its extreme scarcity, it can go for a lot more on the resale market.

In December, a single bottle sold at Sotheby’s for a record $52,500. Two other bottles were auctioned for $47,500 apiece. All three were originally released in 2008.

The Oregon agency’s internal investigat­ion determined the employees violated a statute that says public officials cannot use confidenti­al informatio­n for personal gain. Gov. Tina Kotek sought Marks’ resignatio­n in February, and he quit. The other five are on paid temporary leave. An investigat­ion by the state Department of Justice’s Criminal Division is ongoing.

Marks did not immediatel­y respond to messages Wednesday seeking comment. In his replies to the commission investigat­or, Marks denied he had violated ethics laws and state policy. However, he acknowledg­ed that he had received preferenti­al treatment “to some extent” in obtaining the whiskey as a commission employee.

The practice was allegedly going on for many years and involved not only state employees but also members of the Oregon Legislatur­e, the investigat­or was told.

Five bottles of Oregon’s allotment of Pappy 23-year-old went to “chance to purchase,” a lottery started in 2018.

The odds of winning Pappy 23-year were 1 in 4,150.

Utah, Virginia and Pennsylvan­ia are among other states with lotteries for coveted liquor. Two men in Pennsylvan­ia each bought a bottle of Pappy Van Winkle after winning the liquor lottery in different years. They tried to sell their bottles on Craigslist, but undercover officers posing as buyers nailed them for selling liquor without a license.

In Virginia, an employee of the state’s Alcoholic Beverage Control Authority downloaded confidenti­al informatio­n about which state-run liquor shops would be receiving rare bourbons. An accomplice then sold the intel to Facebook groups of bourbon fans. The now-former employee pleaded guilty to felony computer trespass in September, received a suspended prison sentence and a fine, and was banned from all Virginia liquor stores.

In Kentucky, an employee of Buffalo Trace Distillery was arrested in 2015 for stealing bourbon, including Pappy, over several years and selling it. The caper became part of Heist,a Netflix miniseries, in 2021.

Whiskey is a booming industry, especially the high-end products.

Supplier sales for American whiskey — which includes bourbon, Tennessee whiskey and rye — rose 10.5% last year, reaching $5.1 billion, according to the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States. Revenue for makers of super-premium American whiskey grew 141% over the past five years.

Bourbon, in particular, has a rich American heritage. It’s been around since before Kentucky became a state in 1792 and is where the vast majority of bourbon comes from. In 1964, Congress declared bourbon “a distinctiv­e product of the United States,” barring whiskey produced in other countries from being labeled as bourbon. Today, some of the bestknown Kentucky bourbon distilleri­es are foreign-owned.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A bottle of Pappy Van Winkle 23-year-old bourbon is seen Saturday at the Far Bar in Los Angeles. The bottle has a resale value in the tens of thousands of dollars — a single shot can go for $200.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A bottle of Pappy Van Winkle 23-year-old bourbon is seen Saturday at the Far Bar in Los Angeles. The bottle has a resale value in the tens of thousands of dollars — a single shot can go for $200.

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