This episode is based on several separate cases/incidents: The 2021 Ed Buck case in West Los Angeles. Buck, a wealthy, white political operative, would bring black men to his home and pay them to "slam" meth. Two black men died in his home from meth overdoses because of Ed Buck. Buck was sentenced to thirty years in prison the day before this episode aired for distribution of meth resulting in the death of two men, two counts of enticing men to cross state lines for prostitution and maintaining a drug den. The 2012-2017 Steven Zelich (a.k.a. "The Wisconsin Suitcase Murderer") case. The 1978-1992 Jeffrey Dahmer (a.k.a. "The Milwaukee Cannibal") case. The 2007 Larry Craig sex scandal. On June 11, 2007, Craig, who at the time was a Republican United States Senator from Idaho, was arrested for lewd conduct in a men's restroom at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. Craig later entered a guilty plea to a lesser charge of disorderly conduct on August 8. As a result of the controversy surrounding his arrest, subsequent guilty plea, and pressure from his fellow Republicans, Craig announced his intention to resign from the Senate at a news conference on September 1, which was to become effective on September 30. After Craig's efforts to withdraw his guilty plea failed, on October 4, he released a statement refusing to resign from the Senate. Craig did not run for re-election in 2008, and the incident effectively ended his political career. The "down-low" phenomenon in the black community.