Mayor of Kingstown
In Kingstown, Michigan, prisons are the main economy and everyone is tied to the system. The McClusky family operates as unofficial power brokers, navigating the uneasy space between police, inmates, guards, gangs, and local politicians. As violence and corruption seep into daily life, they work to keep fragile order while chasing influence and survival in a town built on punishment and confinement.
Kingstown, Michigan is a community shaped by incarceration, where prisons dominate the workforce and the social order. In the middle of this pressure cooker is the McClusky family, who act as intermediaries between law enforcement, prison officials, criminal crews, incarcerated men, and elected leaders. Their role is less about public service and more about negotiation, leverage, and preventing chaos from spilling across every boundary. As tensions rise inside the facilities and ripple outward into the streets, shifting alliances force hard choices and constant risk. The family’s fixer work pulls them into disputes over control, retaliation, and political favors, with every decision affecting multiple sides at once. Amid a backdrop of grief, ambition, and systemic failure, the McCluskys attempt to maintain a tenuous balance in a town where power is measured by who you can influence and who you can keep contained.