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    • How Bad was “Bad Frank” Phillips? – Lies, Damned Lies and ...

      Never went to prison

      • Frank Phillips referred to himself as “Bad Frank Phillips,” and so did almost everyone who knew him. Indicted by grand juries in three states, Kentucky, Virginia and West Virginia, for crimes ranging from assault to ku-kluxing to murder, and convicted of minor crimes such as breach of peace and assault, Bad Frank never went to prison.
      hatfield-mccoytruth.com › 2017/01/07 › how-bad-was-bad-frank-phillips
  1. Oct 9, 2016 · Adding insult to injury, a year earlier she had married Franklin “Bad FrankPhillips, a Pike County deputy, bounty hunter and archenemy of the Hatfield clan who days after the New Year’s 1888 raid had tracked down and killed Vance.

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  3. A deputy, Bill Dempsey, was wounded and executed by Frank Philipps after they surrendered. [24] On August 24, 1888, eight of the Hatfields and their friends were indicted for the murder of Randolph's young daughter Alifair McCoy (sometimes spelled Allaphare), who was killed during the New Year's Massacre.

    • The feud began in earnest during the American Civil War. In the early days of the Civil War the western counties of Virginia seceded from the state which had seceded from the Union, creating the new state of West Virginia.
    • Asa Harmon McCoy was murdered after leaving the Union Army. Asa Harmon McCoy was the brother of Randolph McCoy (considered the patriarch of the branch of the family involved most deeply in the feud).
    • Anse Hatfield employed many members of the McCoy family after the war. In the immediate post-war years the increased market for timber ensured that Anse Hatfield’s business prospered, and many of the men later involved in the feud between the families worked in his timber operations.
    • The pig issue unleashed the feud in 1878. Pigs were valuable commodities among the people of Appalachia, and the theft or killing of a pig were considered serious crimes.
  4. A band of bounty hunters lead by Deputy Sheriff Franklin ‘Bad FrankPhillips crossed the Big Tug to capture Devil Anse. Jim Vanse was killed when he refused to be taken into custody. The Hatfields had gathered a posse of their own and met Bad Frank and the McCoys in the Battle of Grapevine Creek.

  5. Apr 28, 2024 · The Court ruled 7-2 that the Hatfields could be tried after all, despite being illegally extradited over state lines, and seven of them were sentenced to life in prison (via History Channel).

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  6. Sep 4, 2021 · The murders of the McCoys caused Kentucky’s governor Simon Buckner to unleash special officer Frank Phillips and 38 men to arrest the nearly 20 men and put out a special reward which brought a slew of bounty hunters to come after the Hatfields.

  7. BadFrank Phillips was appointed by the Kentucky governor to arrest members of the Hatfield family. Phillip’s appointment followed the resumption of violence in the long-dormant feud.

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