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  1. After a few shots of whiskey, he began to run his mouth about being an “outlaw against state, county, and the United States Government!” When one of the customers questioned his credentials, he pulled out his six-guns and, at gunpoint, demanded an apology.

    • Outlaw Gangs

      Outlaw gangs go as far back in history as the beginning of...

  2. On March 11, 1881, Jesse, Ryan, and Jesse's cousin Wood Hite robbed a federal paymaster at Muscle Shoals, Alabama, taking $5,240. Shortly afterward, a drunk and boastful Ryan was arrested in Whites Creek, near Nashville, and both Frank and Jesse James fled back to Missouri.

  3. WilliamBill’ Blackmore* Felix Bradley. Richard ‘Dick’ Burns* Bill Chadwell (Bill Stiles, Jack Ladd, Jack Ward, Cherokee Bill Brown) John Chatman* WilliamBill’ Chiles* Mike & Tom Clearey

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  4. Sep 17, 2008 · On Friday evening, March 25, 1881, almost two weeks following the robbery of a Corps of Engineers payroll at Muscle Shoals, Ala., gang member Bill Ryan became drunk at a small store a few miles north of Nashville.

  5. Apr 4, 2018 · During the following year, Bill Ryan would be sentenced to a long prison term, Frank would surrender to the Missouri authorities, the rest would scatter, and the infamous James Gang would be retired for good. With Frank now in custody, it was time for him to face justice.

  6. William “Bill” Ryan was sentenced to prison for train robbery, and shortly after his release in April 1889; he was found dead in the woods with his head smashed. © Kathy Alexander / Legends of America , updated December 2021.

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  8. Oct 19, 2006 · Jim Crow Chiles and Kit Chiles were both members of Quantrill’s raiders, while William Chiles was an early member of the James-Younger Gang. Bill Chiles was one of the men suspected of holding up the Clay County Savings Association bank in Liberty, Mo., on February 13, 1866.

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