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RIP to an American Badass
Posted on 5/6/14 at 2:12 am
Posted on 5/6/14 at 2:12 am
courtesy of teh Shaggy LINK
quote:
Mr. Walsh’s most famous case ended the Brady Gang’s cross-country crime spree two years later. While the F.B.I. refused to discuss what happened, wire service reporters as well as the local police provided eyewitness accounts of the final shootout.
On Oct. 12, 1937, Mr. Walsh was in the sporting goods store Dakin’s in Bangor, Me., posing as a gun sales clerk and waiting for Public Enemy No. 1, Alfred Brady, and two gunmen, James Dalhover and Clarence Lee Shaffer.
Wanted for four murders, 200 robberies and a prison breakout, they had been in the store days earlier and were returning for Thompson submachine guns. But a large force of federal agents and state and local police officers were waiting in ambush, hidden in cars, storefronts and offices across the street.
The gang’s car drew up at 8:30 a.m. Dalhover got out and entered the store. He was immediately seized and disarmed by Mr. Walsh and taken to the back by other agents. Shaffer and Brady, sensing something was wrong, emerged with guns drawn.
Mr. Walsh, meanwhile, approached the store’s front with a .45 in his right hand and a .357 Magnum in his left. But as he reached the door he realized he was looking through the plate glass at Shaffer. The glass exploded as both men fired simultaneously.
Shaffer fell, mortally wounded, to the sidewalk. Mr. Walsh, although hit in the chest, shoulder and right hand, stepped outside firing his Magnum at Brady, who was cut down in a thundering fusillade from all sides as he shot back wildly. Witnesses said he was still moving as Mr. Walsh put another bullet in him.
Mr. Walsh, who killed at least 11 gangsters in his F.B.I. days, competed regularly in national shooting tournaments and broke the world record for centerfire pistol shooting in 1939 at Camp Ritchie, Md., scoring 198 out of a possible 200. He also won the Eastern regional pistol championships in 1939 and 1940.
In 1942, after America’s entry into World War II, Mr. Walsh joined the Marines. For two years he trained snipers in New River, N.C. He requested combat duty in 1944, was sent to the Pacific and joined the invasion of Okinawa in 1945. At one point, with his unit pinned down, he killed an enemy sniper at 80 yards with one pistol shot.
Posted on 5/6/14 at 2:59 am to Jim Rockford
"When he was 12, his father gave him his first rifle, a .22-caliber Mossberg. He shot rats in the New Jersey Meadowlands and honed his skills on an aunt’s laundry clothespins."
Ah, the good ole days.
Ah, the good ole days.
Posted on 5/6/14 at 3:08 am to Jim Rockford
quote:
Walter R. Walsh, a world-class marksman who shot clothespins off laundry lines as a boy and went on to become an F.B.I. legend in shootouts with gangsters in the 1930s, an Olympic competitor and a trainer of generations of Marine Corps sharpshooters, died on Tuesday at his home in Arlington, Va. He was 106.
Posted on 5/6/14 at 4:14 am to Jim Rockford
quote:
At one point, with his unit pinned down, he killed an enemy sniper at 80 yards with one pistol shot.
RIP
Posted on 5/6/14 at 4:42 am to tzimme4
I was hoping it was Kidd Rock. RIP to this legendary man. He'll be sniping demons that try to get into heaven.
Posted on 5/6/14 at 6:07 am to Jim Rockford
They definitely don't make them like they used too!
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