Rough & Messy Justice: A Train Heist, Murder & Misdeeds - Paperback
Rough & Messy Justice: A Train Heist, Murder & Misdeeds - Paperback
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by W. Keith Regular (Author), Hon Peter W. L. Martin (Foreword by)
Rough & Messy Justice vividly portrays Alberta's Crowsnest Pass of 1920, a rugged Rocky Mountain region shaped by its mining economy and diverse culture. An armed CPR train robbery spirals into a deadly shootout at the Bellevue Café, where police clash with Russian outlaws fresh from Montana's mines. A surviving bandit escapes, triggering a relentless manhunt. When captured, his trial becomes a spectacle marred by overt racism in the press, law enforcement cover-ups, and a judge and jury riddled with bias. With a weak defence lawyer, unreliable witnesses, and critical legal missteps, the proceedings lead to a tragic execution. This gripping true crime account exposes systemic corruption, racial prejudice, and the fatal flaws in Canada's early justice system. By confronting these injustices, Rough & Messy Justice challenges assumptions about fairness and equality under the law, offering an exploration of historical crime and consequence.
Back Jacket
Rough & Messy Justice unravels a gripping true crime and legal drama set in the Crowsnest Pass of 1920. When three armed men rob a CPR train, their escape turns into a deadly gunfight, leaving officers and suspects dead. But the real crime was yet to come... The book reveals the racism and corruption behind the execution of a man whose guilt was far from certain. Blending history and legal analysis, author Keith Regular examines a case that still resonates today.
W. Keith Regular specializes in the history of the early Canadian West. He holds an MA in History from the University of Calgary and a PhD from Memorial University of Newfoundland.
Author Biography
Dr. W. Keith Regular holds a Master of Arts in History from the University of Calgary and a PhD from Memorial University of Newfoundland. Specializing in modern Indigenous and non-Indigenous social and economic relationships, his current research focuses on legal history and the dispensing of justice in the early 20th-century Canadian West, particularly in the Crowsnest Pass. He is also author of the book Neighbours and Networks: The Blood Tribe in the Southern Alberta Economy. Keith lives in Cranbrook, B.C.
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