
Garrett Murder
by
C. F. Eckhardt |
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Nearly
everybody knows that Sheriff Pat Garrett of Lincoln County, New
Mexico Territory, shot and killed a 21-year-old bandit named
Henry McCarty, who usually went by Billy the Kid, in Pete
Maxwell's bedroom at Fort Sumner in July, 1881. What most people
don't know is that Pat Garrett was himself murdered in Doņa Ana
County, New Mexico 27 years later. The murder of Pat Garrett is
one of the many unsolved mysteries of the West.
Garrett had been sheriff of several New Mexico counties,
including Lincoln and Doņa Ana. He also operated a 'private
detective' company which traced and recovered stolen cattle,
'taking care of' the thieves,' usually by leaving them full of
holes. At one point he worked as a detective for Southern
Pacific Railroad. While he was working for SP he was stationed
for a time in
Seguin, Texas. His youngest son, Jarvis, was born in
Seguin.
No matter what he did, Garrett never really made much of a
success at life. In 1908 he was running sheep on rented land in
Doņa Ana County. That he'd made a number of enemies there was no
doubt--anyone who works in law enforcement makes enemies. It goes
with the job. However, Pat was not a likeable fellow--even a lot
of other lawmen didn't like him--and he apparently made enemies
in just about everything he did.
Garrett and two other men were in a wagon at a particularly
desolate spot in Doņa Ana County, either on the way to look over
some sheep or on the way back from looking over some sheep
Garrett was trying to buy. The stories differ. The wagon stopped
and Garrett got down to relieve himself by the back wheel. As he
stood, someone fired a single rifle shot. It struck Pat Garrett
in the back of his head, just at the base of his skull. He was
dead when he hit the ground.
Wayne Brazeal, who was along on the journey but was no friend of
Garrett's, rolled the dead man over and fired a single round
from his pistol into Garrett's chest. He then mounted a horse,
rode into Las Cruces, confessed to murdering Garrett, and was
arrested. However, he was acquitted of the crime since the third
man testified that Brazeal shot a corpse--Garrett was already
dead from the rifle shot to his head when Brazeal shot him.
Who fired the shot that
killed Pat Garrett? There's never been a positive answer to
that. In my discussions with Leon C. Metz, one of Garrett's many
biographers--though probably the most thorough of them--the name
Jim Miller kept cropping up. Jim--known as 'Deacon Jim' because,
given an hour or so to prepare, he could deliver a half-hour
Hellfire-and-brimstone Methodist sermon on any subject in the
Bible; and as 'Killer Miller' because he would kill anyone for
$50--is known to have been in the Las Cruces area about the time
Pat was killed.
Jim Miller, though, preferred to use a shotgun. Specifically, he
used one he could conceal beneath his long frock coat. Garrett
was armed that day, both with the .44 caliber Colt he'd used to
shoot Billy the Kid and with a long-barreled 10-ga shotgun. Jim
would have had to get in close to use his favorite
weapon--entirely too close. Garrett probably knew Jim by
sight--most
West Texas and New Mexico lawmen did--and if he'd seen Jim
Miller coming he would have used his own shotgun. He had a
definite range advantage with the longer barrel.
That left Jim, if indeed he was the shooter, no choice but a
rifle. But what kind of rifle?
A man's head is an uncertain target, particularly at
considerable range. People move their heads. They nod, look
around, tilt them--all of which makes a head a bad target.
Besides, at 150 to 200 yards, a man's head is not a big target.
It appears about the size of a small English pea. In these days
of high-velocity rifles with telescopic sights, it would be
fairly easy to target a man's head. In the days of open sights,
the front sight would completely obscure a human head.
Considering the landscape in that particular part of Doņa Ana
County, an assassin would need to be anywhere from 150 to 200
yards from where the wagon stopped to be concealed. At that sort
of range the actual target would be 'where the suspenders
cross'--just about between the shoulder-blades. It would be a
one-shot kill, because the bullet would penetrate the heart.
The most common caliber of rifle all across the West at the time
was the .44 Winchester Central Fire or .44-40. Winchester
produced the M1873 and M1892 in that caliber, Marlin likewise
produced a rifle and carbine in that caliber, and there were
several imports in that caliber. While a .44-40 carbine or rifle
was a very good weapon at close range--out to 100 yards or
so--beyond that range velocity dropped dramatically and the
bullet did too. A .44-40 carbine, sighted in for 100 yards,
would hit nearly a foot below point of aim at 200. Therefore,
the base of the skull would be the proper aiming point in order
to hit a man Garrett's size 'where the suspenders cross.'
However, there were a couple of new kids on the block by 1908. A
new weapon made its debut in the West 14 years earlier--the
Winchester M1894. By 1908 its most popular caliber was .30
WCF--the famous .30-30. A year after the '94 came out, Winchester
produced the M1895, chambered for, among other calibers, the .30
US cartridge, also known as the .30-40 Krag. Compared to the
trajectory of the .44-40--or even its slightly more effective
brother, the .38-40-- either of the new cartridges was a wonder.
The Krag was originally a black powder cartridge, pushing a 200
grain bullet with only 40 grains of powder, but the bullet was
much more ballistically efficient than the fat, flat-nosed slug
of the .44-40. When the loading went to smokeless powder things
improved a lot. With a muzzle velocity of in excess of 2000 fps,
the Krag round was extremely flat-shooting. The .30-30 was
designed originally as a smokeless-powder round. It had a
selection of slugs, anywhere from about 140 grains to 180. With
any round, it had a muzzle velocity of 2000+ feet per second.
This meant, in both cases, that bullet drop at 200 yards would
be inches, not a foot or so--and not many inches at that.
Theory: The assassin
chose to use one of the new rifles chambered for a smokeless
powder round to avoid giving away his position after he fired.
He was used to the old reliable .44-40, sighted for 100 yards.
He was aware of how far the .44-40's slug would drop at 200
yards. He compensated for the drop by aiming at the top of
Garrett's head. However, he was using either a.30-30 or a
.30-40, also sighted for 100 yards. Either through force of
habit or because he had never fired the weapon at 200 yards and
did not know how little the bullet would drop at that range, he
drew the same bead he would have drawn with his .44-40. By some
chance Garrett did not move his head. The bullet struck him at
the base of the skull, killing him instantly.
Of course, Miller was never tried and convicted of Garrett's
murder. In fact, it would have been difficult to find a jury
that would have convicted anyone of Garrett's murder. He'd made
so many enemies in New Mexico that most of the citizens breathed
a sigh of relief at hearing he'd been killed. |
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