Pretty Boy Floyd: The Notorious Life and Death of the Depression Era Outlaw, Charles River Editors
  • $4.46
    • Facebook Share
    • Twitter Share
    • Pinterest Share

Details

Pretty Boy Floyd: The Notorious Life and Death of the Depression Era Outlaw

Author: Charles River Editors

Narrator: Scott Clem

Unabridged: 1 hr 30 min

Format: Digital Audiobook

Publisher: Findaway Voices

Published: 03/20/2019

Genre: Biography & Autobiography - Criminals & Outlaws

Synopsis

November 1, 1932 was a fine autumn day in the sleepy, cotton-farming city of Sallisaw, Oklahoma, the heart of Sequoyah County. The blinding rays of the midday sun were shining their brightest, but the otherwise blistering heat was offset by a brisk breeze. These were ideal conditions for a Tuesday, a seemingly pedestrian day of the week, but what was unfolding in the Sallisaw State Bank was anything but ordinary. 

At first glance, it would seem as if a traveling carnival or a homegrown celebrity had come to town. The sidewalks of the city bank and its surrounding establishments were teeming with locals, generations of families, young lovebirds, and clusters of friends. Indeed, they had convened to witness a spectacle, albeit one of an entirely different sort.

The doors of the Sallisaw State Bank swung open with a resounding bang, signaling the start of the show. Out staggered a pair of thieves, each toting bulging sacks of bills and coins and glinting Colt .45s. The hogtied tellers inside the bank desperately wriggled across the floor to voice their distress, craning their necks and directing their muffled screams towards the open door. One had even managed to squirm out of his gag and was calling out to the crowd across the street for help. Unfortunately, his cries were negated, not by the spectators' own cries of alarm, but by thunderous applause, supplemented by whoops, whistles, and a constellation of waving handkerchiefs. Some of those who cleared the path for the robbers' getaway car were supposedly patrons present in the establishment during the stick-up itself.  

The ringleader, a striking young gentleman with a square jaw, a smoldering squint, and dark hair slicked back with scented pomade, acknowledged his admirers with a quick nod before ducking into the running vehicle. According to local lore, quite a few of the spectators had been briefed on the robbery beforehand by none other than the ringleader himself. So bold was he in his endeavors that he strolled into the bank's neighboring establishments in the days prior and simply asked its proprietors to refrain from ringing the cops, to which they gladly agreed. He even left those complicit with enough time to extract their savings from the bank.

While it was far from his biggest haul (the thieves fled with $2,531.73, roughly $50,200 today), the courteous ringleader was not the type to bolt without first leaving behind literal tokens of his appreciation. He dipped into his loot and tossed several handfuls of coins out the window. The streets, they say, were so congested with spectators who charged forth to scoop up the loose change that a barricade was created between the approaching squad cars and the getaway vehicle, ultimately allowing the latter to screech off around the bend and out of sight. Prior to their smooth escape, a small sack of bills had also been set aside, in the ringleader's words, “for the schoolkids.”

The dashing ringleader, hailed by many as the “Robin Hood of Cookson Hills,” was none other than Pretty Boy Floyd, a perplexing character as abhorred as he was revered. To the feds, Pretty Boy Floyd was a venomous, manipulative scoundrel who was egregiously lionized as an anti-hero with a heart of gold. A career bank robber supposedly associated with up to 40 bank robberies, his face would soon be plastered on the 1934 poster of the FBI's Most Wanted alongside John Dillinger, Baby Face Nelson, and Alvin Karper. He was also implicated in multiple murders, yet Pretty Boy Floyd's admirers have been willing to overlook these crimes, with some even providing justifications for his behavior and contending that he was unfairly vilified for fighting an unjust system. To them, he was singled out as a scapegoat, and he used that angle himself, once noting, “I guess I’ve been accused of everything that has happened, except the kid

Recommended

Soapy Smith: The Life and Legacy of the Wild West's Most Infamous Con Artist
Soapy Smith: The Life and Legacy of the Wild West's Most Infamous Con Artist
by Charles River Editors

Before there was Charles Ponzi, there was Jefferson Randolph “Soapy” Smith II. The famed Old West con artist and gangster's criminal career ranged from Texas to Alaska, from Denver to the Klondike. But Smith was not predestined to becom...

Narrator: Bill Hare
Published: 09/30/2019

The Accountant's Story Inside the Violent World of the Medelln Cartel
The Accountant's Story
by David Fisher

Arguably the largest and most successful criminal enterprise in history, at times the Medellin drug cartel was smuggling 15 tons of cocaine a day, worth more than half a billion dollars, into the United States. Roberto Escobar knows - he was the ac...

Narrator: Ruben Diaz
Published: 02/25/2009

The Icon True Crime Series John Dillinger After Hours Banker
The Icon True Crime Series John Dillinger After Hours Banker
by Geoffrey Giuliano

The Media ran exaggerated accounts of his bravado and colorful personality, styling him as a Robin Hood figure. In response, J. Edgar Hoover, then director of the Bureau of Investigation (BOI), used Dillinger and his gang as his campaign platform to...

Narrator: Geoffrey Giuliano
Published: 01/07/2021

The Trouble with Innocence
The Trouble with Innocence
by Michael Hall

In partnership with Texas Monthly, Michael Hall's "The Trouble with Innocence" is now available as an audio download, where the length and timeliness of a podcast meets the high-quality production of a full-length audio program.In 1978, a Texas jury...

Narrator: Christopher Ryan Grant
Published: 01/09/2018

Pablo Escobar: The History of the Biggest Narco
Pablo Escobar: The History of the Biggest Narco
by My Ebook Publishing House

Pablo Escobar Murderer, philanthropist, drug dealer, politician, devil, saint: many words have been used to describe Pablo Escobar, but one is irrefutable - legend. For the poor of Colombia, he was their Robin Hood, a man whose greatness lay not in ...

Narrator: Matt Montanez
Published: 05/08/2017

Notes from Hell
Notes from Hell
by Nikolay Yordanov

"This horror story made international headlines. It shows brutality in its most extreme form, a wilful act of cruel injustice for which the Libyan government stands accused. Reading this book will make you cry." Dries Brunt, "Citizen Newspaper", Sou...

Narrator: Nano Nagle
Published: 11/08/2018

Court Number One The Old Bailey Trials that Defined Modern Britain
Court Number One
by Thomas Grant

'These tales of eleven trials are shocking, squalid, titillating and illuminating: each of them says something fascinating about how our society once was' The TimesCourt Number One of the Old Bailey is the most famous court room in the world, and t...

Narrator: Jonathan Keeble
Published: 05/30/2019

Robert Berdella: The True Story of The Kansas City Butcher
Robert Berdella: The True Story of The Kansas City Butcher
by Jack Rosewood

When Chris Bryson was discovered nude and severely beaten stumbling down Charlotte Street in Kansas City in 1988, Police had no idea they were about to discover the den of one of the most sadistic American serial killers in recent history. This is t...

Narrator: Gaius M. Thynne
Published: 09/22/2016

Bugs Moran: The Notorious Life and Legacy of the Chicago Gangster Who Became Al Capone’s Biggest Rival
Bugs Moran: The Notorious Life and Legacy of the Chicago Gangster Who Became Al Capone’s Biggest Rival
by Charles River Editors

Sprightly swing music spills across the dimly lit club. The grayish curtains of cigarette smoke part every once in a while to reveal a sparkling stage and tables upon tables of patrons, some incurably inebriated and others high on the fast-paced nig...

Narrator: Colin Fluxman
Published: 02/12/2019
{"id":"4004580","ean":"9781987127294","abr":"Unabridged","title":"Pretty Boy Floyd: The Notorious Life and Death of the Depression Era Outlaw","subtitle":"","author":"Charles River Editors","rating_average":"0","narrator":"Scott Clem","ubr_id":"4004580","abr_id":"0","ubr_price":"6.95","abr_price":"0.00","ubr_memprice":"4.17","abr_memprice":"0.00","ubr_narrator":"Scott Clem","abr_narrator":"","ubr_length":"Unabridged: 1 hr 30 min","abr_length":"Abridged: "}