Relentless Facts About Bounty Hunters


A shadowy figure stalks you day and night, never resting, always just one step behind. Let your guard down just once, and the whole game is up. How long can you keep running? Dreaded bounty hunters have haunted criminals and fugitives for centuries, whether they were Roman slave-catchers, Old West gunslingers, or modern “bail enforcement officers.” Keep your wits about you as you check out these 42 facts about bounty hunters through history.


Bounty Hunters Facts

42. Bad Behavior

Former WWF star David Schultz is probably best known for assaulting 20/20 reporter John Stossel while Stossel interviewed him about wrestling’s secrets. His WWF career ended shortly afterwards, and Schultz became a bounty hunter, tracking down around 1,700 fugitives, some as far away as Egypt, for over 15 years.

 Wikipedia

41. Crime and Punishment

Though in past centuries, the penalty for skipping out on bail was death, nowadays it just means a longer sentence. Sort of like in high school, where skipping detention meant getting two detentions, which is how I ended up in detention for an entire semester.

 Pixabay

40. Underhanded Dealings

American bounty hunters in the 19th century could make extra profit by kidnapping free black people and selling them into slavery. In 1841, a bounty hunter kidnapped Solomon Northup, a free man, and brought him to the South as a slave. After he escaped, Northup wrote about his experiences in the book Twelve Years a Slave.

 12 Years a Slave (2013), Regency Enterprises

39. Immunity

In the United States, bounty hunters who cause injury while hunting a fugitive aren’t subject to civil liability—meaning you can’t sue them for it.

 Shutterstock

38. Fool Me Once

Over a quarter of the population of Ancient Rome was made up of slaves, who weren’t always happy with their situation and would often escape. Owners would offer hefty rewards to slave-catchers, and re-captured slaves would have to wear heavy iron collars, inscribed with instructions on what to do to them should they escape again.

 Wikimedia Commons

37. Say My Name

Bounty hunters don’t like that name anymore. They generally go by official-sounding titles such as “fugitive recovery agent” or “bail enforcement agent.”

 Shutterstock

36. War on Drugs

The Philippines has been using bounty hunters in its fierce war on drugs. In 2017, President Rodrigo Duterte offered $40,000 to any police officer who killed or captured fellow officers who had assisted a corrupt mayor involved in drug trafficking.

 Wikimedia Commons

35. Hitting the Big Time

After American operatic tenor Carl Tanner completed his degree in Music, he became a truck driver and bounty hunter to make ends meet. A woman heard him singing Puccini’s “E lucevan le stelle” in his truck and told him he should be singing for a living—so he dropped bounty hunting to make a name for himself in New York City. The inspiration for Barry, perhaps?

 Wikimedia Commons

34. Modern Technology

A method that modern bounty hunters use to track down fugitives is called “skiptracing.” This involves collecting every possible piece of information about the fugitive (the “skip”), including credit reports, job applications, utility bills. The skiptracer uses clues from this data to work out possible locations for their target.

 Shutterstock

33. On the Right Track

You knew we’d get to him eventually: Duane Lee Chapman—aka “Dog the Bounty Hunter”—was convicted of first degree murder in 1976. He once thwarted a fellow inmate’s attempt to escape, and the praise he received helped inspire him to become a bounty hunter.

 Wikimedia Commons

32. A Good Living

Modern bounty hunters in the US can earn as much as $100,000 a year, tracking down up to 150 fugitives in that time.

 Flickr

31. International Incident

Bounty hunters have to be careful about chasing fugitives internationally. One American bounty hunter caught a criminal in Canada and took him back to Florida for punishment. The Canadian government then charged the bounty hunter with kidnapping.

 Shutterstock

30. Bad Press

Morgan Spurlock, creator and star of the hit 2004 documentary Super Size Me, took on bounty hunting for his 2008 film Where in the World Is Osama bin Laden? The movie was panned so viciously that Spurlock hasn’t read his press ever since.

 Flickr

29. Strange Ambitions

Leonard Padilla is a notorious bounty hunter who ran for mayor of Sacramento twice—the first time, from federal prison. The second time he ran, he outed an opponent as a child molester.

 Shutterstock

28. Striking a Deal

Leonard Padilla once convinced serial killer Wesley Shermantine, who was on death row, to reveal the locations of his victims’ bodies in exchange for $33,000. Shermantine wanted the money for candy, a typewriter, and a tombstone for his parents. Pretty reasonable, as far as shopping lists go.

 Wikimedia Commons

27. Serious Consequences

Old West bounty hunter Mickey Free was born in Mexico and spent his childhood in Arizona Territory, but at the age of 12 he was kidnapped by the Pinal Apache. The US military tried to recover him, but they went after the wrong Apache group and sparked the Chiricahua Wars.

 Wikimedia Commons

26. Nom de Guerre

Mickey Free was originally named Felix Telles, but he gained the name that would make him famous when he joined the US Army’s Apache Scouts—the soldiers couldn’t pronounce his real name. As a Scout, Free tracked such well-known outlaws as Geronimo and the Apache Kid.

 Wikimedia Commons

25. Breaking the Sabbath

Most of the US still follows bounty hunting rules laid out in an Old West court ruling in 1873. This ruling established that bounty hunters could chase a fugitive into another state, could break and enter into the fugitive’s house to arrest them, and could even arrest fugitives on Sundays. *Gasp* not Sundays!

  Wikimedia Commons

24. A Sure Thing

Bounty hunting originated in medieval England, where defendants would offer a friend or family member as “surety.” If the defendant disappeared, their surety would be tried and sentenced in the defendant’s place—so it’s not surprising that sureties would hunt down fleeing defendants.

 Pikist

23. Scared Straight

American defendants are 28% less likely to skip bail if their state allows bounty hunters.

 Public Domain Pictures

22. Act Naturally

Ralph “Papa” Thorson was a successful American bounty hunter from the 1950s who passed away in 1991. Steve McQueen portrayed Thorson in the 1980 movie The Hunter, in which Thorson had a cameo as a bartender.

 The Hunter (1980), Paramount Pictures

21. Written in the Stars

“Papa” Thorson was a bishop with the Temple of Inspired Living, and a devotee of astrology, which he credited with his success. He once described bounty hunting as “picking the right astrological moment to hunt the man down.” So if Mercury is in Gatorade, the criminals are more likely to get caught? Sure, Papa.

 Pixabay

20. Carrying On

Following the death of “Papa” Thorson in 1991 (from an alleged car bomb), his widow, Dottie, and his daughter, Brandi, took over the bounty hunting business. They are the subject of the early-2000s TV series The Huntress.

 Getty Images

19. Big Money

Wild West outlaw Jesse James had a bounty of $5,000 on his head—about $90,000 in today’s money.

 Wikimedia Commons

18. Hollywood Hunter

Former South African politician Rick Crouch once worked as a high-profile bounty hunter and private investigator in the US, and has been called “PI to the stars”. He published a book called Bail Investigator Training Manual (Become a bounty hunter now).

 Wikimedia Commons

17. Career Change

In 1877, Texas Ranger John Riley Duncan successfully tracked down and helped to ambush infamous outlaw Wes Hardin. Duncan got a share of the $4,000 reward for Hardin’s capture, and decided to quit his job and become a bounty hunter.

 Shutterstock

16. Minor Obstacles

Duncan was a successful bounty hunter, but he did have some misadventures. In 1878, a prostitute shot him inside a brothel, which required him to get a tracheotomy and to use a silver breathing tube for the rest of his life. Duncan continued to find success as a bounty hunter after this.

 Shutterstock

15. Star-Crossed Lovers

The Dunn Brothers were five Old West bounty hunters and occasional cattle rustlers. They made their biggest catch when they shot and killed notorious outlaws “Bittercreek” Newcomb and Charley Pierce. Newcomb was romantically involved with the Dunns’ sister Rose, and they simply waited for him and Pierce to come over and visit his girlfriend.

 Shutterstock

14. A Bad End

The Dunn Brothers were not well-loved, especially since they supplemented bounty hunting with robbery and cattle rustling. Eventually, Sheriff Frank Canton started investigating Bill Dunn—when Bill tried to ambush him, Canton fired first and killed Bill. With their reputation tarnished, the Dunn Brothers stopped bounty hunting.

 Wikimedia Commons

13. One-Man Operation

Millard “Dry Wolf” Gardner was a famous Prohibition-era lawman. He got his start as a bounty hunter, working alone to track down bootleggers and bring them to court. As a deputy sheriff, he was known for walking into speakeasies, having a drink, and then raiding the place.

 Wikimedia Commons

12. Simmering Tensions

In 1850, American Congress passed the Fugitive Slave Act, allowing bounty hunters to track down escaped slaves in free states with almost no regulation. There was also hefty punishment for anyone who assisted an escaped slave.  Several Northern states passed laws protecting fugitive slaves in response, augmenting tensions between the North and South.

 Wikimedia Commons

11. Domino Effect

Domino Harvey was a British model and bounty hunter who worked in the United States. She attained considerable notoriety before her death of a fentanyl overdose in 2006—Kiera Knightley even portrayed Harvey in the biopic Domino.

 Domino (2005), New Line Cinema

10. Conflict of Interest

Pat Garrett, a former New Mexico saloon owner, became a local sheriff and found himself tracking down an old acquaintance of his—Billy the Kid. After tracking down various members of Billy’s gang, Garrett claimed that he ambushed Billy in the dark and killed him. However, some think that Garrett faked his old pal’s death.

 Wikimedia Commons

9. Good at Their Job

As of 2004, bounty hunters were catching around 31,500 fugitives per year, making up 90% of bail jumpers.

 Shutterstock

 

8. Going Incognito

Charlie Siringo worked as a detective and bounty hunter for Pinkerton Detective Agency in the 1880s and 90s. He was an expert at undercover work, and he successfully infiltrated Butch Cassidy’s Wild Bunch gang. Siringo’s information led to the death of Kid Curry, prompting Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid to flee to South America.

 Wikimedia Commons

7. Dying Breed

Nowadays, bounty hunting is illegal in all but a few countries, and it’s mostly practiced in the United States and the Philippines.

 Wikipedia

6. Getting a Head

Tom Tobin was an early explorer, US Army Scout, and bounty hunter in New Mexico and Colorado. In the 1860s, the army requested Tobin’s help in hunting down Mexican murderer Felipe Espinosa. Tobin turned down the help of a troop of soldiers, tracked Espinosa and his cousin alone, ambushed them in their camp, and returned to the army with the Espinosas’ heads in a sack. Now that’s how you make an entrance.

 Shutterstock

5. Ancient Headhunting Firm

Charietto was a German bounty hunter who worked for the Roman Emperor Julian the Apostate. At night, he would watch for barbarian raiders crossing the Rhine on the empire’s frontier, and in the morning he would bring their severed heads to the Romans.

 Shutterstock

4. Gaming the System

Roman slaves and slave-catchers could work in cahoots, to the annoyance of the masters. A slave-catcher could offer to buy the fugitive slave from their master at a reduced rate once captured. The captured slave could then pay the slave-catcher a hefty price for his freedom—so the slave-catcher would profit, the slave would gain his freedom, and the master would have lost a slave for less than his market value.

 Shutterstock

3. John of Priests

Seán na Sagart—aka John Mullowney—was an infamous priest hunter in 18th-century Ireland. At a time when Catholic priests were forced to take an oath recognizing Queen Anne as the head of the Church of England and Ireland, there was a bounty of anywhere from £5 to £100 on the heads of rogue Catholics.

 Wikimedia Commons

2. Selling Out

John Mullowney started out as a horse thief, but he was arrested and sentenced to death for his crimes. A judge, learning of his “low character,” offered to spare Mullowney’s life if he became a priest hunter, which he enthusiastically embraced.

 Shutterstock

1. Cruel and Unusual

John Mullowney used cruel deception to capture Catholic priests. He would pretend to be on his deathbed and would send for someone to perform last rites, and then would kill or capture the priest. One time, when Mullowney had killed the second-last priest in the area, the very last priest dressed as a woman to attend the funeral. Mullowney found him and attacked him, but the priest fought back and a bystander killed Mullowney.

 Pixabay

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