said to have been in no way mixed up in the…
Entities extracted from this source (3)
George W. Manleyperson
3 claims cited from this source
a.k.a. George Manley, Manley, Geo. W. Manley
Jo Criserperson
2 claims cited from this source
a.k.a. Joe Criser, Criser
Robert Reddingperson
2 claims cited from this source
a.k.a. Redding, Robt. Redding, Bob Redding
Chunks (2)
chunk 1782 · paragraph 0
said to have been in no way mixed up in the
final trouble, further than being a witness to a
petty assault case in which Redding and Jo
Criser were placed under arrest by Manley and
which brought all parties from Lone Mountain
to Central on the morning of the killing to have
a hearing of the case. Manley is said by the
friends of Redding, on several occasions lately
had threatened the life of Redding, and on the
other hand Redding is reported to have made
the remark in this city that Manley was liable
to get badly hurt if he did not let up on his
persecutions of him. Thus matters have been
going on for several months since the trouble
began and until it culminated fatally for Man-
ley at Central. On the morning of the killing
Redding and Joe Criser went to Central City
to have a hearing. A number of witnesses also
accompanied the parties. It seems Redding and
his friends arrived first, and both parties were
armed. Manley just previous to the shooting
had left his revolver in Wm. Hutchinson’s store
and he was coming out when Redding started
toward him and is reported to have said,
“Manley, I understand you are going to kill
me.” Then Redding claims that Manley placed
his hand on his hip pocket and answered,
“Yes.” Redding on this commenced shooting,
firing four shots, three of which took effect
and any one of them would have resulted in
almost instant death.
chunk 1783 · paragraph 0
ey, I understand you are going to kill
me.” Then Redding claims that Manley placed
his hand on his hip pocket and answered,
“Yes.” Redding on this commenced shooting,
firing four shots, three of which took effect
and any one of them would have resulted in
almost instant death. On being searched it was
found that Manley was unarmed and if he did
make a motion as is claimed by Redding, he
intended it for a bluff, which cost him his life.
The story does not look reasonable. It is said
that when Redding fired the first shot, Manley
was facing him, but turned in such a manner
as to receive it in the shoulder. Redding fired
three shots into Manley’s body after he had
fallen — two of which took effect in the back.
This is one of the worst features connected
with the killing and cannot be accounted for
by the friends of Redding.