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00:00You
00:31That guy right there, that's Wyatt Earp.
00:37The toughest son of a bitch in the West.
00:41And right now, he's in the middle of the most famous gunfight in history.
00:50You might have heard of it.
00:54The gunfight at the O.K. Corral.
00:58But here's what you probably don't know.
01:02This gunfight wasn't the end of a story.
01:05Nope. It was just the beginning.
01:10The shootout at the O.K. Corral is one of those stories where you think you know it.
01:17But the more you learn about it, the crazier the story becomes.
01:22Going back to the old ways.
01:26The whole Earp family got targeted as revenge following the O.K. Corral.
01:36I'm going to kill every one of them.
01:42Wyatt's action was cold-blooded murder.
01:46He was just overwhelmed with a desire for vengeance.
01:49Wyatt, please.
01:53But this small-town feud got so big, it affected the entire country.
02:03Even the President of the United States feels that he has to intervene.
02:06He has to do something.
02:07And then, J.P. Morgan got involved.
02:12What the hell is this?
02:16Things got so bad, it threatened to spark a second civil war.
02:20We will not be trotted on ever again!
02:26We were just wondering when all this is going to stop.
02:31I'm not stopping until Ike's dead.
02:37This is a war that no one's heard of.
02:39And yet it was going to determine the future of the West.
02:42And really, the future of America.
03:13This is a war that no one's heard of.
03:22On March 15, 1881, $26,000 worth of silver was loaded onto a stagecoach
03:30to be transported across the Arizona desert.
03:33Good?
03:34Good.
03:36Yeah!
03:49Now, this stagecoach had made countless trips like this before.
03:59But today, it was different.
04:06¡No!
04:07No!
04:08Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh.
04:48The driver and a passenger were both shot dead, and the robbers, well, the robbers got away.
04:56Even for the Wild West, this was a pretty brazen crime, and the news spread quickly.
05:08Making its way back to the town where the stagecoach started from, Tombstone.
05:18Now, when you think about an old West town, your mind probably conjures up some dusty, dirty, lawless hellhole that
05:24you see in old Hollywood movies.
05:27Well, Tombstone wasn't like that at all.
05:31It was a mecca of wealth and culture in the middle of nowhere.
05:35Tombstone was an unusually sophisticated town for the time.
05:39There were a lot of upper-class people.
05:41They had reading rooms, libraries, bookstores, and the comforts of a real town.
05:47They even had an oyster bar.
05:50Think about that.
05:51Oysters in the Old West.
05:54So how did Tombstone become the Paris of the desert?
05:59Well, one reason and one reason alone.
06:04Silver.
06:09There was close to 1,000 metric tons of silver in the hills surrounding Tombstone.
06:15That would be worth over a billion dollars today.
06:19There's something about that old saying, there's silver in them thar hills.
06:23Why eek a living out as a dirt farmer when suddenly you can have a pan full of silver and
06:29live like a king?
06:30So it's part of the American dream, fortune-seeking, get rich quick, if I only make it to a town
06:37like Tombstone, Arizona.
06:40All right, so back to those murders.
06:46Now, in the event of a stagecoach robbery, or any robbery for that matter, there was a procedure.
06:52First, the sheriff, the top lawman in the county, was notified.
07:03And in Tombstone, that sheriff was Johnny Behan.
07:09But it wasn't his job to chase after criminals.
07:13Kid.
07:17You go wake the herbs.
07:23The day-to-day peacekeeping was done by three brothers.
07:37Virgil, Morgan, and Wyatt Earp.
07:46Virgil was the oldest, and he was the level-headed one.
07:51Morgan was the youngest, and he idolized his older brothers.
07:55He said you can run, but you can run, but you will cry.
08:02And then, there was Wyatt.
08:05He was a man of few words, and he had his own special way of dealing with crime.
08:15We think of him as a gunslinger, but he much preferred just using his fists.
08:19So, he was very useful for keeping law and order without shootouts breaking out.
08:25Wyatt would walk right up to thugs and just punch them.
08:29Usually so fast, they wouldn't see it coming.
08:34It wasn't exactly by the book.
08:37But you couldn't argue with the results.
08:42I mean, the guy was rough.
08:45A little unhinged.
08:47God!
08:48You bastard!
08:50You could say he lived by his own moral code.
08:54But he was determined to see justice served.
09:00Now, Wyatt set out to catch the stagecoach robbers.
09:04And this time, it was personal.
09:08Because one of the men who was murdered was Wyatt's close friend.
09:13Bud Philpott.
09:39Wyatt followed the horse tracks of the robbers for three days.
09:45And one of those tracks led to a ranch.
09:50Where they found this guy.
09:52Luther King.
10:04Gun.
10:05Gun.
10:33Why'd you kill the driver?
10:37Who pulled the trigger?
10:42If you give us a name, we'll work out a deal.
10:58You didn't have to do that.
11:01Yeah, I did.
11:04Get your hands up!
11:07All right.
11:08All right, all right.
11:09In no time, Luther confessed to being one of the stagecoach robbers.
11:14And even gave up the name of one of the killers.
11:17Billy Leonard.
11:19Wyatt had no idea who this Billy Leonard was.
11:22But there was a clue.
11:24All right, let's go.
11:29Hey.
11:31Don't forget your hat.
11:33Now, everyone out west wore hats.
11:37But if your hat had a band made out of rattlesnake,
11:41that meant that you were a member of a gang
11:43that was known as the Cowboys.
11:48Now, forget everything you know about Cowboys.
11:52You think they're heroes, right?
11:54Like in the old John Wayne movies?
11:56Nope.
11:58Beginning in 1880,
12:00the term cowboy became a dirty word in Arizona territory.
12:04It meant outlaw, desperado, robber, and murderer.
12:10You see, the Cowboys were a notorious criminal gang
12:14that dealt in stolen cattle.
12:17Let me explain.
12:20Out west, beef was big business.
12:24A cow worth three bucks in Texas
12:26was worth 60 bucks in Chicago.
12:29Modest ranchers became cattle barons.
12:33The railroads boomed, and everyone was getting rich.
12:39But when droughts, disease, and harsh winters
12:42began wiping out the cattle in Texas,
12:44a gang of outlaws from Arizona
12:46started stealing cattle from Mexico.
12:51The Cowboys were notorious
12:53for doing a lot of midnight raids into Mexico,
12:56stealing 500,000, 1,500 heads of cattle,
12:59hustling them across the U.S. border,
13:01and then finding buyers on the black market
13:03so they could make a lot of money.
13:06Nobody cared that they were stolen
13:07because they were getting cheap beef.
13:10The money flowed, and the Cowboy gang grew and grew.
13:14They were like the Mafia.
13:18And just like the Mafia,
13:20they had a mob boss.
13:23His name was Ike Clanton.
13:42Ike used a dangerous mix of fear and charm
13:45to get what he wanted.
13:47You never knew if he was going to cut your throat
13:50or buy you a drink.
13:52But one thing's for sure.
13:54Ike could always be counted on for a good story.
13:57And I say to him,
13:58where the hell have you been?
13:59And he says,
14:01I've been at church.
14:02And I'm thinking,
14:03he's gone all religious.
14:06And then he insists on taking me there.
14:08Now I'm getting really worried.
14:11And sure enough,
14:13inside this church,
14:14there's people singing hymns,
14:16and at the front is the priest.
14:18Only he's stark naked,
14:19and he's a-dancing and a-hopping
14:21like a chicken on heat.
14:23I say,
14:24Carly,
14:24what the hell have you done?
14:27I'm a bitch.
14:30Ike was short-tempered,
14:32boastful.
14:33He drank too much.
14:34He liked to go out
14:36and have fun with the Cowboys
14:38and shoot up towns
14:39and brag
14:40and talk about
14:41how important he was,
14:42yet he somehow
14:44developed respect among people
14:45for his leadership
14:46in the Cowboys.
14:58Now that hand
15:00is gonna be big.
15:08I've arrested Luther King
15:10for the stagecoach robbery.
15:14Can't say I know who that is.
15:16I found his hat.
15:18He's one of yours.
15:26And?
15:27Luther named Billy Leonard.
15:31Now Ike knew that
15:32Billy Leonard
15:33had carried out the robbery,
15:35and Ike hadn't sanctioned it.
15:36But he still wasn't just
15:38gonna give Billy
15:39up to the law.
15:41You know what I've been hearing?
15:43What?
15:44I've been hearing
15:45Doc Holliday did it.
15:52What are you talking about?
15:54That's what people are saying.
15:56Doc Holliday was one
15:58of the stagecoach robbers.
16:00Ain't that right, Curly?
16:01Yep.
16:02Or shit.
16:03You should ask around.
16:06Let me know
16:07if you need any more help.
16:30Now, you may have heard
16:31the name Doc Holliday before.
16:35But I bet you don't know
16:36the real story.
16:46Doc Holliday had a reputation
16:47as a drunk and a gambler.
16:58Morning, ma'am.
17:02Not many people in Tombstone
17:04realize that he really
17:06was a doctor.
17:12Doc was a doctor of dentistry,
17:14and he had a flourishing
17:16career back east.
17:18He grew up in a fairly
17:20wealthy family,
17:21went off to dental school
17:22in Philadelphia,
17:23and became a very good dentist.
17:27You have some decay
17:29on your second upper molar.
17:32That's what's causing the pain.
17:37Now, a lot of dentists
17:38would just whip that tooth out,
17:40but I think I can save it.
17:54I'm so sorry.
18:01Doc was cursed
18:02with a life-threatening
18:03disease of the lungs.
18:05Doc Holliday is diagnosed
18:07with tuberculosis,
18:08or what in the time
18:09was called consumption.
18:10It was a very common disease,
18:12often led to death.
18:13It was also a disease
18:14that did not discriminate.
18:16So poor people
18:16came down with consumption,
18:18rich people came down
18:19with consumption.
18:24To stay alive,
18:25Doc was told to go west,
18:27where the climate was warmer
18:28and the air drier.
18:32And to help with the coughing,
18:34the doctors advised him
18:36to drink whiskey.
18:38So when Doc called whiskey
18:41his medicine,
18:42he meant it.
18:47And he drank it.
18:50Lots of it.
19:18So you can see why this rumor
19:20spread so quickly.
19:21The Doc was one
19:22of the stagecoach robbers.
19:25I mean,
19:26it wasn't hard to believe.
19:33Why is it
19:34that the people
19:35who know the least
19:38are the ones
19:39who talk the most?
19:42Here's the crazy thing.
19:44It wasn't the rumor
19:45that got him into trouble.
19:47It was his girlfriend,
19:49Kate Elder,
19:50also known as
19:51Big Nose Kate.
19:54There's debate
19:55as to whether she got her name
19:56because of her nose
19:57or because she was nosy.
19:59I'm not a jealous person.
20:00You are a jealous person.
20:02You're a drunk.
20:03Doc had a fiery
20:04love-hate relationship
20:06with Kate Elder.
20:07A little piece of shit.
20:07After one
20:09really bad argument,
20:11Kate was so angry
20:12that she actually
20:14signed an affidavit
20:15saying that Doc
20:16had confessed
20:17to the stagecoach robbery.
20:20So the judge
20:21demanded his arrest.
20:25You know I didn't do it, right?
20:28Yeah, I know.
20:31The arrest of Doc
20:33put Wyatt
20:34in a difficult situation.
20:36You see,
20:38Doc was actually
20:39Wyatt's best friend.
20:42Their paths
20:43first crossed
20:44in Dodge City, Kansas
20:47where Wyatt
20:48was Deputy Marshal.
20:51Doc was playing cards
20:53and he looked
20:54out the window.
20:57He saw
20:58that a group
20:58of young men
21:00had surrounded
21:01Wyatt Earp
21:01and Wyatt Earp
21:02was in danger.
21:03You're going inside
21:04and you're giving me.
21:05I can rule
21:06wherever I want with it.
21:08God damn
21:09cow-poking clowns.
21:11Why can't you
21:12keep your shit
21:13munching mouth shut?
21:14Now this is one
21:15of those strange
21:16twists of fate
21:17that sometimes
21:18happens in history
21:20because while
21:21everyone else
21:21was watching Doc,
21:23this guy was about
21:24to put a bullet
21:25in Wyatt's back.
21:34give me your gun.
21:36You too.
21:36Put it down there.
21:51Doc Holliday
21:52saved the life
21:53of Wyatt Earp
21:53and they formed
21:54a kind of a code,
21:56an allegiance
21:56that you saved
21:57my life
21:58so I'll be loyal
21:59to you forever.
22:02Don't worry, Doc.
22:03I'll figure something
22:04out.
22:07Can I get a drink?
22:10Yeah.
22:11Sure.
22:15Not only was
22:16Wyatt's best friend
22:17in jail,
22:20but one of the actual
22:21stagecoach robbers,
22:22Luther King,
22:23was out.
22:27Nobody knows
22:28exactly how
22:29Luther King
22:29got out of jail.
22:31The most likely
22:32reason was that
22:33the cowboys
22:33bribed some official.
22:36The only thing
22:37we know for certain
22:38is that the cowboys
22:39wanted him out of jail
22:40for a reason.
22:45Cruelly!
22:47Cruelly,
22:47I didn't say nothing!
22:48Cruelly,
22:49I didn't say nothing!
22:54The cowboys
22:55were bloodthirsty
22:58and remorseless.
23:00When it got out
23:02that Luther King
23:03had provided information
23:04about the robbery,
23:06a group of cowboys
23:07lynched him
23:08in the mountains
23:09outside of Tombstone.
23:13The cowboys
23:15were bound together
23:16by friendship,
23:18by greed,
23:19and by knowledge
23:20that, you know,
23:22we have committed
23:22all these crimes.
23:26It was very much
23:27like the mafia.
23:29If you ratted out,
23:30you got killed.
23:39With Luther King
23:40dead,
23:42Doc was the only one
23:43in jail
23:44for the stagecoach robbery.
23:49Wyatt wasn't going
23:50to let his best friend
23:51hang for a crime
23:52he didn't commit.
23:53And he knew
23:54Billy Leonard
23:55and his gang
23:55were responsible.
23:57But Wyatt had no idea
23:59where they were.
24:00And the only people
24:01who did know
24:02where they were,
24:03guys like Ike Clanton,
24:05well,
24:05they weren't talking.
24:07So,
24:08the case was at a standstill.
24:10And that was starting
24:11to cause real problems.
24:14You see,
24:16this was about
24:17something much bigger
24:18than just a couple
24:19of dead bodies
24:20in Arizona.
24:22Let me explain.
24:27Twenty years earlier,
24:28America went to war
24:30with itself.
24:32The Civil War
24:34was bloody,
24:35but it was also expensive.
24:38So expensive
24:39that the U.S.
24:39had to borrow
24:40millions of dollars
24:41from European countries
24:43in order to win the war.
24:46Fast forward 16 years
24:48and America
24:49was nowhere near
24:50paying off those loans.
24:52So the Civil War debt
24:54in the 1870s
24:55into the 1880s
24:56looms as this huge problem.
24:58So people in the banking world
24:59are really keen
25:01on reducing
25:02that massive debt
25:03that was rung up
25:04during the American Civil War.
25:05But then,
25:06some folks in Washington
25:08had a brilliant idea.
25:09Remember all that silver
25:11that was coming out
25:12of the West
25:12in places like Arizona?
25:14We'll just use that
25:15to pay off our debts.
25:18Now, Tombstone
25:20had more silver
25:21than it knew
25:21what to do with.
25:23But the only way
25:24to get it back East
25:25was to rely
25:26on the stagecoaches
25:27of an express business
25:28founded by two men.
25:31Henry Wells
25:32and William Fargo.
25:33You know,
25:34Wells Fargo.
25:37So now you had people
25:38back East panicking
25:39because if the stagecoach robbers
25:41couldn't be caught,
25:42then sure as hell
25:44other robberies
25:44would follow.
25:46And that would significantly
25:47disrupt the flow of silver.
25:51This was actually
25:52a big deal
25:53and it weighed
25:54on the minds
25:55of some very
25:55powerful people.
26:00I mean,
26:01really powerful people.
26:05The Prince of Wales.
26:09Lord Rothschild.
26:13And this guy.
26:16American banker
26:17J.P. Morgan.
26:31I think you clipped
26:33that one, sir.
26:34Poor shitty miss.
26:37Yep.
26:38That's how J.P. Morgan
26:39spoke to the Prince of Wales.
26:41That's how he spoke
26:42to everyone.
26:43Pull!
26:54Back then,
26:55British aristocrats
26:56would have said
26:56he was uncouth
26:57or rough around the edges.
27:00And in some ways,
27:01they were right.
27:03Pull!
27:06You see,
27:07bankers behaved
27:08like they were
27:09in some gentleman's club.
27:10It was all about
27:11rules and etiquette.
27:13But J.P. Morgan
27:15didn't give a damn
27:16about that.
27:16If he thought
27:17someone was wrong,
27:18he'd tell you.
27:19What the hell is this?
27:20And in no uncertain terms.
27:22Why didn't you just do it?
27:29You're riding
27:30your luck, Morgan.
27:32Luck has nothing
27:33to do with it.
27:35Now,
27:36you're probably wondering,
27:37what the hell
27:38does this have to do
27:39with Tombstone
27:39or America
27:41for that battle?
27:43The answer
27:47is railroads.
27:55Railroads were
27:56America's biggest industry.
27:58They accounted for 80%
28:00of the stock market.
28:02But they were a mess,
28:04overbuilt,
28:05run by corrupt directors
28:07and on the verge
28:08of bankruptcy.
28:10Morgan believed
28:11he could save them.
28:12But to do that,
28:14he needed to own them.
28:21In the early 1880s,
28:22J.P. Morgan
28:23is just emerging
28:24as that sort of
28:25towering figure
28:26of Wall Street.
28:27He's one of the more
28:28powerful bankers
28:29and he's perfecting
28:30what's going to become
28:31his calling card,
28:32which is to consolidate
28:33businesses
28:34and to revive businesses,
28:36and particularly
28:37the railroads.
28:40Control of America's
28:41railroads would give
28:42J.P. Morgan
28:43unprecedented wealth
28:44and power.
28:46But for Morgan's plan
28:48to work,
28:49he needed an enormous
28:50investment.
28:51And he could only get
28:53that from London.
28:57That's where
28:58Lord Rothschild comes in.
29:00He owned the biggest
29:02bank in the world
29:03and had access
29:03to billions of dollars.
29:06Do you know what
29:07the London banks
29:07are calling America?
29:10A nation of swindlers.
29:13I assure you
29:14we've learned
29:14from our past mistakes.
29:16Let's hope so.
29:18We wouldn't want
29:19a repeat of 73.
29:21A disaster
29:22if ever there was one.
29:23But like many financiers,
29:26he thought America
29:27was a dangerous investment.
29:29And what of the dollar?
29:31The dollar
29:32will be silver-backed
29:34until we raise
29:35our gold reserves.
29:38Silver?
29:46Morgan's plan
29:47to take over
29:48the railroads
29:49hinged on persuading
29:50Britain that America
29:52was a safe place
29:53to invest.
29:56And that's why
29:57the stagecoach robbery
29:58was a problem
30:00to even him.
30:05People like J.P. Morgan,
30:06what they prized
30:07more than anything else
30:08was order.
30:09If America seems
30:10like an unstable society,
30:11then that maybe
30:13gives European investors
30:14pause when it comes
30:15to investing
30:16in the American economy.
30:17And when there's
30:19marauding
30:19and banditry
30:21on the southwest border
30:22in Arizona,
30:23that's bad for business.
30:27Within days,
30:28one of the largest
30:29rewards ever seen
30:30in the Wild West
30:31was posted.
30:33Close to $6,000
30:35for the capture
30:37of the stagecoach robbers.
30:56Now, $6,000
30:57might not sound
30:58like that much money,
30:59but today,
31:00that adds up
31:01to $180,000.
31:06And it's just
31:07what Wyatt needed
31:10to blow
31:11this murder case
31:12wide open.
31:33What do you want?
31:36I need your help
31:37to find Billy Leonard
31:38and his gang.
31:42Didn't I already
31:43tell you?
31:44I don't know.
31:45This is our award.
31:48How much?
31:50$6,000.
31:53What's your cut?
31:54Nothing.
31:55It's all yours.
32:00When do I get
32:01the money?
32:01When they're arrested,
32:04do we have a deal?
32:09Yeah.
32:15Ike accepts the deal.
32:16He's willing to give up
32:17these men
32:18and entice them
32:19to a place
32:20where they might be killed,
32:22certainly arrested,
32:23for money.
32:24You know,
32:25this is a fellow cowboy.
32:26This is your buddy,
32:27but enough money,
32:28so I'm going to turn you over.
32:30And Wyatt knew
32:31to do that.
32:32He knew Ike's character.
32:33He knew that he could get him
32:35to rat these guys out.
32:40Ike told Wyatt
32:42exactly where he could find
32:43Billy Leonard
32:44and his gang.
32:58Hey, bring me another.
33:01Billy was already planning
33:02his next heist.
33:05Billy Leonard
33:06and his cohort
33:08were hired as assassins
33:09to get rid of a couple
33:11of ranchers,
33:13but these ranchers
33:14got word of it.
33:20And they get killed.
33:23Billy Leonard
33:24and his gang died
33:25before Wyatt
33:26could arrest them.
33:28And that put an end
33:30to the hunt
33:30for the stagecoach robbers.
33:34But Doc Holliday
33:36was still being held
33:36as a suspect.
33:38Luckily for him,
33:40Kate Elder
33:40finally came
33:41to her senses.
33:42Miss Elder,
33:43please,
33:44tell the court
33:45what you overheard
33:46Doc Holliday say
33:47about robbing
33:47the stagecoach
33:48on March 15,
33:491881.
33:53I never heard him
33:54say anything about that.
33:55She withdrew
33:56her allegations.
33:58Case dismissed.
33:59And Doc walked free.
34:07Wyatt closed the case,
34:09satisfied that justice
34:11had been served.
34:19Our story
34:20would have ended there.
34:24But there was
34:25just one problem.
34:38Where's my goddamn money?
34:41Haven't you heard?
34:44Billy Leonard got shot.
34:46So?
34:49So?
34:51There's no reward.
34:54What are you
34:55talking about?
34:57Billy died
34:59before I had a chance
34:59to arrest him.
35:01I don't give a shit.
35:03No arrest.
35:06No reward.
35:09Hey!
35:11Hey!
35:19Once Billy Leonard died
35:21in that gun battle,
35:22the reward
35:23could no longer
35:24be paid for him.
35:38leave the bottle.
35:50Leave the bottle.
35:58here's to Billy.
36:01Here's to Billy.
36:02What?
36:05Billy Leonard.
36:06A great poker player.
36:10Though he could look you
36:11in your eyes
36:14and see straight
36:15into your soul.
36:19what do you mean?
36:23In you all,
36:24your little secrets.
36:32What secrets?
36:37What do you know?
36:55Ike became convinced
36:56that Doc Holliday
36:57knew about the deal
36:59and was telling other people.
37:05And this was all
37:06in Ike's head.
37:12But now he's
37:13fearing for his life
37:14because he thinks
37:16that the knowledge
37:16is out
37:17that he was a rat.
37:36We need to talk.
37:40Alone.
37:46Come on.
37:52I'll be at the bar.
37:53Yeah.
37:59You told Doc about our deal.
38:04No.
38:05Oh, shit.
38:05He knows.
38:08I didn't tell anyone.
38:11I was with Doc.
38:12He told me.
38:16I don't know
38:16what you're talking about.
38:19Now, Wyatt
38:20really hadn't told a soul.
38:22But sticking to your word
38:24wasn't something
38:25Ike understood.
38:27I don't believe you.
38:34Calling me a liar.
38:38Yeah.
38:40I'm calling you
38:42a liar.
38:49Get out.
39:11What was that about?
39:13Ah, nothing.
39:13He's drunk.
39:14Come on.
39:15Let's play.
39:18Let's play.
39:28You can run on
39:30for a long time.
39:32Run on
39:33for a long time.
39:35Run on
39:36for a long time.
39:38Sooner later
39:39I'll get you down.
39:41Sooner later
39:42I'll get you down.
39:49Ike wondered
39:50how he could have been
39:51so stupid
39:52doing a deal
39:53with a lawman
39:54and then ratting
39:55on another cowboy.
39:58And now Doc knew.
40:01How long before
40:02everyone knew?
40:10He needed to think,
40:12stay calm.
40:13The whiskey
40:14was making him
40:14more paranoid.
40:16Maybe Doc
40:17had told others.
40:18Did any of these
40:19cowboys know?
40:24Maybe everyone knew.
40:29after drinking
40:29all night
40:32Ike knew
40:32that Wyatt,
40:33Earp,
40:33and Doc
40:34needed to be dealt with.
40:46Wyatt!
40:48Ike was so drunk
40:50when he left the bar
40:51he could barely walk.
40:53Ike Clanton,
40:55he's apparently
40:55drinking all night.
40:56He's drunker
40:57and drunker.
40:58He's enraged.
40:59And in the morning
41:00he's going around town
41:02with a six-shooter
41:03threatening to kill
41:04the Earps
41:05and Doc Holliday.
41:07I'm coming for you!
41:09You and your
41:11goddamn brother!
41:14Hi.
41:18Where are you?
41:22You cheating
41:23son of a bitch.
41:24Shut up and go home.
41:25Kept all the money
41:26for yourself,
41:27did you?
41:28What's he talking about?
41:30You and your brothers
41:31are scum of the earth.
41:33Sons of a whore.
41:40He was asking for it,
41:41you know.
41:42Yep.
41:44For the Earps,
41:46Ike's threats
41:47were just the whiskey
41:48talking.
41:49They locked him up.
41:50Once the courthouse
41:52was open,
41:54the judge fined Ike
41:55$25 for threatening
41:57behavior
41:59and told him
42:00to leave town.
42:09We should get that
42:10bandaged.
42:11I'm fine.
42:13Now,
42:13the last thing
42:13Ike needed
42:14was his kid brother,
42:15Billy Clanton,
42:16fussing over him.
42:18Billy was the opposite
42:20of Ike.
42:20He might describe
42:22himself as cautious,
42:23a thinker,
42:25but Ike would say
42:26gutless.
42:29The others are
42:30meeting us
42:30at the corral.
42:32To get Ike safely home,
42:33Billy arranged
42:34for four of the
42:35toughest cowboys
42:36to wait for them
42:37where they kept
42:37their horses.
42:40At the old
42:41Kendersley Corral.
42:42Only the townspeople
42:43had shortened it
42:44to the O.K. Corral.
42:48Fuck.
42:51Billy just wanted
42:52to get Ike out of town,
42:54lay low for a while.
43:00But Ike believed
43:01it was only a matter
43:02of time before
43:03Wyatt told everyone
43:04that he was an informant.
43:07And if the cowboys
43:09found out,
43:10he'd end up
43:11Blake Luther King.
43:18We'll get that
43:19bandaged up
43:19as soon as we get home.
43:23You okay, Ike?
43:28We're not going anywhere.
43:33We're going to kill
43:34Wyatt Earp.
43:37Why don't we get him
43:38another day?
43:41Truth is,
43:41it was freezing.
43:43And all Billy wanted
43:44to do was get home
43:45and put his feet
43:46in front of the fire.
43:56You see what they did
43:58to me?
43:59If we let them
44:00get away with it,
44:01they'll think
44:01they control the town.
44:03Billy was trying
44:04to get his crazy brother,
44:05Ike,
44:06to leave town
44:07and was trying
44:08to calm him down
44:09while Ike was
44:10making threats.
44:12That's why we need
44:12to kill the Earps
44:13and that son of a bitch
44:14stock holiday
44:15right now!
44:17And townspeople
44:18were passing by
44:19hearing Ike
44:21make threats
44:21against the Earps.
44:29Mr. Clanton?
44:30Yes.
44:31And his boys,
44:31they're out.
44:32I saw them,
44:32I was by the corral,
44:33I heard them talking,
44:34they're coming to kill you.
44:35There's four,
44:36there's five of them,
44:36they're coming here.
44:37You just get inside,
44:39you take care,
44:39and I appreciate
44:40your information,
44:41alright?
44:41Alright, sir.
44:45Two cigars, please.
44:54Ike is still here.
44:58Goddammit.
45:06You coming?
45:08I'm coming.
45:16Three lawmen
45:17against Ike
45:19and his boys.
45:20If it came to a fight,
45:22the Earps
45:23would be outnumbered
45:24and outgunned.
45:29Where are you headed?
45:31Ike,
45:31Klan.
45:34You need help.
45:38Now,
45:38listen up.
45:40Doc wasn't a marshal,
45:41and he wasn't exactly
45:42what you'd call stable,
45:43either.
45:44Bringing him along
45:46could backfire.
45:47Complicated.
45:48But he was still
45:49a hell of a shot.
45:52And Wyatt knew
45:53he could use
45:54all the help
45:54he could get.
46:00Give him the shotgun.
46:03You sure?
46:05Yeah.
46:08Get under your coat.
46:23Now, Ike and Wyatt
46:24don't know it yet,
46:25but they're moving
46:26headlong
46:27into the most famous
46:28showdown
46:29in the history
46:30of the Wild West.
46:39Let's get one thing
46:41straight.
46:42Wyatt and his brothers
46:43had no intention
46:44of starting a gunfight.
46:46Their plan
46:47was to disarm
46:47the cowboys
46:48and tell them
46:49to get out of town.
46:55Now, you can imagine
46:56Ike was thinking,
46:57maybe I should have
46:58listened to Billy.
47:00Virgil was thinking,
47:02this is all bravado.
47:04And Billy Clanton
47:05was thinking,
47:06what the hell
47:07was Doc doing
47:08there with a shotgun?
47:11Oh, we don't want that.
47:18No!
47:19No!
47:31You can run on for a long time
47:35Run on for a long time
47:38Run on for a long time
47:41Soonerly, gotta cut you down
47:43Soonerly, gotta cut you down
47:50You can run on for a long time
47:51You're gonna tell the long-tongue liar
47:53Gonna tell the midnight rider
47:56You're the ramble, the gambler
47:59The backbiter
48:00Tell them God's gonna cut them down
48:02Tell them God's gonna cut them down
48:07You can run on for a long time
48:10You can run on for a long time
48:11You can run on for a long time
48:13Run on for a long time
48:15Run on for a long time
48:16Run on for a long time
48:16Sooner or later, gotta cut you down
48:19Sooner or later, gotta cut you down
48:23Sooner or later, gotta cut you down
48:32Sooner or later, gotta cut you down
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