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gun and broke
Campbell's right wrist, the second hit him in the foot. Campbell screamed and scooped his gun with his left hand, Stoudenmire whirled and rapidly fired. Campbell dropped his gun, grabbed his stomach and toppled to the ground. After being shot Campbell reportedly looked up at Stoudenmire and stated "You big son of a b--ch, you murdered me." He would die the next morning. Constable Krempkau also died shortly after the gunfight.
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When
Campbell saw Hale go down, he exited from cover with his pistol drawn yelling that it wasn't his fight. Constable Krempkau, still conscious and thinking Campbell had shot him, quickly fired his pistol at Campbell before losing consciousness. The first bullet fired by Krempkau struck Campbell's
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A large crowd gathered in El Paso, including John Hale and his friend, former town
Marshal George Campbell. There was animosity among Americans about the Mexicans being heavily armed within the city limit, but at the same time tensions were high among the Mexicans, who wanted justice for their two
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reputation, and who was eating dinner at the "Globe
Restaurant" across the street, ran out onto the street and pulled out his pistols. While running, Stoudenmire fired once, but the shot went wild and hit an innocent Mexican bystander who tried to run from the erupting incident. When John Hale
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Constable
Krempkau went to a saloon next door to retrieve his rifle and pistol. A confrontation erupted with ex-City Marshal George Campbell over comments allegedly made by Campbell about Krempkau's interpretations and his friendship with the Mexicans. John Hale, who was allegedly unarmed, was
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heavily intoxicated and upset with
Constable Krempkau's involvement in the investigation. Hale pulled one of Campbell's two pistols and yelled, "George, I've got you covered!". He shot Krempkau, who then reeled backward. Slumping against a saloon door, Krempkau pulled out his own pistol.
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cattle rustlers, among them Hale, feared the deceased were acting as scouts and would alert the larger
Mexican group to their location. It was determined that two American cattle rustlers ambushed the 2 Mexicans during the night of April 13 or in the early morning of 14th.
26:(December 23, 1850 – April 14, 1881) was born in Greenup County Kentucky and was the youngest of five children. He moved to Texas in 1875 and by the end of 1876 he was appointed deputy sheriff of
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The court in El Paso held an inquest into the deaths of the men when they returned to El Paso, and
Krempkau, being fluent in Spanish, was required to act as an interpreter to the Mexicans.
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on
December 1, 1880. He served from late 1880 until January 1881, when he was replaced by a new town marshal, Ed Copeland. Campbell was the last person killed by
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who had been killed. The mercenaries, paid by a wealthy
Mexican ranch owner, were looking for two missing farm hands, Sanchez and Juarez, and 30 stolen cattle.
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The verdict was that the two Mexicans, Sanchez and Juarez, were in that vicinity of Hale's ranch in an attempt to locate 30 stolen Mexican cattle. The
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peeked out from behind the pillar, Stoudenmire fired again, hitting Hale between his eyes, killing him instantly.
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The events leading up to the gunfight seem to have started with around 75
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near Hale's ranch and the corpses were transported back to El Paso.
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http://epcc.libguides.com/content.php?pid=309255&sid=2604554
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young men who had been killed. Constable Krempkau was fluent in
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http://www.elpasotexas.gov/police/history_stoudenmire.asp
241:http://www.darkcanyon.net/gunmen_of_el_paso.htm
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219:El Paso local community history project site
16:For other people named George Campbell, see
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18:George Campbell (disambiguation)
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201:Creative Publishing Company
172:El Paso Lawman G.W. Campbell
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197:Egloff, Fred R. (1982).
271:United States Marshals
92:Verdict of the Inquest
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