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发表于 2008-9-18 18:27:25 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
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发表于 2008-9-19 07:16:43 | 显示全部楼层
感谢你把这个故事将给我们大家听,

我去过育空和西北领地,这个故事在那里非常著名,而且每一个人都会给你讲到,

我只听了个大概,今天才知道这个故事的全貌,非常感谢。
发表于 2008-9-20 18:16:59 | 显示全部楼层
太厉害了!

简直就是外星人!

向 Johnson 同志学习!
发表于 2008-9-21 10:44:57 | 显示全部楼层
生猛野人呀!

传奇经历!
 楼主| 发表于 2008-9-22 09:07:34 | 显示全部楼层
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发表于 2008-9-23 06:11:58 | 显示全部楼层
可能是前苏联克格勃高手。
发表于 2008-9-23 12:32:08 | 显示全部楼层
护刀刀
可能是前苏联克格勃高手。


外星人,一定是外星人
发表于 2008-9-23 12:42:32 | 显示全部楼层
他不是人!没有行为守则,没有道德。

只是一个有枪 的疯子。

没有什么值得为他感到骄傲的。
发表于 2008-9-23 20:54:15 | 显示全部楼层

[闲聊]

他是佛陀转世,目的是为了把别的猎户抓到的猎物放生,并把夹子挂在树上!南無阿弥陀佛! 8)

飞毛腿!

飞毛腿!
 楼主| 发表于 2008-9-24 06:16:05 | 显示全部楼层
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发表于 2008-9-24 07:14:22 | 显示全部楼层
所为 挡他者死。

偷猎 ,干扰其他猎人。没有道德
随意杀人,不遵守法律。没有行为守则
发表于 2008-9-24 21:23:56 | 显示全部楼层

[闲聊]

xhunt 如果你在文革期间被“错误地”被打成“右派”,大家要把你抓来“枪毙”,你在逃亡期间还能遵纪守法,那你就是不想活了! :lol: 蝼蚁尚且偷生,只有留得青山在,才有可能有平反的日子。。。。。。阿弥陀佛!
发表于 2008-9-24 23:21:02 | 显示全部楼层

Albert Johnson (criminal) !!

从道德, 法律的层面来讲。 Albert Johnson 肯定是一个罪犯!

但他的过人体力等。严寒里的作为。 无疑将 “遗臭万年”

这里是比较权威的记载:

Albert Johnson known as the Mad Trapper of Rat River, was a fugitive whose actions eventually sparked off a huge manhunt in the Northwest Territories in Canada. The event became a minor media circus as Johnson eluded the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) team sent to take him into custody, which ended after a 150 mile (240 km) foot chase and a shootout in which Johnson was fatally wounded.

Details of Johnson's life before his arrival in Fort McPherson on July 9, 1931 are unknown. Soon after arriving he built a small 8x10 foot cabin on the banks of the Rat River, near the Mackenzie River delta. Johnson did not take out a trapping license, however, which was considered somewhat odd for someone living in the bush.

In December one of the local trappers complained to the local RCMP detachment in Aklavik that someone was tampering with his traps, tripping them and hanging them on the trees. He identified Johnson as the likely culprit. On December 31 Constable Alfred King and Special Constable Joe Bernard, each of whom had considerable northern experience, trekked out to Johnson's cabin to ask him about the allegations. They noticed smoke coming from the chimney, and approached the hut to talk. Johnson refused to talk to them, seeming to not even notice them. King approached and looked in the window, at which point Johnson placed a sack over it. They eventually decided to return to Aklavik and get a search warrant.

They returned two days later with two additional RCMP officers and a civilian deputy. Johnson again refused to talk and eventually King decided to enforce the warrant and force the door. As soon as he started, Johnson shot him through the wood. A brief firefight broke out, and the team managed to return King to Aklavik, where he eventually recovered.

A posse was formed – this time with nine men, 42 dogs and 20 pounds (9 kg) of dynamite which they intended to use to blast Johnson out of the cabin. After surrounding the cabin they thawed the dynamite inside their coats, eventually building a single charge and tossing it into the cabin. After the explosion collapsed the building, the men rushed in. Johnson opened fire from a foxhole he had dug under the building. No one was hit, and after a 15 hour standoff in the 40-below weather the posse again decided to return to Aklavik for further instructions.

By this point news of the events had filtered out to the rest of the world via radio. When the posse returned on January 14, delayed because of almost continual blizzards, Johnson had left the cabin and the posse gave chase. They eventually caught up to Johnson on January 30, surrounding him at the bottom of a cliff. In the ensuing firefight, Johnson shot Constable Millen through the heart. [1] The troops remained in position, and that night Johnson scaled the cliff to elude the RCMP once again.

The posse continued to grow, enlisting local Inuit and Gwich'in who were better able to move in the back country. Johnson eventually decided to leave for the Yukon, but the RCMP had blocked the only two passes over the local Richardson mountains. That didn't stop Johnson, who climbed a 7,000 foot peak and once again disappeared. This was only discovered when an Inuit trapper reported odd tracks on the far side of the mountains.

In desperation, the RCMP hired Wop May to help in the hunt by scouting the area from the air. He arrived in his new ski-equipped Bellanca monoplane on the 5th. On February 14 he discovered the trick Johnson had been using to elude his followers, when he noticed a set of footprints leading off the center of the Eagle River to the bank. Johnson had been following the caribou tracks in the middle of the river, where they walked in order to give them better visibility of approaching predators. Walking in their tracks hid his own footprints, and allowed him to travel quickly on the tramped-down snow without having to use his snowshoes. He only left the trail at night to make camp on the river bank, which is the track May had spotted. May radioed back his findings and the RCMP gave chase up the river, eventually being directed to Johnson by February 17.

The team rounded a bend in the river to find Johnson only a few hundred yards in front of them. Johnson attempted to run for the bank, but didn't have his snowshoes on and couldn't make it. A firefight broke out in which one RCMP officer was seriously wounded and Johnson was eventually killed after being shot nine times. May landed and flew the officer to help, being credited with saving his life.

An examination of Johnson's body yielded over two thousand dollars in both American and Canadian currency as well as some gold, a pocket compass, a razor, a knife, fish hooks, nails, a dead squirrel, and a dead bird. During the entire chase, the Mounties had never heard Johnson say a single word. To this day no one knows for certain who he was, why he moved to the Arctic, or if he was actually responsible for interfering with the trap lines as alleged.

Two relatively recent theories regarding Albert Johnson's identity have appeared in print. In the 1989 book "Trackdown" by Dick North, the mad trapper was identified as John Johnson from North Dakota. More recently, in the 2007 book "What Became of Sigvald Anyway" the mad trapper is identified as Sigvald Pedersen Haaskjold by Mark Fremmerlid. Other writers such as Frank Anderson, Helena Katz, and Thomas P. Kelley, have considered the case unsolved.

On August 11, 2007, a forensic team exhumed his body and conducted forensic tests on his remains before re-interning it. Forensic examination is now underway in an attempt to conclusively establish his true identity. Results of this testing will be released in conjunction with the documentary film being done for Discovery Channel by Myth Merchant Films

The event has been written about in a number of books, a song by Wilf Carter, as well as a fictionalized account that was later turned into the movie Death Hunt, starring Charles Bronson.



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Johnson_(criminal)
http://www.outdoorlife.com/outdoor/hunting/article/0,19912,1199031,00.html
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Albert-Johnson/18829183876
http://www.thecanadianencycloped ... arams=A1ARTA0004146
http://www.cst.ed.ac.uk/2005conference/papers/McCartney_paper.pdf
发表于 2008-9-25 06:25:32 | 显示全部楼层
也许 "遇神杀神,遇佛杀佛。 挡他者死。" 这句话得罪朋友了 。

对不起,我把它收回。
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