Arctic Manhunt: Hunt for the Mad Trapper

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2024-04-23に共有
In 1931, a stranger in the Canadian Arctic went on a murder and theft spree. His manhunt was a media circus.

コメント (21)
  • The Mad Trapper would be considered a 1% er, even amongst Elite Force Russian/Siberian soldiers. To stay ahead of fully-provisioned local trackers, their dogs and the Cops and then...to climb over the Ice Mountain after all that. Even the local-born trackers could not follow him. That's God-level stuff. ( remembering that he had just about nothing to eat.) ==== Truly incredible, knowing that fully-equipped modern-day mountaineers STILL cannot do it. And he did it during an Arctic Storm. Absolutely mind-blowing.....1 man in 2 million stuff. No way, he was a city boy. The expensive dental work makes me think that he was a hard-core miner that struck it big, in his past and spent a lot of money on his mouth. Which leaves the last intriguing question..... WHAT scared this Superman enough to make him flee to Alaska ???? He certainly wasn't someone who seemed scared of anything, judging by his actions.
  • @tazman8271
    Outstanding production. Been following this story for many years. I hope they do the "Familial DNA" and work it that way.
  • @MarkBambro
    "Mad Trapper" he wasn't until they "pestered" him. He just wanted to live alone they started the fight.
  • In life, all he wanted was to be left alone and now, even in death, they can’t let him be!
  • @annazaman9657
    As of 2021 they have found ancestors in Sweden. Only a matter of time when he's identified
  • @Rick-ve6yp
    There's 2 things I feel should have been included in the fantastic story of the "Mad Trapper". First is the way that Albert wore his snow shoes backward to confound the posse. The other is the contribution of Wop May and his flight from Edmonton to track the man.
  • @pedenmk
    This is the best documentary I've seen in a while. Thanks for sharing.
  • This is amazing. I read the book mad trapper of rat river when I was 15 yrs old. I’m now 56 and I stumbled upon this video and the moment I saw the title I remembered that book and the effect it had on me. I gained my thirst of reading from stories like this one and I find it incredible that 40 odd years later I’m still learning more about that event all those years ago and love the fact others have the same curiosity and passion for what happened back then.
  • 41:12 What both impresses and confounds me is his arctic survival skills. You don’t learn those skills by trial and error. He had to have prior or a lifetime upbringing in winter conditions . He did not learn those skills as a Chicago gangster.
  • @Watson1
    Why spoil a good documentary with the loud music, making it hard to understand what is being said. So many videos are doing the same thing. Very annoying.
  • @johngray8606
    There was a movie made about this man. Starring Charles' Bronson and Lee Marvin. " Death Hunt "
  • @helenglos5744
    Thanks for sharing this. It's such an interesting documentary - well done 🙂
  • A corn fed Scandavian able to survive extremely cold weather.
  • if they are able to find his family... will the family recieve the $2400 dollars the trapper had on his person when killed ?
  • My grandfather died for more than 3 decades already. When my grandmother died 16 years after he died, we exhumed my grandpa's remains to use his grave for his wife and all we get are fragments of his skull and the pair of his leg bones.
  • @bobsaenz5840
    Lee Marvin and Charles Bronson were in a movie about the Mad Trapper. Marvin was the RCMP Sergeant and Bronson was the suspected trapper.
  • @JBo77
    No mobster but definitely a military man.
  • @katr8756
    The trapper was a crack shot!! Wow!! And hard tough man!
  • Did they ever prove he was stealing from traps? The bunker he built was impressive. Did he know something was going to happen? I think it's sad that he wanted to be left alone but was hunted and shot. By God he gave them a run for their money!