The Imposters
Let’s get the issue of imposters out of the way quickly. Brushy Bill Roberts, who died in 1950, claimed that he was the Kid. However, he was unable to remember important events in Billy’s life such as the Lincoln prison escape, he didn’t really look like the outlaw, he was illiterate while the Kid wasn’t and finally, his birth date was recorded in his family Bible as 1879.
John Miller, an Arizona man, also claimed he was the outlaw. There are also suggestions that Billy and Garrett were friends and planned the whole incident so the fugitive could escape. There is little or no evidence to back up any of these claims.
Inconsistent Testimonies
What is far more relevant to the case is the issue of discrepancy in the testimonies of Garrett, Poe, the coroner and several other people. For instance, Poe does not remember the significant incident at the peach orchard. After the shooting, Garrett claimed the Kid had a .41 caliber pistol in his hand, Poe said it was a .38 caliber. Furthermore, several of Billy’s friends say he only had a knife and not a gun. Garrett claims that he stayed in Maxwell’s house with his men for the entire night. However, Poe and several other people say they moved the body quickly, dressed it and prepared it for a wake.
One of the residents of Fort Sumner, ‘Paco’ Anaya, wrote that after the shooting, Garrett handed a piece of paper to Alejandro Segura, the Justice of the Peace. He had already written down the jury’s ‘verdict’ and asked Segura, Anaya and the rest of the jury to sign it. The report said: “We, the jury, find that Billy the Kid (met) his death by a bullet which was fired from a gun in the hands of Pat F. Garrett.” Garrett apparently lost the verdict by the next morning. However, there is no other evidence of this; we are relying on Anaya’s word alone for the entire existence of the jury and its verdict.
In the aftermath of the apparent shooting, numerous people claimed to have met the Kid. For example, a Mrs. Wood of Seven Rivers said she served the outlaw dinner three days after he was supposed to have died. There were at least 26 newspaper articles written that claimed Billy was still alive after July 14, 1881. During an interview in 1983, Pat Garrett’s last surviving daughter, Elizabeth, claimed that her father did not kill the Kid.
Overall, there are a huge number of unanswered questions. For example, Billy was extremely naïve on the night in question. An experienced outlaw (even at a tender age) would surely have recognized two deputies standing on the porch. He also wouldn’t have backed into a darkened doorway where more danger possibly lurked. There are different accounts regarding the tip-off that brought the lawmen to Fort Sumner, the encounter at the orchard, and the moments before and after the shooting.
Although the incident happened well over a century ago, it remains an intriguing mystery. Did Pat Garrett kill Billy the Kid as per the official tale? If not, did someone else shoot the outlaw? Perhaps he killed an innocent man as the fugitive escaped and fled to Mexico? Whatever happened, the answer will probably remain a secret forever.
Sources For Further Reading:
History Channel – 9 Things You May Not Know About Billy the Kid
History Channel – Billy the Kid Convicted of Murder
History Collection – Billy the Kid Is Arrested for the First Time (1875)
US Marshal Service – How Much Did It Cost to Find Billy the Kid?
El Paso Times – 1934: Pistol That Killed Billy the Kid Will Be Returned to Garrett’s Widow
CNN – A Pardon for The Notorious Billy the Kid?
The Washington Post – One Man’s Quest to Bury the Wild West Mystery of Billy the Kid’s Death