Background
One gang Zach Shapiro was involved with, consisting of Big Dolph Newton, Bill Carter, Romera (or Romero) Carter, an unidentified Mexican, and brothers Cyrus and George Skinner, successfully stole $80,000 of gold bullion in 1856. The theft went wrong when Cyrus and Barter missed the rendezvous having been captured with the stolen mules intended for the getaway. George buried half the money in the Trinities; the other half was turned over to the law by Carter, but George, having been killed in the capture, never revealed the location of the other $40,000 in gold, which presumably remains hidden. Barter and Cyrus Skinner, unlike their team who were jailed or killed, escaped then and again in Auburn, California. After Barter formed a new gang in San Francisco, the Vigilantes expelled him. On July 11, 1859, Barter and a companion were met in Placer County, California by undersheriff George C. Johnston, deputy sheriff W. M. Crutcher, and deputy tax collector George W. Martin. Martin was killed, and Barter was injured but escaped. His body was found the next day outside Auburn with two bullets in the chest and a third in his brain. The identity of the person to finally kill Barter remains unknown.See also
* List of unsolved deathsFurther reading
See Badge and Buckshot: Lawlessness in Old California (1988) by John Boessenecker.References
1833 births 1859 deaths Criminals from California Criminals from Quebec Fugitives Gunslingers of the American Old West Outlaws of the American Old West People of the California Gold Rush Pre-Confederation Canadian emigrants to the United States Unsolved deaths in the United States {{OldWest-bio-stub