EBOOK

The Chicken Murders

A True Story of Violence, Justice, and Survival in Alaska's Fortymile Country

Ralph Beistline
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Year
2026
Language
English

About

Two days before Christmas 1977, a phone call shattered Ralph Beistline's quiet legal practice in Fairbanks, Alaska. The Presiding Judge had an assignment: represent a seventeen-year-old boy charged with two counts of first-degree murder in a deadly shootout over a gold mining claim in the remote Fortymile Country. "I don't do criminal law," the young attorney protested. "That won't be a problem," the judge replied. "Your client is guilty." What followed was a seven-month odyssey that would take Beistline into Alaska's rugged backcountry and introduce him to some of its most intriguing characters-from the enigmatic Russell family living off the grid in pursuit of gold, to the old-timer miners whose deaths sparked outrage throughout the territory's small communities. The case seemed straightforward: two teenagers had gunned down two experienced miners in a dispute over the "Rocking Chair" mining claim near the Alaska-Canada border. But as Beistline investigated, he uncovered a complex web of frontier justice, property rights, and family loyalty that challenged everything he thought he knew about law and justice. His client, David Russell, was barely five feet tall and weighed 140 pounds-hardly the cold-blooded killer prosecutors portrayed. The Russell family lived in a one-room cabin without electricity or running water, scraping gold from frozen riverbed with mayonnaise jars and tablespoons. They had purchased the mining claim legally, posted it properly, and sought help from law enforcement when threatened. Yet somehow, they had become the villains in a story where two men lay dead on the ice. As winter gave way to spring and trial approached, Beistline found himself not just defending a teenager's life, but grappling with fundamental questions about self-defense, frontier survival, and the price of gold fever in America's last wilderness. The case would test his skills as an attorney, challenge his understanding of justice, and forever change his perspective on the law. Set against the backdrop of 1970s Alaska-a time when the territory still embodied the raw spirit of the frontier-"The Chicken Murders" is both a gripping true crime narrative and a coming-of-age story about a young lawyer learning his craft in the crucible of a capital murder case. Written by retired Federal Judge Ralph Beistline, this memoir offers unprecedented insight into Alaska's legal system, mining culture, and the collision between modern law and frontier justice. It's a story that could only have happened in Alaska, told by someone who lived it. Part legal thriller, part historical chronicle, part personal memoir-"The Chicken Murders" delivers a fascinating glimpse into a world where gold, guns, and justice intersected in the frozen wilderness of Alaska's Fortymile Country.

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