CANADA Canada - “Albert Johnson”, "Mad Trapper of Rat River" killed in an Arctic shootout, Feb 1932

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WARNING: GRAPHIC / POST MORTEM PICTURES INCLUDED BELOW


Albert Johnson, known as the "Mad Trapper of Rat River" was killed in a shoot out with Royal Canadian Mounties on 17 February 1932.

His story is one of Yukon frontier lore. In 1981, the story was made into a movie titled "Death Hunt" with Lee Marvin and Charles Bronson playing the lead roles. But just who was he? The story of the search for his identity is just as fascinating.

The story began on July 9th, 1931, in the Northwest Territories when a stranger arrived in Fort McPherson. Constable Edgar Millen of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police routinely questioned the newcomer who identified himself as ‘Albert Johnson’ but provided no other personal information. Millen satisfied his responsibility to ensure Johnson was equipped for survival in a frontier land with sufficient money and supplies but thought it odd that Johnson declined to buy a trapping license. He noted Johnson was slight of stature, clean in appearance, and spoke with a Scandinavian accent.



Albert Johnson ventured far into the McKenzie Delta and built a small, log cabin on the banks of the Rat River where he lived as a recluse. Come the winter, local natives found their traps being raided and concluded the only suspect was Albert Johnson. They complained to the RCMP in Aklavik, causing two Mounties to dog-sled 60 miles through waist-deep snow, arriving at Johnson’s cabin on December 26th, 1931. Johnson was there but refused to speak, forcing the police to return to Aklavik and get a search warrant.

On December 31st four Mounties returned to Rat River. As they attempted to force into Albert Johnson’s shack, he shot at them with a 30-30 Savage rifle, seriously wounding a constable. The police retreated to form a larger posse.
They came back with nine, heavily-armed men, forty-two dogs, and twenty pounds of dynamite. Johnson again opened fire, causing the police to hurl in explosives which blew the cabin apart. Rather than himself also being in pieces, Johnson emerged from a foxhole under the cabin and blasted back with his rifle. A 14-hour standoff, in -40F temperatures, took place until the posse backed-off to Aklavik for more help.

A severe blizzard delayed the return, but on January 14th, 1932, a huge squad of police and civilians arrived to find Albert Johnson long gone. The pursuers caught up with Johnson two weeks later far up the Rat River where Johnson opened fire from a thicket of trees on the bank and shot Constable Edgar Millen dead. Again the police retreated.

By now the news of the manhunt had reached the outer world through an emerging medium called radio. Listeners all over Canada, the United States, and the world, were fixed to their sets to hear the latest on the cat and mouse game between a lone, deranged bushman and the might of the famed Canadian Mounties who ‘always got their man’. It was like the OJ Simpson case of the time.

The ‘Arctic Circle War’ represented the end of one era and the beginning of another as the police turned to technology to capture Albert Johnson. They embedded radio into another new tactic – the airplane. World War One flying ace W.R. ‘Wop’ May and his Bellanca monoplane were hired to find Johnson from the air and radio his position to the dogsled and snowshoe team on the ground.

On February 14, May spotted Johnson on the Eagle River in the Yukon Territory, confirming Johnson had traveled an incredible 150 miles, crossing a 7,000-foot mountain pass in white-out conditions, in temperatures with wind chill hitting 60 below Fahrenheit. He’d eluded his trackers by wearing snowshoes backward and mingling with migrating caribou herds.

The police overtook Johnson on a river bend on February 17th, 1932. It ended in a mass of bullets leaving another Mountie seriously wounded and Albert Johnson, the Mad Trapper of Rat River, dead on the snow.

They sledded Johnson’s body back to Aklavik where it was examined, fingerprinted, and photographed. Remarkably, dental examination showed sophisticated, gold bridgework which indicated this man, age estimated at 35 – 40, came from an affluent background. In his effects was $2,410 in Canadian money (worth $34,000 today) but absolutely no documents on his identification. An extensive investigation ensued to find his true identity. His death photos and description were circulated word wide, causing some leads to come in, but nothing definite. No one came forward to claim the body and ‘Albert Johnson’ was buried in a perma-frost grave near the village of Aklavik... much more at the link below.


Albert Johnson's equipment.


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LINK:

WHO WAS THE MAD TRAPPER OF RAT RIVER? - Dying Words

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Here are a few of the DNA "rule outs" that were considered possible identity matches for "Albert Johnson":

Arthur Nelson
, a prospector who was known to be in British Columbia from 1927 to 1931 and had left for the Arctic. Photos of Nelson appeared to be a dead-ringer for ‘Albert Johnson’ and descriptions of Nelson’s effects (rifle, pack, and clothing) were identical to those recovered from Johnson.

John Johnson
, a Norwegian bank robber who’d done time in Folsom Prison. Again, the physical description was similar and the Scandinavian accent noted by Constable Millen seemed to fit.

The Johnson family of Nova Scotia identified the Mad Trapper as their lost relative, Owen Albert Johnson, who was last heard of in British Columbia in the late 1920’s. Again all the pieces fit – physical appearance, personal effects, and disposition.

Sigvald Pedersen Haaskjold
was suggested as being the real ‘Albert Johnson’. Haaskjold, who was last seen in northern British Columbia in 1927, was a recluse who was paranoid of authorities because he’d evaded conscription in the First World War. He’d built a fortress-like cabin near Prince Rupert before disappearing. Once more the looks, age, accent, and mentality fit the Trapper’s profile.

All of the above Missing Persons were ruled out by DNA testing, as being a match to the body of "Albert Johnson".

Questions remain. Who was Albert Johnson? What became of all the other missing men?
 
3362UMYT_LARGE.jpg

Facial reconstruction by Andrea Stevenson

"ALBERT JOHNSON"

Date of Discovery: February 17, 1932
Location of Discovery: Eagle River, Yukon Territory, Canada
Date of Death: February 17, 1932
State of Remains: Recognizable
Cause of Death: Gunshot wound

Description
Age Range:
30-45 (est.)
Sex: Male
Race: White
Height: 5'9" - 5'10"
Weight: 150-175 lbs.
Hair: Brown
Eyes: Blue

Distinguishing Characteristics / Identifying Features
He spoke with a slight Scandinavian accent, had scoliosis, or some other curvature to the spine that would have caused back pain, and "very sophisticated dental work" was observed which could've indicated upper socioeconomic status, including gold and "tooth-colored" fillings and a gold bridge. One of his feet was longer than the other. Isotope testing of the teeth suggest that he grew up or lived in the northern US or possibly a Scandinavian country.

Dentals: Available
Fingerprints: Available
DNA: Available

Clothing & Personal Items
It is unknown what type of clothing he was found wearing. There were numerous personal effects discovered nearby. He had 32 kidney pills with him, as well as a substantial amount of money: $2,410 dollars in both Canadian and US currencies, all in large bills, that would be worth approximately $60,000 today. Also found near the body were two glass jars, one containing five pearls, and the other containing seven gold pieces of dental work. There were strangely two pieces of gold bridgework (determined not to be his) nearby as well as gold dust. There was also a pair of snowshoes and a pack discovered containing the following items: a razor, a comb, a mirror, a needle, a thread, a rag described as "oily," fishhooks, wax, matches, nails, an axe, a pocket compass, 119 shells, and a knife made from an old trap spring. These items were all neatly stored in (presumably) hand-sewn moose hide cases. He had some weapons with him as well: a .22 Winchester rifle, a model 99 Savage, a .30-30 rifle, 39 .30-30 ammunition shells, 84 .22 shells, and four shotgun shells.

Circumstances
In the summer of 1931, a man calling himself "Albert Johnson" traveled to the northern Canadian wilderness and built a log cabin at Rat River, in the MacKenzie Delta region of the Northwest Territories. On December 26, 1931, the RCMP attempted to visit him at the cabin to investigate some complaints that had been made about him - specifically, that he had been poaching traplines. Met with resistance, they returned with a search warrant, but were shot at by Johnson and one of the RCMP officers was wounded on this occasion. On a subsequent visit, RCMP engaged Johnson in a standoff, and blew up his cabin with dynamite - but Johnson escaped, setting off a 7-week manhunt over 150 miles of snowy, mountainous terrain in minus-50 to 60 degrees Celsius temperatures. Two other officers were injured, and another killed, before Johnson himself was fatally shot by RCMP on February 17, 1932. An autopsy was performed, establishing the cause of death as a fatal gunshot wound, and he was then buried in an Aklavik cemetery. In 2007, his remains were exhumed and DNA retrieved in order to positively identify him.

His true identity is unknown nearly a century later, and he has been dubbed "The Mad Trapper."

Investigating Agency(s)
Royal Canadian Mounted Police - Yukon Headquarters
4100 4th Avenue
Whitehorse, YT Y1A 1H5
Phone: 867-667-5555
E-Mail: CanadasMissing-DisparusCanada@rcmp-grc.gc.ca

Source(s)
3362UMYT
 
The movie "Death Hunt" (1981), starring Charles Bronson and Lee Marvin was based on the story of Albert Johnson.


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Story line - Canada 1931: The unsociable trapper Johnson lives for himself in the ice-cold mountains near the Yukon river. During a visit in the town he witnesses a dog-fight. He interrupts the game and buys one of the dogs - almost dead already - for $200 against the owner's will. When the owner Hasel complains to Mountie Sergeant Millen, he refuses to take action. But then the loathing breeder and his friends accuse Johnson of murder. So Millen, although sympathetic, has to try to take him under arrest - but Johnson defends his freedom in every way possible.

- Although based on a true story, the film was heavily criticized by Canadian historians for getting many historical facts and characterizations wrong.

- Charles Bronson has less than fifty words of dialogue in this film, since he spends most of it running through the snow on his own pursued by the Mounties, but it is still one of his better films from the late seventies and early eighties era.

- He plays the real life character Albert Johnson, a fur trapper who killed some people in a dispute over dogs and went on the run in territory which had never been crossed during the ferocious Arctic winter. He successfully got away from them, despite the fact that they had many men, dogs and even an aeroplane to help them to track him down...

LINK:

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082247/
 
I didn't see a thread for this one, so creating one for this legendary Canadian case from the Canadian Arctic. @othram and a film company (who produced a documentary on his exhumation around 10 years ago) have been working over the past few years on this case. Some links below.

Who is the Mad Trapper of Rat River?

In 2007, Myth Merchant Films of Alberta Canada secured permission for a team of forensic experts to exhume the body of the Mad Trapper in order to conduct a thorough examination of the remains and retrieve DNA samples to finally determine his true identity. The team of world class experts included Dr. David Sweet, Dr. Owen Beattie, Dr. Lynne Bell, Dr. Sam Andrews and John Evans of the Canadian Police Research Centre.

Examination of the Mad Trapper’s remains revealed several important insights: (1) he was approximately 30-40 years of age, (2) he suffered from scoliosis, (3) the shot that killed him entered the lower back, (4) he had undergone sophisticated and expensive dental work for the period, and (5) results of oxygen isotope tests conducted suggested he spent his youth in the American Midwest.

The retrieval of the Trapper’s DNA has enabled genetic comparisons to possible relatives. There have been comparisons made with more than two-dozen families, with strong circumstantial evidence the fugitive was a family member, and yet, to date no close relatives have been identified. Last year, Othram joined the hunt to identify the Mad Trapper. Starting from exhumed remains, the Othram team leveraged Forensic-Grade Genome Sequencing® to develop a comprehensive genealogical profile for the Mad Trapper. Recent biogeographical analysis has determined his background is Swedish. We now know the Trapper is linked to multiple descendants of Gustaf Magnusson (1776 - 1853) and Britta Svensdotter (1781 - 1846). Further analysis suggests that the Mad Trapper is their descendant, or he is the descendant of one of their close relatives. Furthermore, many of his genetic matches trace their ancestry to the towns of Hånger, Kävsjö, and Kulltorp in Sweden.


Whitehorse Daily Star: A most bizarre case The Mad Trapper of Rat River

Albert Johnson, “The Mad Trapper of Rat River” | The Canadian Encyclopedia

Albert Johnson (criminal) - Wikipedia

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/mad-trapper-not-a-canadian-scientific-tests-discover-1.862436

Warning: Postmortem photos at links.
 
Here’s the link to a Swedish genealogy site that traced all 11 children of the shared ancestor of TMT’s cousin matches. There doesn’t appear to be any good candidates so Gustav and Brittany probably aren’t his ancestors but one might just be another cousin. Unfortunately the trees don’t go back much further than the mid 1700s.

Gustaf Magnusson & Britta Svensdotter | Anbytarforum
 

Unknown Trapper "Albert Johnson"


Savage model 99 rifle like the one carried by "Albert Johnson"

Location:
Eagle River, Yukon, Canada
Date of Death: February 17, 1932
State of Remains: Recognizable
Cause of Death: Gun shot wound

Physical Description
Estimated Age: 30-45 years old
Race: white
Sex: Male
Height: 5'9" to 5'10"
Weight: 150 to 175 lbs.
Hair Color: brown
Eye Color: blue
Distinguishing Marks/Features: He had a slight Scandinavian accent, scoliosis, or a curvature to the spine, that would have caused back pain, "very sophisticated dental work" that indicated "an upper socio-economic situation" including tooth-colored and gold fillings and a gold bridge. One of his feet was longer than the other. Isotopes in Johnson's teeth suggest he was from the northern United States or a Scandinavian country

Identifiers
Dentals: Available
Fingerprints: Available
DNA: Available

Clothing & Personal Items
Clothing: Unknown
Jewelry: Unknown
Additional Personal Items: 32 kidney pills, $2,410 dollars in large bills, both Canadian and American (worth approximately $60,000 today); two glass jars, one containing five pearls, and the other, seven gold pieces of dental work.

He was also found with a pair of snowshoes, a .22 Winchester rifle, a model 99 Savage, a .30-30 rifle, 39 .30-30 ammunition shells, 84 .22 shells and four shotgun shells.

The contents of his pack: razor, comb, mirror, needle, thread, oily rag, fishhooks, wax, matches, nails, axe, pocket compass, 119 shells, a knife made from an old trap spring—all in neatly sewn moosehide cases; five freshwater pearls, some gold dust, $2,410 in bills, and two pieces of gold bridgework, not his own.

Circumstances of Discovery
Albert Johnson (name thought to be an alias) and now dubbed "The Mad Trapper," came to Northern Canada and built a log cabin at Rat River in the Mackenzie Delta region of the Northwest Territories in the summer of 1931. On December 26, 1931, RCMP attended his cabin to investigate complaints made about him that he was poaching trap lines. Met with resistance, RCMP returned with a search warrant at which time, Johnson shot and wounded one of the RCMP officers.

On another subsequent visit, there was a standoff and Johnson escaped after police blew up his cabin with dynamite. This started a 7-week chase over 150 miles of snowy mountainous terrain in -50 to -60 degrees Celsius temperatures. Two more RCMP officers were injured and another was killed before Johnson himself was shot and killed by RCMP on February 17, 1932. An autopsy was done and he was buried in an Aklavik cemetery. In 2007, his remains were exhumed and DNA retrieved.

Investigating Agency(s)
Agency Name: RCMP
Agency Contact Person: Unknown
Agency Phone Number: Unknown
Agency E-Mail: CanadasMissing-DisparusCanada@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
Agency Case Number: Unknown

NCIC Case Number: N/A
NamUs Case Number: N/A
Former Hot Case Number: N/A

Information Source(s)
Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Legion Magazine
Maclean's
The Mad Trapper Story
The Globe and Mail Published May 12, 2009
The Mad Trapper, Pure History Specials Arctic Manhunt Documentary Mystery
The Canadian Encyclopedia
The Mad Trapper: Unearthing a Mystery By Barbara Smith
Radio Canada International
WHO WAS THE MAD TRAPPER OF RAT RIVER? - Dying Words
3362UMYT
Case%20Number.jpg

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Did you read the comments in the last link? Dying Words is doing Y-chromosome testing on Trapper familial candidates and is now on his second familial DNA test of his latest candidate.
 
What can be gathered, from the comments on the Dying Words blog linked above, is that a former RCMP coroner, Garry Rodgers, is conducting his own DNA testing on candidates, and he's using Y-chromosome testing, which is male DNA on male descendants or male-line only male cousins/uncles.

I was wondering why he was going with male DNA. It's more expensive and restrictive. Why not just put a relative of the candidate, with a family tree, in a DNA database that can be accessed by people like Othram or put his or her DNA in Ancestry, if it isn't there already, and find all the trees to compare with the Othram findings?

I take it it's because male DNA is handed down virtually identical so you get a more reliable match, almost 100% if not 100% which Law Enforcement looks for.
 
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What can be gathered, from the comments on the Dying Words blog linked above, is that a former RCMP coroner, Garry Rodgers, is conducting his own DNA testing on candidates, and he's using Y-chromosome testing, which is male DNA on male descendants or male-line only male cousins/uncles.

I was wondering why he was going with male DNA. It's more expensive and restrictive. Why not just put a relative of the candidate, with a family tree, in a DNA database that can be accessed by people like Othram or put his or her DNA in Ancestry, if it isn't there already, and find all the trees to compare with the Othram findings?

I take it it's because male DNA is handed down virtually identical so you get a more reliable match, almost 100% if not 100% which Law Enforcement looks for.
Good point. If you want to help identify him, best bet is to you add your autosomal DNA profile to a genealogical database that works with law enforcement search.
 
I believe he's working on behalf of the RCMP, rather than with the production company that exhumed the body. Law Enforcement, I don't think, ever announces an ID on a criminal matter when the suspect is developed solely from a cousin equivalent match like the one you developed on TMT, no matter how good a case they end up building on the suspect.

As you know, when IDing a criminal through familial DNA, they find the suspect and get his DNA to compare directly to the DNA from the bodily fluids or skin cells or hair etc. from the crime scene to get a 100% match to the DNA profile. You can't do that in this case because it's a John Doe case, not an UNSUB. So Law Enforcement might find the needle in the family haystack that comes from a positive familial result, but just sit on it.

I'm not sure Y-chromosome testing overcomes this problem. Wouldn't mitochondrial be better as there's always a chance of questionable paternity?
 
I guess paternity issues regarding Y-chromosome testing only matters with false negatives. A positive is a positive not a false positive due to illegitimacy and therefore unrelatedness.
 
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