"Daly Gang"@en . . . . "50837034"^^ . . . . . . . . . "7853"^^ . . . . . "1088997644"^^ . . . . . . "The Daly Gang was a notorious, though now unknown, bandit gang who operated in Aurora, Nevada and its neighboring parts. The gang was named after its leader John Daly but was masterminded by a boss only known as \u201CThree-Fingered\u201D Jack McDowell. The gang terrorized Aurora and was infamous for their armed robberies and shootouts. They were also known for their violent treatment of their victims and anyone who resisted their robbery. The gang is now considered by historians as one of the most underrated and violent gangs in the Old West."@en . . "While the first paragraph appears to summarizes the article, it is unclear whether it is intended as a lead section or is part of the rest of the article because there is no section heading to divide it from the body of the article."@en . . . . . . . . . . "May 2022"@en . "The Daly Gang was a notorious, though now unknown, bandit gang who operated in Aurora, Nevada and its neighboring parts. The gang was named after its leader John Daly but was masterminded by a boss only known as \u201CThree-Fingered\u201D Jack McDowell. The gang terrorized Aurora and was infamous for their armed robberies and shootouts. They were also known for their violent treatment of their victims and anyone who resisted their robbery. The gang is now considered by historians as one of the most underrated and violent gangs in the Old West. For 25 years the gang committed their crimes with little to no interference from the law. To make matters worse for the people of Aurora, many members of the gang, including John Daly, became City Marshals in the Fall of 1863. A year later, the local newspaper Esmeralda Star is quoted with saying \"No sooner had the Marshal been sworn in than the worst villains that ever infested a civilized community were appointed policemen, and with but few exceptions they were composed of as hard a set if criminals ever went unhung.\" Any witnesses of their crimes were threatened and scared away. But on February 1, 1864, their murder of a man named William R. Johnson gained national attention which finally infuriated many of the settlers in the city. Johnson had previously killed a Daly Gang member named Jim Sears when the latter tried to steal his horse. The Daly Gang retaliated by capturing Johnson, and afterwards either shot him or slit his throat. Some accounts say that the gang also set his body on fire. After the murder of Johnson, many got fed up of the Daly Gang, and they formed a vigilante group of over 600 men. They captured many members of the gang including Daly and McDowell in their hideout in the Aurora Saloon. They were then locked up in a makeshift prison, and after their drumhead trials, were subsequently hanged outside Armory Hall. This action angered Governor James W. Nye so much that two days later he headed for Aurora with a Provost Marshal Van Bokkelen and United States Marshal Wasson and was going to call out the troops from Fort Churchill to put down the vigilantes. After the Marshal looked into the facts, no action was taken against the \"Citizen Safety Committee.\""@en . .