Jailing the Johnston Gang: Bringing Serial Murderers to… (2024)

Desiree Cooper

150 reviews4 followers

May 20, 2022

Not written well…it was interesting somewhat because I know the area, but I don’t think it would interest those who don’t know the area.

Gina

Author5 books28 followers

July 3, 2019

This book was not written by Ann Rule, and that's a pity.

The case is really interesting, but the telling isn't that interesting. Sometimes even when there is a detail that should be tantalizing and it just gets dropped.

I believe some of that is writing skill, and some of that is a chip on the shoulder of the various sources about how law enforcement isn't appreciated and how getting different groups (city, county, feds, prosecutors) to work together is usually really hard but not with them, and how much that movie sucked!

Yes, the case that inspired the book also inspired a movie, At Close Range, which the law side hated, feeling that it glorified the criminals. I disagree that it glorified them, but nonetheless, I think of a writer like Rule and how she talked to victims, perpetrators, and law enforcement and wove such rich and educational books, and feel the loss here. Especially, it feels like a big part of the issues is that Mowday simply isn't that interested in the humanity of the criminals, but he doesn't create really human portraits of the law enforcement side either, so maybe it's him.

Aaron

334 reviews6 followers

October 24, 2023

Disappointing true-crime suffers from a complete lack of characterization of the book's many adversaries. You get no diversity between outlaws, except the main rural crime bosses are older, one underling is crazy and has epilepsy, another is a "cold-stone killer." Meanwhile, others have flaws and/or sociopathic tendencies. The young victims are characterized for nothing, so you are better off watching the movie with Sean Penn just to see the clothing and haircuts. The merchandise and tractors stolen are more interesting than the criminals, and the grimy circles of thieves, the fences, the alibi-supplying family households, even the Pennsylvania/Delaware environments themselves of cheap bars and motels get no coloration. There are a lot of names dropped re: law enforcement but here there's no characterization, as well. You learn about the crimes but get no sense of the people.

Amber

61 reviews

December 7, 2023

This true crime story is fascinating. However, the author was not it for me. He inserted himself into the story but wrote about himself in third person. He even quoted himself! I couldn't get past it.

This is a true case where I live and some of it occurred when I was a child yet I had never heard of it! It's about a group of people, mostly related (hello Cecil County!) who were a very sophisticated crime group but weren't taken seriously at first because they stole farm equipment and resold it on the black market. Then there were a series of murders they committed and that is what got the FBI and higher law enforcement attention.

Due to the terrible writing of this book, I would really only recommend this for people who are truly interested in this case or local to the area. I wish Ann Rule or someone great was able to cover this case and do it justice.

February 1, 2023

I grew up in Chester, Lancaster, and Cecil counties. I heard a lot about the Johnston Gang growing up in that area. I was in high school and working in Nottingham when Norman Johnston escaped from prison and everyone was on high alert, helicopters flying over, etc. I read this book because I wanted to learn more about the gang, and not just the At Close Range movie version. I did learn more, but it was not easy. This book is not well written, it is not easy to read and there are grammatical issues that should've been caught during the editing process. If you're familiar with the story and want to learn more, then I'd say give this a read. But, if you aren't, I do not recommend this as a way to familiarize yourself.

Evan Thrash

2 reviews

June 10, 2024

The topic is fascinating, especially if you are from Chester County area. The scale of the Johnston Gang’s influence was surprising. Where the booked was lacking was the writing. The book read almost like a textbook just giving information not selling the story of the events that happened. In no ways is this a “bad book” but I thought the author could have done a better job of telling the story without all the quotes from the people involved in the case. He could have told the story more from his point of view.

Scott Gundaker

111 reviews

January 8, 2023

After living and working in Chester County, PA and Cecil County, MD most of my adult life and hearing so many stories of this gang the book brought alot of detail. As well as watching the movie many times the book definitely tells so much more.

Sally Winterton

47 reviews1 follower

October 20, 2023

Bruce Mowday shares the story of the Johnston Gang. A recent prison escape in the same area piqued my interest in reading his account, as it was mentioned often during the two weeks the county was plagued with the search.

Jflorek

36 reviews1 follower

February 11, 2024

Describes the crimes of the infamous Johnston brother made famous in the movie At Close Range, starring Sean Penn.

Chad

40 reviews4 followers

August 27, 2010

My father passed on a copy of this to me that he had borrowed from my uncle. The subject matter was very interesting to them and to me, because the Johnston gang were based on the border of Chester and Lancaster counties in Pennsylvania, where I grew up. Although the only part of the story that takes place during my lifetime was an escape from prison, many of the locations discussed in the book are ones that I have visited or at least driven past many times. To discover that such a ruthless, Cosa Nostra-like organization operated in farm country.

Unfortunately, I cannot recommend the book to someone who does not have local connections. The author, Bruce Mowday, is a local newspaperman who covered the story back when it was occurring. He writes the entire 252 page book as if it were a newspaper article and needs to present just the facts, in as few words as possible, and in a manner comprehensible to someone at a sixth grade reading level. I do not expect that nonfiction be written like literature, but this book has no sense of style at all. Mr. Mowday is most concerned with demonstrating the effectiveness of cooperation between multiple law enforcement organizations, but this means that there are scores of characters: three criminal masterminds, more than a dozen associates, several fences, multiple victims, FBI officers, Pennsylvania state troopers, Maryland state troopers, local policemen and sheriffs from multiple local jurisdictions, attorneys representing the nation, state, and counties, multiple judges, at least half a dozen defense attorneys, several reporters, and myriad witnesses. Keeping track of their individual identities is impossible.

Amerynth

822 reviews25 followers

February 25, 2015

A few years back I saw a movie loosely based on the Johnston Gang murders and I become curious about the real story behind the case. I found little information on the subject aside from Bruce Mowday's book "Jailing the Johnston Gang: Bringing Serial Murderers to Justice."

Unfortunately, the book is hardly readable. Mowday is determined to basically list everyone who was interviewed about the gang (along with where they live) and mention every police officer involved in the case by name. The book is extremely repetitive and does not tell the story in a way that someone with no knowledge of the case could follow.

I found the book so difficult to read that I gave up without finishing it.

    crime nonfiction read-2015

Gwen Greer

3 reviews

January 17, 2016

Having lived in southern Pa all my life , back in the 70's this family was in the local news weekly. And I remember well the night Robin Miller and Bruce Jr were ambushed and shot. If anyone has seen the movie At Close Range based upon this book it certainly does not do the book justice, which happens with most made for TV movies based on a book. The movie shed some light onto the Johnston family, but if you want the real story read this book. Excellent in depth read with photos.

Tara

4 reviews1 follower

August 10, 2015

The details are very interesting, I just felt like the book jumped around a lot. It is more a telling of the facts than the story start to finish. The facts of one crime may be repeated three different times throughout the book for example. However it is overall a very interesting gang and it was local for me that is why I read it.

Missy McNaney

23 reviews1 follower

December 18, 2016

Having grown up in Kennett Square when the Johnston Brothers and their gang burglarized, assaulted, threatened and killed as many as 10 people, this account of their eventual capture and imprisonment brought back many memories for me, especially the ambush and killing of two Kennet Square police officers in Nov 1972. I recommend thus book to any Chester County native.

Martha

41 reviews

August 7, 2011

I enjoyed this - saw the author speak about it. It's about local bad guys (Chester County) which held the interest for me. Good story, but toooo many names to keep up with - think it might have been better told in a sequence that was easier to follow.

Ronnie Cramer

1,032 reviews27 followers

December 13, 2015

This book about the 1970s prosecution of a Pennsylvania crime family is long on police PR and short on detail. Since it's only about the last days of the gang, reading it feels like you've walked into the theater when the movie's almost over.

Karen

Author6 books52 followers

February 21, 2018

A little less journalism and a little more story telling and this would have been a great book. It's obvious that the author wanted to get all the facts straight, but almost any reader would get a little bit lost in this book.

    pennsylvania-books true-crime

Gary

7 reviews

July 15, 2012

Good history of the Family and area of the crimes

Lenny

401 reviews6 followers

May 16, 2013

Good accounting of the trial and exploits of the Johnston's. Not the family you would want to live next door to.

Jailing the Johnston Gang: Bringing Serial Murderers to… (2024)

FAQs

Who were the Johnston Brothers killers? ›

Led by Bruce Johnston Sr., along with his brothers David and Norman, the clan—often referred to as a rural mafia—terrorized Chester County throughout the 1970s. What started as petty thievery grew into grand theft auto, breaking into homes, stealing farm equipment and selling it for profit, and murder.

Who are the victims of the Johnston gang? ›

Bruce was convicted of the murders of Gary Crouch, James Johnston, James Sampson, Robin Miller, Wayne Sampson, and Duane Lincoln and for the attempted murder of Bruce Jr. He received six consecutive life sentences.

What was the movie about the Johnston gang? ›

At Close Range is a 1986 American neo-noir crime drama film directed by James Foley from a screenplay written by Nicholas Kazan, based on the real life rural Pennsylvania crime family led by Bruce Johnston Sr.

What serial killers had a twin? ›

Robert Bruce Spahalski and Stephen Spahalski were identical twins. Same hair, same eyes, same thirst for blood. Stephen was the first brother to kill--by viciously bashing in storeowner Ronald Ripley's head with a hammer. Unlike Stephen, Robert didn't stop with just one victim.

How accurate is the movie At Close Range? ›

The main story is based on the real life story of killer Bruce Johnson. With the accepting of the character's names being changed, the film features an accurate interpretation of events.

What happened to the Johnson gang? ›

Richard "Chad" Johnson and Daniel O'Loughlin, were both jailed for 11 years; Michael Nicholls was given 10 years; Albi Johnson, aged 25, was jailed for nine years; and Ricky Johnson was given eight years. Despite the convictions, antiques worth tens of millions of pounds have yet to be recovered.

Who were the real people behind At Close Range? ›

The rule and downfall of the Johnston Gang is masterfully recorded in the classic movie, starring Christopher Walken and Sean Penn. Read more about the family that inspired the movie in The Cinemaholic. The Johnston Gang - The Real At Close Range and the murder of Robin Miller.

Where did the Johnston gang live? ›

The Johnston brothers started their criminal activities in the 1970s in surrounding areas of Chester County, PA. More specifically they originated in the Kennett Square, Oxford area.

What is the Netflix show about the gangster brothers? ›

When a mysterious enemy targets his family, a Taipei triad member heads to Los Angeles to protect his strong-willed mother and oblivious younger brother. “When you're living as a gangster, you can never truly relax,” say the creators.

Is there any truth to the movie gangster Squad? ›

Although the film is inspired by the real-life LAPD Gangster Squad, much of it is fabricated.

Who were the Johnston clan enemies? ›

The Clan Johnstone also had a long feud with the Clan Moffat who were another Scottish border clan who were raiders and reivers, and conducted long-running feuds with their neighbours. Their greatest enemies were the Clan Johnstone. The feud climaxed with murder of the Clan Moffat chief in 1557, Robert Moffat.

Who are the three black brothers serial killers? ›

Linwood Earl Briley, James Dyral “J. B.” Briley Jr., and Anthony Ray Briley were a sibling trio of serial/spree killers, rapists, and robbers who were responsible for a murder, rape, and robbery spree that took place in Richmond, Virginia, in 1979. James Dyral Briley Jr.

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