OLD COLD CASE
Horicon City Marshal William Gibson — Civil War veteran, father of four, a man his community trusted with their safety — was shot once, point-blank, on the steps of his own jailhouse, in front of his ten-year-old son.
The killer vanished into the dark Wisconsin night. Suspects were arrested across the state. Leads were chased down, and evidence was recovered. A reward climbed to two thousand dollars — the equivalent of sixty-five thousand dollars today.
There were arrests that went nowhere. A killer who slipped through the net and disappeared without a name. And then — seventeen years after the murder — a dying man in a Minneapolis hospital confessed to killing eleven men. He named one of them - Marshal William Gibson of Horicon.
This is a cold case more than a hundred and forty-four years old. And today, we’re going back in to pay tribute and honor the name of a fallen officer. We'll follow his timeline, from his arrival at the American House Hotel, to his day of heavy drinking, and his subsequent arrest by Marshal Gibson for public drunkenness.
We'll hear from the witnesses who gave depositions at the official inquiry. The Detectives who were brought in for the manhunt. The town on edge.
We'll learn about who William, or 'Bill', Gibson was as a man, an Irish immigrant with a dream and a duty.
We'll remember Marshal Gibson and his sacrifice. His Memorials here in Wisconsin and in Washington D.C.
This is the Old Cold Case, The Murder of Marshal William Gibson.