A woman with a gun. A federal conviction. A sentence the system could not sustain.
In 1899, Pearl Hart took part in one of the last stagecoach robberies in the American West. The crime was brief, poorly planned, and quickly punished. What followed was not.
Convicted under federal law and sent to Yuma Territorial Prison, Hart became an administrative problem the justice system had not prepared for: a notorious female offender confined inside an institution built for men. Within months, the punishment imposed with public certainty began to unravel behind the scenes.
The Stagecoach Robbery is a fact-based historical true crime study of Pearl Hart’s case-not as folklore, but as institutional history. Drawing on contemporary reporting, legal context, and prison realities, this book examines how gender, discretion, and public optics shaped punishment, and why the state ultimately retreated from its own sentence.
Rejecting romance and speculation, Alana Sanchez traces what the legend obscures: the limits of justice when punishment becomes politically and culturally uncomfortable.