- Wyatt Earp: [Opening Narration] A great hiding place for Western outlaws was the Brown Hole. As historian Charles Kelly remarked in his book 'Outlaw Trail', it was the toughest outlaw hideout in the West. It covered the corner where Colorado, Utah and Wyoming joined. Not only was the hole a natural fortress, the outlaws who camped there were the scum of all the cow towns and gold diggings from Texas to Oregon.
- Wyatt Earp: [Narration] That outlaw trail ran from Robber's Roost in the south to Hole in the Wall up north. In the 70s and 80s, many a long rider with a price on his head and the shadow of a hangman's rope on his face joined other desperate men in what they called the Last Hideout.