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‘Outside the Law’ Hits a Bull’s Eye

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Outside the Law

How an Ex-Cop Became America’s Most Prolific Bank Robber Since John Dillinger

By Mark Ogden and Paul Ogden (Amazon, June 2025)

Genre: Non-Fiction

Pages (Print): 245

Via: Author Request

“You do not see me. I am invisible!”

Mom! Mom! barketh I, Kimber the Magnificent. Dancing my patented Kimber Canine Jig. Tail wagging a mile a minute.

Mom: What’s up, Kimster?

Kimber: It’s a mega doughnut alert!

Mom: Doughnut alert? What the heck are you barking about, Kimmi?

Kimber: Oh, c’mon Mom! I’m talking about that new book we just finished. The one about the ex-Marine, ex-cop, ex-attorney who becomes a super-duper bank robber dude. It’s a four-alarm, honest-to-goodness humdinger of a doughnut alert.

Mom rolleth her eyes-eth.

Kimber: No, really. It goes like this:

He was a decorated Marine. A principled cop. An attorney. A dedicated son and father who respected authority and always followed the law. So, what caused Clifton Bruce Davidson to embark upon a dangerous criminal enterprise, eventually becoming America’s most prolific bank robber since John Dillinger? Ditto one of the FBI’s Most Wanted, robbing 38 banks in 26 months?

This eminently engaging non-fiction book reveals the how and why to that question. Kind of. Nutshell version: “Bruce was a man of character, loyal and generous, who had chosen a life of crime because it was his only option left.”

But there’s more. Lots more.

The book opens with Davidson handcuffed, in the back of a police vehicle. It closes with Davidson handcuffed, in the back of a police vehicle. What happens in between is a gripping and compelling real-life story unlike anything we’ve ever read.

The authors introduce us to Davidson as a kid and take us through his upbringing and education until he decides to join the U.S. Marine Corps.

“Years later, while training at the Indiana Law Enforcement Academy, Davidson’s instructors told the trainees that for anyone who went through Marine boot camp, the law enforcement training would be a joke. He was right.” (Semper Fi, Jarhead. And oh yeah. Don’t ever call a Marine a “soldier” (p. 47). Major faux pax, dude. Major.)

We follow Davidson from Marine Corps boot camp at MCRD San Diego to his military police training at Lackland AFB in Texas in 1984. And his K-9, Bear. Bear is “a black and silver German Shepherd … with a mean streak. But Davidson soon grew attached to him.” Our kinda guy!

After the Marines, Davidson joins the Elkhart, IN Police Department. This portion of the book – where Davidson “had seen the best and worst of humanity,” is highly readable. Engaging, entertaining, and exciting, the narrative shows us that you never know what’s going to happen next in police work. Examples: Two little girls “sleep dialing” 911 (kids, don’t try this at home). Miranda warnings. “Unknown disturbance” calls, medical emergencies and all points in between. It’s quite a ride. Think Space Mountain meets Hill Street Blues meets Dragnet (the latter is a cop show, for all you young whipper-snappers. It’s a really, really old cop show. For dinosaurs. Hi, Mom.)

Then we find out how politics and personal agendas affected the Elkhart P.D. (Hi, Chief Ivory and Mayor Putz.) Davidson is elected president of the Elkhart Fraternal Order of Police in 1994 and enters “cutthroat politics” and “its character assassinating weaponry.” Writes Ogden ominously, “It would not end well.” This includes the tragic consequences of a lack of support from the Elkhart police chief and city leaders and the death of a much-loved officer.

Uh-Oh

Next, you walk with Davidson through a series of professional and personal crises as he begins his “secret life as a nascent bank robber” while dodging creditors and disciplinary action from the legal community. Post-police officer, Davidson becomes an attorney. He can barely keep his head above water financially as a sole practitioner. As his life spirals out of control, he becomes a closet alcoholic battling chronic depression. His wife files for divorce. Takes the kid. Davidson also gets stiffed by clients to the tune of tens of thousands of dollars. He gets disbarred.

And so… bank robbery. Then Davidson’s on the run with the FBI hot on his trail.

A Merry Chase

Speaking of the FBI, Davidson led them a merry chase for over seven months after knocking off his first bank. He always managed to stay a step or two ahead of the proverbial long arm of the Law. As in, “When you’re a fugitive on the run, it pays to be paranoid.”

One thing that surprised us about Outside the Law is that the second half – post-USMC, post-cop, post-attorney, and now bank robber on the lam – has a “travelogue” feel to it as we crisscross the country with Bruce while he tries to stay one step ahead of the law. It includes descriptions of everything from a “Classic Ribeye, medium rare” in North Platte, Nebraska to a corn palace in Mitchell, South Dakota and Chicago style dogs and deep-dish pizza. Also, chicken panini and fries at the International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C. Oyster and Dungeness crab in San Franscico. Crawfish etouffee and jazz in New Orleans.

Kimber: Yeah, baby! When do we eat?

Multiples

Davidson was on the run for over seven months, driving across the country 2.5 times plus multiple trips up and down the East and West Coasts. This included stops in Salt Lake City. Houston. Albuquerque. Santa Fe, Denver and Portland. Yellowstone’s Old Faithful geyser. Phoenix and Bakersfield. All while Davidson’s a wanted man. Stealing cars along the way.

Superb

Outside the Law features excellent writing and superb storytelling skills. The style is warm and conversational. Factual, yes. Voluminous, meticulous research, yes. But rich descriptions and careful attention to detail flavor every page. The thorough backstory offers readers a solid understanding of Davidson’s upbringing, education, family life and training without overwhelming them with its sheer magnitude. So, the story is factual without coming across like a Sahara scirocco, if ya know what I mean, Cookie.

Sound

Additionally, the book is structurally sound, with just the right amount of backstory mixed with a You Are There present-day feel to keep you engaged.

Crisp and agile, the writing is nimble and vibrant. It’ll keep you turning pages until the very end. You feel like you’re right there with Davidson, an eye-witness to his life events.

Kimber: Remember that time we rode in the back seat of Bruce’s Ford Explorer and stopped at Arthur Bryant’s Barbecue in Kansas City, Missouri? Let me count the spare ribs… What?

Until that fateful day when… Oh, wait. To find out what happens next, you’ll have to read the book yourself, Cupcake.

How?

So, what made him do it? How did it all go haywire? What sent Bruce Davidson so far down the wrong path? We may never really know the answers. But the loss of a job he loved, the collapse of his marriage, the cratering of his law practice, severe financial stress and a tumultuous personal life didn’t help. In the end, this book is as much mystery as it is history. We appreciated how the authors don’t tell you what to think. They just tell Davidson’s story and let you draw your own conclusions.

Finally, Outside the Law is a story as tragic as it is puzzling. Mom needed an extra bowl of cookies ‘n cream ice cream after reading it. Make that two or three bowls. But who’s counting?

Yo! That extra doughnut spoken for? “Askin’ for a friend.” – Love, Kimber.

Our Rating: 4.0

2 thoughts on “‘Outside the Law’ Hits a Bull’s Eye

  1. Paul Ogden's avatar

    Thank you so much for your review of our book. I greatly appreciate your style in reviewing the book – relaxed, humorous but detailed. I think you appreciate the Shakespearean tragedy that is Davidson’s life. Had a few things went differently in his life, Davidson wouldn’t be in a prison cell today. I hope that comes across to readers – we are all a few missed breaks here and there for our lives to have turned out differently. Thanks again for the review. Paul Ogden

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