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  2. Bonnie Elizabeth Parker (October 1, 1910 – May 23, 1934) and Clyde Chestnut "Champion" Barrow (March 24, 1909 – May 23, 1934) were American bandits and multiple murderers who traveled the Central United States with their gang during the Great Depression. The couple was known for their bank robberies and multiple murders, although they ...

    • Bonnie died wearing a wedding ring—but it wasn’t Clyde’s. Six days before turning 16, Bonnie married high school classmate Roy Thornton. The marriage disintegrated within months, and Bonnie never again saw her husband after he was imprisoned for robbery in 1929.
    • Bonnie wrote poetry. During her school days, Bonnie excelled at creative writing and penning verses. While she was imprisoned in 1932 after a failed hardware store burglary, she penned a collection of 10 odes that she entitled “Poetry from Life’s Other Side,” which included “The Story of Suicide Sal,” a poem about an innocent country girl lured by her boyfriend into a life a crime.
    • The Navy rejected Clyde. As a teenager, Clyde attempted to enlist in the U.S. Navy, but lingering effects from a serious boyhood illness, possibly malaria or yellow fever, resulted in his medical rejection.
    • Clyde’s first arrest came from failing to return a rental car. The notorious criminal was first arrested in 1926 for automobile theft after failing to return a car he had rented in Dallas to visit an estranged high school girlfriend.
  3. While less common, the aggressive type of hybristophilia can occur in men with female serial killers. In some cases, admirers of these criminals have gone on to marry the object of their affections in prison. [3] [4] In popular culture, this phenomenon is also known as " Bonnie and Clyde syndrome ". [5]

  4. Jun 12, 2020 · Possibly the most famous and most romanticized criminals in American history, Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow were two young Texans whose early 1930s crime spree forever imprinted them upon the...

  5. What does the phrase Bonnie and Clyde mean? There are two meanings listed in OED's entry for the phrase Bonnie and Clyde . See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence.

  6. Bonnie and Clyde. /ˌbɒni ən ˈklaɪd/. /ˌbɑːni ən ˈklaɪd/. a pair of young US criminals, Bonnie Parker (1911-34) and Clyde Barrow (1909-34). They met in 1932 and robbed banks and murdered 12 people in the south-western US before being shot dead by police in Louisiana.

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