FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives, 1960s
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In the 1960s, for a second decade, the United States FBI continued to maintain a public list of the people it regarded as the
Ten Most Wanted Fugitives The FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives is a most wanted list maintained by the United States's Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The list arose from a conversation held in late 1949 between J. Edgar Hoover, Director of the FBI, and William Ki ...
. Following is a brief review of FBI people and events that place the 1960s decade in context, and then an historical list of individual suspects whose names first appeared on the 10 Most Wanted list during the decade of the 1960s, under FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover.


FBI headlines in the 1960s

As a decade, the 1960s were the final and most controversial of the Hoover era in the Bureau. The famous Director had formed and defined the Bureau for nearly a half century. During the turbulent 1960s, the FBI continued controversial domestic surveillance in an operation called Cointelpro. It aimed at investigating and disrupting dissident political organizations within the United States, including civil rights leaders, such as Martin Luther King Jr. who was a frequent target of investigation. As a more friendly face presented to the public, in 1965 Warner Bros. Television presented the series ''
The F.B.I. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is the domestic intelligence and security service of the United States and its principal federal law enforcement agency. Operating under the jurisdiction of the United States Department of Justice, t ...
'', showing dramatizations taken from actual historical FBI cases, starring Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. as fictional agent Louis Erskine. Epilogues included Zimbalist stepping out of character to alert viewers to Ten Most Wanted Fugitives from the FBI's contemporary list.


FBI "Most Wanted Fugitives" in the 1960s

The FBI in the past has identified individuals by the sequence number in which each individual has appeared on the list. Some individuals have even appeared twice, and often a sequence number was permanently assigned to an individual suspect who was soon caught, captured, or simply removed, before his or her appearance could be published on the publicly released list. In those cases, the public would see only gaps in the number sequence reported by the FBI. For convenient reference, the wanted suspect's sequence number and date of entry on the FBI list appear below, whenever possible. As the new decade opened, six of the ten places on the list remained filled by these elusive long-time fugitives, then still at large: * 1950 #14 (ten years), Frederick J. Tenuto * 1952 #36 (eight years), James Eddie Diggs * 1954 #78 (six years), David Daniel Keegan * 1956 #97 (four years), Eugene Francis Newman * 1958 #107 (two years), Angelo Luigi Pero * 1959 #112 (one year), Edwin Sanford Garrison The most wanted fugitives listed in the decade of the 1960s includes (in FBI list appearance sequence order):


Year 1960


Joseph Corbett, Jr.

Joseph Corbett, Jr. was wanted for kidnap and murder of wealthy heir Adolph Coors III
status: paroled in 1980


Year 1961


Year 1962


Year 1963


Year 1964


Year 1965


Year 1966


Year 1967


Year 1968


James Earl Ray

April 20, 1968 #277, & also June 11, 1977 #351
Two months on the list
James Earl Ray was apprehended June 8, 1968 in London, England by British authorities for the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.
He died of
hepatitis C Hepatitis C is an infectious disease caused by the hepatitis C virus (HCV) that primarily affects the liver; it is a type of viral hepatitis. During the initial infection people often have mild or no symptoms. Occasionally a fever, dark urine, a ...
at age 70 in prison. ----


Year 1969


Billie Austin Bryant

January 8, 1969 #295
shortest time (excluding never published) on the list, 2 hours
Fourth "Special Addition"
Billie Austin Bryant was wanted for first degree murder of two FBI Agents
status: US PRISONER at the Federal Penitentiary at Atlanta, Georgia November 4, 1969 ---- By the end of the decade, the following Fugitives were the FBI's Ten Most Wanted: * 1965 #203 (five years), John William Clouser * 1968 #265 (two years), Charles Lee Herron * 1968 #279 (two years), Taylor Morris Teaford * 1968 #282 (two years), Byron James Rice * 1969 #298 (one year), Warren David Reddock * 1969 #300 (one year), Cameron David Bishop * 1969 #301 (one year), Marie Dean Arrington * 1969 #302 (six months), Benjamin Hoskin Paddock (also father of shooter in
2017 Las Vegas shooting On October 1, 2017, Stephen Paddock, a 64-year-old man from Mesquite, Nevada, opened fire on the crowd attending the Route 91 Harvest music festival on the Las Vegas Strip in . From his 32nd-floor suites in the Mandalay Bay hotel, he fired ...
) * 1969 #304 (three months), Joseph Lloyd Thomas The tenth space had just opened up at the end of the year 1969.


References


External links


Current FBI top ten most wanted fugitives at FBI site
{{FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives by year 1960s in the United States