FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives, 1980s

The FBI's Ten Most Wanted Fugitives during the 1980s is a list, maintained for a fourth decade, of the Ten Most Wanted Fugitives of the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation.

FBI headlines in the 1980s

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During the 1980s, the FBI added the names of the two longest-lasting profiles of the Top Ten Fugitives. The current longest member, Victor Manuel Gerena became the 386th fugitive to be placed on May 14, 1984, and is currently still at large.[1] The FBI added, Donald Eugene Webb, on May 4, 1981, who remained on the list until March 2007 when the FBI, presuming his death, removed his name. Webb the second longest member of the list, remained on 25 years, 10 months and 27 days.[2] The 1980s also brought the first man-and-woman couple listed together, who were FALN terrorist group associates Donna Jean Willmott and Claude Daniel Marks. The couple surrendered together seven years later, then pleaded guilty together to a Leavenworth prison breakout conspiracy from 1987.

Among other prominent fugitives in the decade were Mutulu Shakur, the stepfather of the later famed rapper Tupac Shakur, and also appearing was the sociopath Charles Ng, who had teamed up with the infamous Leonard Lake in as many as 25 sex-slave torture-murders at Lake's ranch in California. The boss of the Colombo crime family, Carmine Persico, also made the list in the 1980s.

The decade also was marked by the start of the popular Fox television program America's Most Wanted in 1988, which became a major new publicity venue for profiling and then the apprehension of many of the FBI's Top Ten Fugitives.

FBI 10 Most Wanted Fugitives to begin the 1980s

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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 their 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, the following Fugitives from prior years still remained at large, as the members of the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list:

Name Sequence Number Date of Entry Notes
Charles Lee Herron #265 1968  • Arrested in June 1986
Katherine Ann Power #315 1970  • Surrendered to authorities in 1993
Joseph Maurice McDonald #339 1976  • Arrested September 15, 1982
Raymond Luc Levasseur #350 1977  • Arrested November 4, 1984
Carlos Alberto Torres #356 1977  • Arrested April 4, 1980
Charles Everett Hughes #364 1978  • Arrested April 29, 1981
Leo Joseph Koury #366 1979  • Eluded the FBI for 12 years before dying of a stroke on June 16, 1991.[3]
John William Sherman #367 1979  • Arrested December 17, 1981
Earl Edwin Austin #370 1979  • Arrested March 1, 1980
Vincent James Russo #371 1979  • Arrested January 4, 1985

FBI Most Wanted Fugitives added during the 1980s

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The most wanted fugitives listed in the decade of the 1980s includes (in FBI list appearance sequence order):[4][5]

1980–1989

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Name Sequence Number Date of Entry Time Listed
Albert Victory #372 March 14, 1980 One year
Albert Victory FBI Most Wanted Poster
Albert Victory was arrested at his home on February 24, 1981, after being traced by New York State Police to Lafayette, California. He was wanted by the FBI after he slipped away from two New York prison guards after he bribed them to be take him to his girlfriend's hotel room.[6] He was in prison for killing New York City police officer John E. Varecha during a traffic stop.[7]
Ronald Turney Williams #373 April 16, 1980 One year
Ronald Turney Williams FBI Most Wanted Poster
Ronald Turney Williams was wanted for escaping West Virginia State Penitentiary in a mass breakout on Nov. 7, 1979, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, armed robbery, kidnapping and arson. During the escape, they came across a passing vehicle and fatally shot the driver who was an off-duty West Virginia state trooper. He was arrested on June 8, 1981, at a stakeout at George Washington Hotel in New York City; was shot and wounded by an FBI agent.[8]
Daniel Jay Barney #374 March 10, 1981 One month
Daniel Jay Barney FBI Most Wanted Poster
Daniel Jay Barney died from a self-inflicted gunshot following a hostage crisis on April 19, 1981, where he had taken four hostages in a condo in Denver, Colorado. After two escaped and the police negotiated the release of the other two hostages, Barney killed himself.
Donald Eugene Webb #375 May 4, 1981 Removed from the list
Donald Eugene Webb was wanted in connection with the December 4, 1980, murder of the police chief in Saxonburg, Pennsylvania, who was shot twice at close range after being brutally beaten about the head and face with a blunt instrument. After eluding capture for over two decades he was removed from the list on March 31, 2007, without ever being located.[9] On July 14, 2017, remains found at the Dartmouth home of Webb's wife were identified as belonging to Webb. Investigators stated that Webb had died in 1999.[10]
Gilbert James Everett #376 May 13, 1981 Four years
Gilbert James Everett FBI Most Wanted Poster
Gilbert James Everett was wanted for a spree of 86 bank robberies in the 1980s and was arrested on August 12, 1985, by local police in Bismarck, Arkansas.[11][12]
Leslie Nichols #377 July 2, 1981 Five months
Leslie Nichols FBI Most Wanted Poster
Leslie Nichols was wanted for killing four people in Little Rock, Arkansas, between June 12th and 15th, 1980, in drug-related shootings. The victims hands and feet were tied with coat hanger wire and shot in the head execution style. He was arrested on December 17, 1981, in his apartment in Los Angeles, California, by FBI agents and local police.[13]
Thomas William Manning #378 January 29, 1982 Three years
Thomas William Manning FBI Most Wanted Poster
Thomas William Manning was a part of a Marxist organization, the United Freedom Front (UFF), which bombed a series of US military and commercial institutes and committed bank robberies in the 1970s and early 1980s.[14] He was arrested on April 24, 1985, in Norfolk, Virginia.
David Fountain Kimberly Jr. #379 January 29, 1982 Six months
David Fountain Kimberly Jr FBI Most Wanted Poster
David Fountain Kimberly Jr. shot and wounded a federal police officer in October 1981. He was arrested without incident on July 8, 1982, in Matecumbe Key, Florida, by FBI agents; despite being armed with a loaded .38 caliber tucked in his waistband.[15]
Mutulu Shakur #380 July 23, 1982 Four years
Mutulu Shakur was arrested February 11, 1986, in Los Angeles, California, on Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act charges for bank robbery to finance a militant organization, and for having aided Assata Shakur (unrelated), in her escape from prison in New Jersey, where she had been incarcerated for the murder and wounding of one state trooper and another Black Panther member accompanying her in 1973 while stopped on the New Jersey Turnpike.
Charles Edward Watson #381 October 22, 1982 One year
Charles Edward Watson FBI Most Wanted Poster
Charles Edward Watson was convicted for his role in the killing of a police officer in 1975 among other crimes when he escaped prison. He was arrested October 25, 1983, in Slatington, Pennsylvania, while leaving his residence.[16]
Laney Gibson Jr. #382 November 28, 1983 Three weeks
Larry Gibson Jr. FBI Most Wanted Poster
Laney Gibson Jr. was wanted for escaping the Clay County jail with other prisoners while awaiting trial for the murder of R. T. Gray. He was arrested December 18, 1983, in Montgomery, Alabama, at a suburban motel.[17]
George Clarence Bridgette #383 January 10, 1984 Three weeks
George Clarence Bridgette FBI Most Wanted Poster
George Clarence Bridgette was wanted for the murder for four people, including a 3-year-old child in a drug related shooting where he and two other accomplices walked into a Long Beach, California, house and shot five people. He was arrested January 30, 1984, in Miami, Florida, after a civilian recognized his photo from an Identification Order in a post office.[18]
Samuel Marks Humphrey #384 February 29, 1984 One month
Samuel Marks Humphrey FBI Most Wanted Poster
Samuel Marks Humphrey was wanted for bank robbery and murder. He was arrested March 22, 1984, in Portland, Oregon.[19]
Christopher Bernard Wilder #385 April 5, 1984 One week
Christopher Bernard Wilder was killed in a shootout with police at a gas station in Colebrook, New Hampshire, on April 13, 1984. He was wanted for the murders of several young women in several different states.
Victor Manuel Gerena #386 May 14, 1984 Still at large but removed from the list
Victor Manuel Gerena is wanted in connection with the 1983 armed robbery of approximately $7 million from a security company in Connecticut. He allegedly took two security employees hostage at gunpoint and then handcuffed, bound and injected them with an unknown substance in order to further disable them.[20] He was removed from the list on December 15, 2016. He was on the list for 32 years, seven months and one day - the longest anyone has been on the list.
Wai-Chiu Ng #387 June 15, 1984 Four months
Wai-Chiu Ng FBI Most Wanted Poster
Wai-Chiu Ng was acquitted in April 1985 of murder but convicted of 13 counts of first-degree robbery, and sentenced to seven consecutive life terms. He was arrested October 4, 1984, in Calgary, Alberta, Canada by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. He became the third suspect, charged in absentia on March 30, 1983, with 13 counts of aggravated first-degree murder; wanted in the February 19, 1983 Wah Mee massacre, the worst mass killing in the history of Seattle, Washington, during which thirteen people were shot to death at the Wah Mee Club, a gambling club in Seattle's International District.[21]
Alton Coleman #388 July 17, 1984 Three days
Alton Coleman was executed by the state of Ohio on April 26, 2002. He was arrested July 20, 1984, in Evanston, Illinois, by local police due to civilian cooperation; was wanted for the murder of 44-year-old Marlene Walters of Norwood, Ohio, among others, during a six-state killing spree in 1984.
Cleveland McKinley Davis #389 October 24, 1984 Three months
Cleveland McKinley Davis FBI Most Wanted Poster
Cleveland McKinley Davis a.k.a Jomo Joka Omowale after joining the Black Panthers, was wanted for the attempted robbery and murder of a drug dealer with two other accomplices in Virginia Beach. He was arrested January 25, 1985, in New York City by FBI agents and local police.[22]
Carmine Persico #390 January 31, 1985 Two weeks
Carmine Persico FBI Most Wanted Poster
Carmine Persico a.k.a. "Junior" was serving a 100-year sentence after being convicted of murder and labor and construction racketeering in 1986. He was arrested February 15, 1985, in Wantagh, New York, by FBI agents. Persico was boss of the New York-based Colombo crime family.
Lohman Ray Mays Jr. #391 February 15, 1985 Seven months
Lohman Ray Mays FBI Most Wanted Poster
Lohman Ray Mays Jr., a career criminal, escaped Turney Center Industrial Prison and then robbed several banks before he was arrested on September 23, 1985, in Cheyenne, Wyoming, by local police.[23]
Charles Earl Hammond #392 March 14, 1985 One year
Charles Earl Hammond FBI Most Wanted Poster
Charles Earl Hammond was wanted in connection to drug-related murders in Kansas City in May, 1980 along with his brother Michael Frederick Allan Hammond (fugitive #393).[24] Apprehended August 4, 1986.
Michael Frederic Allen Hammond #393 March 14, 1985 One year
Michael Frederic Allen Hammond FBI Most Wanted Poster
Michael Frederic Allen Hammond was wanted in connection to drug-related murders in Kansas City in May, 1980 along with his brother Charles Earl Hammond (fugitive #392).[24]
Robert Henry Nicolaus #394 June 28, 1985 One month
Robert Henry Nicolaus FBI Most Wanted Poster
Robert Henry Nicolaus was wanted for shooting his ex-wife twice in the chest while on parole for killing his three children. She was able to identify Nicolaus as her assailant before dying. He was arrested July 20, 1985, in York, Pennsylvania, after a civilian recognized his photo on an Identification Order at a post office.[25]
David Jay Sterling #395 September 30, 1985 Five months
David Jay Sterling FBI Most Wanted Poster
David Jay Sterling was arrested and convicted for a series of rapes in 1983 in which after he was sentenced, sent to a sexual psychopath treatment program at Western State Hospital. However, he escaped in 1985 and robbed six banks, with an accomplice, in at least three different states and using stolen airplanes to escape. He was arrested February 13, 1986, after being pulled over in a routine traffic stop near Covington, Louisiana, by local police.[26]
Richard Joseph Scutari #396 September 30, 1985 Six months
Richard Joseph Scutari FBI Most Wanted Poster
Richard Joseph Scutari was wanted for racketeering, harboring a fugitive and storing about $40,000 from a $3.6-million robbery of a Brink’s armored truck in July, 1984. He was identified by the FBI as a member of The Order, a white supremacist group believed connected with the murder of Denver radio talk show host Alan Berg. He was arrested March 19, 1986 without incident at a repair shop he worked at, in San Antonio, Texas.[27] He is currently serving a 60-year sentence.[28]
Joseph William Dougherty #397 November 6, 1985 One year
Joseph William Dougtery FBI Most Wanted Poster
Joseph William Dougherty along with another fellow inmate, Terry Lee Conner (fugitive #402), were being transported from the federal prison at El Reno to the courthouse in downtown Oklahoma City when Dougherty brought out a sharp object and held it to the throat of a US Marshal. The two marshals transporting them were left handcuffed to a tree as the two fled in Marshal's car. During an 18-month hunt for Conner and Dougherty, they were identified as suspects in a series of bank robberies. He was arrested December 19, 1986, by FBI agents in Antioch, California, outside a local laundromat.[29]
Brian Patrick Malverty #398 March 28, 1986 One week
Brian Patrick Malverty FBI Most Wanted Poster
Brian Patrick Malverty was wanted in connection of the murder of Gene West and 17-year-old Ricky Lee Sims. They were botrh robbed, bound and gagged, shot in the head, chest, and back; then their bodies and house was set on fire. He was arrested April 7, 1986, in San Diego, California, after a civilian recognized his photo on an Identification Order at a post office.[30]
Billy Ray Waldon #399 May 16, 1986 One month
Billy Ray Waldon was arrested on June 16, 1986, in San Diego, California, after local police attempted to pull him over for a routine traffic citation. Initially sentenced to death for his crimes, Waldon's conviction was overturned in 2023.[31] He was wanted for several robberies and murders, two burglaries, a rape, and arson.[32]
Claude Lafayette Dallas Jr. #400 May 16, 1986 One year
Claude Lafayette Dallas Jr. FBI Most Wanted Poster
Claude Lafayette Dallas Jr. was arrested March 8, 1987, in Riverside, California, by FBI agents while he was leaving a convenience store. He was wanted for the deaths of two game wardens in Idaho.[33]
Donald Keith Williams #401 July 18, 1986 One month
Donald Keith Williams FBI Most Wanted Poster
Donald Keith Williams a.k.a the "Veil Bandit" because he wore a cloth veil over a baseball cap to disguise himself committed 34 bank robberies and was wanted for stealing more than $100,000 over the course of three years. He was arrested August 20, 1986, in Los Angeles, California, by FBI agents through assistance of a concerned civilian.[34]
Terry Lee Conner #402 August 8, 1986 Four months
Terry Lee Conner FBI Most Wanted Poster
Terry Lee Conner escaped custody of the U.S. Marshal's alongside Joseph William Dougherty (fugitive #397) while being transported from the federal prison at El Reno to the courthouse in downtown Oklahoma City.[29] In one of the robberies they both stole $500,000 from the Central Bank of West Allis by holding the vice president of the bank, his wife, his daughter, and his daughters boyfriend hostage for three days. He was arrested without incident on December 9, 1986, in Arlington Heights, Illinois, by the U.S. Marshals Service and the FBI.[35]
Fillmore Raymond Cross Jr. #403 August 8, 1986 Four months
Fillmore Raymond Cross Jr. FBI Most Wanted Poster
Fillmore Raymond Cross Jr. surrendered voluntarily to the FBI on December 23, 1986, in San Francisco, California. Cross, a former president of the Hells Angels motorcycle group in San Jose, California, was wanted for supposedly beating a businessman in an extortion scheme.[36]
James Wesley Dyess #404 September 29, 1986 Two years
James Wesley Dyess FBI Most Wanted Poster
James Wesley Dyess escaped federal custody while being charged for two murders committed during a home burglary in Jackson, Mississippi. He was arrested March 16, 1988, in Los Angeles, California, when he was stopped on a routine traffic violation and recognized by a Los Angeles Police Department officer.[37]
Danny Michael Weeks #405 September 29, 1986 Two years
Danny Michael Weeks FBI Most Wanted Poster
Danny Michael Weeks escaped from a prison in Angola, where he was incarcerated for murder and armed robbery. Two weeks before his capture, he kidnapped Susan K. Vincent at gunpoint from a shopping center in Greensboro, North Carolina. Vincent was released three days later unharmed. He arrested March 20, 1988, at his son's home in Seattle, Washington, due to an FBI task force and civilian cooperation. He had been featured on America's Most Wanted.[38]
Mike Wayne Jackson #406 October 1, 1986 One day
Mike Wayne Jackson FBI Most Wanted Poster
Mike Wayne Jackson killed his probation officer in Indianapolis on September 22, 1986, before fleeing to Missouri. He committed suicide by shotgun on October 2, 1986, in Wright City, Missouri.[39]
Thomas George Harrelson #407 November 28, 1986 Three months
Thomas George Harrelson FBI Most Wanted Poster
Thomas George Harrelson, a member of the Aryan Nations Church, was is accused of taking $50,000 from a Rossville, Illinois bank and shooting at police car during a car chase. He was arrested February 9, 1987, in Drayton, North Dakota, after his getaway car slid into a ditch while trying to flee the scene of a bank robbery.[40]
Robert Allen Litchfield #408 January 20, 1987 Four months
Robert Allen Litchfield FBI Most Wanted Poster
Robert Allen Litchfield a.k.a the “Block House Bandit”, escaped from federal prison in Talladega, Alabama while serving a 60 year sentence for 15 bank robberies. He was arrested May 20, 1987, at Lake Tahoe in Zephyr Cove, Nevada, by FBI agents in close cooperation with the U.S. Marshal Service and the Sheriff's office.[41]
David James Roberts #409 April 27, 1987 Ten months
David James Roberts FBI Most Wanted Poster
David James Roberts was arrested February 11, 1988, in Staten Island, New York, in an apartment after hiding for four days, due to FBI investigation and civilian information. He was convicted for murder, kidnapping, arson and rape, and was given six life sentences in an Indiana State Prison. However, after his daring escape from a prison vehicle while on the way to the state prison, he worked as the director of a homeless shelter in Staten Island, New York, under his alias Bob Lord. He had seen himself on the first episode of a reality TV show from FOX called America's Most Wanted (AMW) on February 7, 1988. He was not only the first fugitive to be profiled in such show, but also the first direct capture as a result of the program and the first from the FBI's Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list. He is currently serving several consecutive life sentences at Pendleton Correctional Facility in Indiana.[42]
Ronald Glyn Triplett #410 April 27, 1987 Three weeks
Ronald Glyn Triplett FBI Most Wanted Poster
Ronald Glyn Triplett was wanted for escaping prison where he was being held for robbery and attempted murder of a waitress. He later held two federal agents at gunpoint.[43][44] He was arrested May 16, 1987, in Tempe, Arizona.
Claude Daniel Marks #411 May 22, 1987 Seven years
Claude Daniel Marks FBI Most Wanted Poster
Claude Daniel Marks pleaded guilty on May 9, 1995, to a prison escape conspiracy in Illinois. He surrendered December 6, 1994, along with his partner Donna Jean Willmott (Fugitive #412). He and Willmott had purchased 36 pounds of explosive from undercover FBI in 1985 to attempt to free a FALN leader from Leavenworth prison before going on the run.[45]
Donna Jean Willmott #412 May 22, 1987 Seven years
Donna Jean Willmott FBI Most Wanted Poster
Donna Jean Willmott pleaded guilty on May 9, 1995, to a prison escape conspiracy in Illinois. She surrendered on December 6, 1994, along with her partner Marks (Fugitive #411). She and Marks had purchased 36 pounds of explosive from an undercover FBI agent in 1985 to attempt to free a FALN leader from Leavenworth prison.[45]
Darren Dee O'Neall #413 June 25, 1987 Four months
Darren Dee O'Neall was arrested October 25, 1987, on an auto-theft charge in Lakeland, Florida.[46] Louisiana State Police later discovered his "Top Ten" identity. O'Neall had been wanted for the rape and murder of multiple women.
Louis Ray Beam Jr. #414 July 14, 1987 Four months
Louis Ray Beam Jr. FBI Most Wanted Poster
Louis Ray Beam Jr. is a white supremacist with ties to the Ku Klux Klan who was wanted on charges of seditious conspiracy to violently overthrow the U.S. government, including alleged participation in a conspiracy to assassinate a federal judge and an FBI agent in Arkansas with 14 others.[47] He was arrested November 6, 1987, at home with his wife in Guadalajara, Mexico. During the arrest, Beam's wife opened fire and critically injured a Mexican police officer. He was later acquitted of the conspiracy charges.
Ted Jeffery Otsuki #415 January 22, 1988 Eight months
Ted Jeffery Otsuki FBI Most Wanted Poster
Ted Jeffery Otsuki was arrested September 4, 1988, in Guadalajara by Mexican Federal Judicial Police and the FBI who had set up a surveillance team and waited for him at his apartment. He had been featured on America's Most Wanted for the 1987 murder of a Boston, Massachusetts police officer and shooting of another police officer he believed were chasing him.[48]
Pedro Luis Estrada #416 April 15, 1988 One year
Pedro Luis Estrada FBI Most Wanted Poster
Pedro Luis Estrada was wanted for three homicides and possible involvement in two others as a henchman for a New York-based narcotics ring.[49] He was arrested October 1, 1989, by a SWAT team of FBI agents at his home in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. He had been featured on America's Most Wanted which received information leading to his arrest.
John Edward Stevens #417 May 29, 1988 Six months
John Edward Stevens FBI Most Wanted Poster
John Edward Stevens was arrested November 30, 1988, in Cincinnati, Ohio. He was found in a motel with his girlfriend. He had been featured on America's Most Wanted and suspected of more than 25 robberies in eight states.[50]
Jack Darrell Farmer #418 May 29, 1988 Three days
Jack Darrell Farmer FBI Most Wanted Poster
Jack Darrell Farmer, was awaiting trial on racketeering charges which include two murders, drug trafficking and extortion, when he was released to his attorney's custody on day visits to prepare for the trial.[51] On one visit he tied and gagged his lawyer and escaped. He was arrested June 1, 1988, in Lantana, Florida, after being featured on America's Most Wanted. He was recognized by a co-worker who called in. He was the leader of Chicago's "Little Mafia" gang.
Roger Lee Jones #419 May 29, 1988 One year
Roger Lee Jones FBI Most Wanted Poster
Roger Lee Jones was the first child molester to be added to the list when he fled Sarasota, Florida after being charged with seven counts of lewd and lascivious assault on a child under 16.[52] He was arrested March 4, 1989, in Great Falls, Montana, at KOA campground, after being featured on America's Most Wanted.[53]
Terry Lee Johnson #420 June 12, 1988 Two months
Terry Lee Johnson FBI Most Wanted Poster
Terry Lee Johnson escaped from Limestone prison in Athens, Alabama, in 1986 while serving a life sentence for murder. He was arrested August 17, 1988, in San Diego, California by the San Diego Police Department. Johnson was sleeping in his pick-up when local police, upon noticing his truck had expired tags, arrested him on an unrelated traffic warrant under the name Lee Johnson. After spending several days in San Diego County Jail Johnson was being released. FBI agents at the County Jail picking up another prisoner recognized Johnson from a recent episode of "Americas Most Wanted" and stopped his release.[54]
Stanley Faison #421 November 27, 1988 One month
Stanley Faison FBI Most Wanted Poster
Stanley Faison was wanted for beating Ophilena Edwards with a tire iron, then fatally stabbing her boyfriend, Sylvester Wilson.[55] He was arrested December 24, 1988, in Detroit, Michigan, by FBI and local police. He had been featured on America's Most Wanted.
Steven Ray Stout #422 November 27, 1988 One week
Steven Ray Stout FBI Most Wanted Poster
Steven Ray Stout had strangled and stabbed to death his former mother-in-law, Bonnie Craft, and one of her daughters, Maureen Turner. He entered the Keefe's mobile home, beat 19-year-old Turner with a hammer, strangled and then stabbed her two times in the chest. He then waited for the Keefe to return home, then beat and stabbed her to death before putting both bodies in the bedroom. He was arrested December 6, 1988, in Gulfport, Mississippi, after being featured on America's Most Wanted.[56]
Armando Garcia #423 January 8, 1989 Five years
Armando Garcia FBI Most Wanted Poster
Armando Garcia and 14 other Miami police officers participated in a drug ripoff ring in the mid-1980s later dubbed the Miami River Cops Scandal. Uniformed officers, all on the graveyard shift, would raid drug dealers, steal their cocaine and later resell it. Garcia met with some other defendants and plotted to kill some of the witnesses, then vanished in 1987 with his father and wife. He was arrested January 18, 1994, in Cali, Colombia with his father after being featured on America's Most Wanted.[57]
Melvin Edward Mays #424 February 7, 1989 Six years
Melvin Edward Mays FBI Most Wanted Poster
Melvin Edward Mays was arrested March 9, 1995, by the FBI's Chicago Joint Terrorism Task Force. He was wanted on 40 counts of conspiracy to commit acts of terror on behalf of the Libyan Government as a top general of the El Rukin street gang. Mays evaded arrest in 1986 while awaiting trial and was featured on America's Most Wanted as well as Unsolved Mysteries.[58]
Bobby G. Dennie #425 February 24, 1989 Eight months
Bobby G. Dennie FBI Most Wanted Poster
Bobby G. Dennie was wanted in Florida and four other states on various charges, including murder, rape, robbery, forgery, theft and escape.[59] He was arrested October 28, 1989, in Lake Wales, Florida, by the FBI and Polk County detectives after receiving information following his feature on Unsolved Mysteries. He had also been featured on America's Most Wanted.
Costabile "Gus" Farace #426 February 24, 1989 Nine months
Costabile Farace FBI Most Wanted Poster
Costabile "Gus" Farace was wanted for the murder of DEA agent Everette Hatcher during a drug sting operation on the Bonanno crime family in Staten Island, New York. Farace was later murdered by James Galione and Mario Gallo and pleaded guilty in 1997. Prosecutors said the men worked at the time for the Bonanno family, which had put out a hit on Farace over Hatcher’s killing. He had been featured on America's Most Wanted.[60]
Arthur Lee Washington Jr. #427 October 18, 1989 Still at large but removed from the list
Arthur Lee Washington Jr. is wanted in the attempted murder of a New Jersey state trooper using a .45 caliber semi-automatic handgun on April 12, 1989.[61] Washington had been associated in the past with militant black prison groups and the Black Liberation Army. There was evidence that he may have been an injection drug user, due to the old track marks on both arms. He was removed from the list in December 2000 for no longer meeting the list criteria.[62] He is still wanted by New Jersey State Police.[63]
Lee Nell Carter #428 November 19, 1989 One day
Lee Nell Carter FBI Most Wanted Poster
Lee Nell Carter was arrested November 20, 1989, in Detroit by FBI agents and Detroit police. Civilians identified him during the broadcast of America's Most Wanted. He was wanted for a shooting spree that left a woman dead and two men injured due to an affair.[64]
Wardell David Ford #429 December 20, 1989 Nine months
Wardell David Ford FBI Most Wanted Poster
Wardell David Ford was wanted for an armored car robbery on February 22, 1983, in which he killed one of the guards. Ford's cousin, David Temple, an accomplice in the robbery, died in the shootout. He was arrested September 17, 1990, in New Haven, Connecticut, after being featured on America's Most Wanted.[65] He had also been featured on Unsolved Mysteries.

End of the decade

[edit]

As the decade closed, the following were still at large as the Ten Most Wanted Fugitives:

Name Sequence number Date of entry
Leo Joseph Koury #366 1979
Donald Eugene Webb #375 1981
Victor Manuel Gerena #386 1984
Claude Daniel Marks #411 1987
Donna Jean Willmott #412 1987
Armando Garcia #423 1989
Melvin Edward Mays #424 1989
Arthur Lee Washington Jr. #427 1989
Wardell David Ford #429 1989

One spot on the list of Ten remained unfilled from a capture late in the year 1989. It was filled the next month in 1990.

FBI directors in the 1980s

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References

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  1. ^ "Ten Most Wanted Fugatives". The Federal Bureau of Investigation. Retrieved March 12, 2012.
  2. ^ Friedman, Megan (June 23, 2011). "Top 10 Notorious Fugitives". Time Inc. Archived from the original on March 23, 2010. Retrieved March 12, 2012.
  3. ^ Matera, Dary (2004). FBI's Ten Most Wanted: From James Earl Ray to Osama Bin Laden. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-052435-7.
  4. ^ Federal Bureau of Investigation (2000). FBI's Ten Most Wanted Fugitives Program - 50th Anniversary 1950-2000. K&D Limited, Inc.
  5. ^ "A Chronological Listing of the FBI's "Ten Most Wanted Fugitives" March 14, 1950 – January 1, 2000" (PDF). Federal Bureau of Investigation. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 27, 2002. Retrieved March 2, 2009.
  6. ^ Gaiter, Dorothy (1981-02-25). "POLICEMAN'S KILLER CAPTURED ON COAST". The New York Times. p. 28.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ "Police officer's killer sues NY over parole reversal". Police1. 2017-04-28. Retrieved 2024-11-12.
  8. ^ New York, Times (1981-06-09). "F.B.I. Agents Wound Fugitive in Hotel Lobby". The New York Times. p. 6.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ Maskaly, Michelle (October 27, 2008). "Wanted: Donald Eugene Webb for the Murder of a Pennsylvania Police Chief". FOX News. Archived from the original on October 30, 2008. Retrieved December 2, 2008.
  10. ^ Victoria Warren, Remains found in Dartmouth yard are those of fugitive wanted for killing police chief, The Associated Press via WHDH News, July 14, 2017
  11. ^ "Gilbert James Everett, the FBI's most-wanted fugitive bank robber,... - UPI Archives". UPI. Retrieved 2024-11-12.
  12. ^ By (1985-08-15). "'MOST WANTED' MAN, A FLORIDA ROBBERY SUSPECT, TAKEN TO TENNESSEE". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved 2024-11-12.
  13. ^ "FBI arrests two top 10 fugitive - UPI Archives". UPI. Retrieved 2024-11-12.
  14. ^ Burrough, Bryan (2016-04-05). Days of Rage: America's Radical Underground, the FBI, and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence. Penguin Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-14-310797-2.
  15. ^ "David Fountain Kimberly, Jr..jpeg - 715x390". FBI.gov. Retrieved 2024-11-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  16. ^ "Charles Edward Watson.jpeg - 495x705". pp. FBI.gov. Retrieved 2024-11-13.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  17. ^ "Dec 21, 1983, page 24 - The Messenger at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2024-11-13.
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