The FBI released the below information:
The seeds of the FBI’s Ten Most
Wanted Fugitives list were planted on February 7, 1949, after The Washington
Daily News published the article “FBI’s Most Wanted Fugitives Named.” (Seen above).
The
FBI’s public affairs function at the time had given the reporter—who’d asked
for a list of the “toughest guys” the Bureau wanted to arrest—the names of 10
dangerous individuals.
The resulting news story became so
popular that the FBI created the Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list on March 14,
1950.
This week marks the 70th
anniversary of the list, which is commonly called the Top Ten. The program uses
public outreach to capture offenders wanted for serious crimes.
Over the years, 523 fugitives have
been placed on the list, with 488 of them having been caught. As a testament to
the effectiveness of the program, 162 of those captures were made with the
public’s direct assistance.
The early Bureau used identification
orders as a way to get the word out about wanted fugitives. The first
identification order was issued in December 1919 seeking escaped U.S. Army
prisoner William N. Bishop, who was captured in April 1920.
“The FBI has been in the business of
seeking fugitives from the law really since its beginning,” says FBI Historian
John Fox. “We started issuing, as early as 1919, our first identification
orders—basically, fliers we would send out to law enforcement notifying them of
criminals we were looking for. That’s what eventually evolves into the Ten Most
Wanted Fugitives program.”
Historically, the Top Ten list has
reflected the concerns of the time. In the 1950s, bank robbers, burglars, and car
thieves populated the list. The 1960s saw fugitives wanted for kidnapping,
sabotage, and destruction of government property. Members of organized crime
groups and murderers were present on the lists of the 1970s. Drug kingpins and
serial killers were a priority in the 1980s. And in the 1990s, the list
reflected the increasing threat of international criminal activity.
Over the past two decades, the Top
Ten list has focused on the most violent of fugitives sought for homicides,
armed robberies, gang activities, and mass shootings.
In the earliest days, wanted posters
would be placed in local post offices, and information on offenders was
provided to newspapers. This quickly was supplemented with radio shows and
television programs. As media has changed over the years, so have the FBI’s
outreach methods.
“We still do the traditional
stuff—the press conference, posters, sending out a press release—but we now add
in the more modern aspects,” says Chris Allen, head of the FBI’s Investigative
Publicity and Public Affairs Unit. “Now folks are on their smartphones, so we
have a Wanted mobile app. We have
social media we use to publicize fugitives—we tweet, run Facebook ads, use
Instagram.”
The FBI also works with digital billboard companies
to publicize wanted fugitives, Allen added.
There are two main criteria for
adding an individual to the list. First, they have to be considered dangerous—based
on crimes already committed—or likely to continue committing crimes. Second, a
fugitive may be added if investigators believe publicity will help lead to the
fugitive’s arrest. Not all fugitives meet both criteria.
Criminals who appear on the Ten Most
Wanted Fugitives list are not ranked. Instead, their position on the FBI
website changes randomly every week, regardless of their length of time on the
Top Ten, how dangerous they are, or the crimes they’re accused of.
While the Top Ten is usually just
that, in 70 years, there have been 13 special additions—instances where the
list has expanded past 10 individuals. These include the additions of James
Earl Ray for the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., and Ramzi Yousef for
the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.
The most on the list at one time was
16, when six members of the Weather Underground militant organization were
added in 1970 for acts of domestic terrorism.
All fugitives on the list are
considered armed and dangerous. If you come across one of the Top Ten
fugitives, contact the FBI’s toll-free tip line at 1-800-CALL-FBI (225-5324) or
submit a tip online. Additionally, you can
contact your local FBI field office or nearest U.S. embassy or consulate.
Thanks to the public’s help, our Ten
Most Wanted Fugitives program continues to apprehend some of the world’s most
dangerous criminals—while reminding fugitives on the run that the FBI never
forgets.
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