FBI 1950'den beri azılı suçluları bulmak için "En çok Aranan 10 Kaçak" listesinden faydalanıyor. Tarihte karanlık bir yer edinen katiller, soyguncular, mafya babaları ve teröristler yarım yüzyıldan uzun süredir "aranıyor".
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As one of the most prolific rapists and serial killers of all time, Bundy was added to the FBI's most-wanted list in 1978 after being linked to several disappearances and killings of teen girls in Oregon, Washington and Utah. After twice escaping from prison, he gained a following more akin to a celebrity during his well-publicized trial. Though Bundy eventually confessed to 28 murders, police estimate that he was responsible for at least 100. In 1989, he was executed by Florida's electric chair at the age of 43. In February 2010, the Volkswagen Beetle where many of his brutal murders took place was added to the display at the National Museum of Crime & Punishment.
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One of Boston's most infamous gangsters, Irish mob boss James "Whitey" Bulger has a list of alleged crimes including money laundering, extortion, drug dealing and 19 murders. He has the distinction of being one of the FBI's most-wanted men — second only to the now deceased Osama bin Laden — as well as the oldest person ever to be added to the list (in 1999, at age 69). A $2 million reward was on offer for his capture. But those distinctions are no more after he was arrested in Santa Monica. The 81-year-old was detained with his long-time girlfriend Catherine Greig, who is 60. Announcing the arrests, the FBI's Richard Deslauriers said the couple were detained "without incident."
Read more: https://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1971762_1971761_1971730,00.html #ixzz1ror9Z8rm
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Although he started as a small-time crook who robbed grocery stores and dabbled in mail fraud, Ray eventually became one of the most notorious murderers ever when he assassinated civil rights hero Martin Luther King Jr., shooting him in Memphis on April 4, 1968. Ray is one of just six fugitives to have appeared on the list twice — originally in 1968, and again in 1977 when he escaped from prison. Ray was sentenced to 99 years, later recanting his confession; in 1998, he died in prison of hepatitis C at the age of 70.
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Eisemann-Schier was the first woman to be placed on the FBI's most-wanted list, in late 1968. Along with Gary Steven Krist, she was wanted for the kidnapping of Barbara Jane Mackle and extortion. The wealthy Mackle family eventually paid a $500,000 ransom, and Barbara Jane, a 20-year-old college student who had been buried in a box 1½ ft. underground, was discovered safe. Krist was captured within days, but Eisemann-Schier, a 26-year-old graduate student, remained a fugitive for more than two months. She later pleaded guilty, saying she had been in love with Krist, the mastermind of the plot. After a few years in prison, she was paroled and deported to Honduras.
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Another prominent radical was Black Panther H. Rap Brown, who was wanted by the FBI for two years. The charges came following a 1967 rally in which Brown told a crowd of hundreds to get guns and "burn America down"; the rally resulted in riots and a shooting. Brown was charged with unlawful interstate flight, arson, inciting to riot and failure to appear in court. Brown, who has since changed his name to Jamil Abdullah al-Amin after converting to Islam, is currently serving a life sentence for the 2000 fatal shooting of a law-enforcement officer.
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He was on the list for more than 10 years, originally wanted for allegedly orchestrating the bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. Though the official FBI poster listed his occupation as "unknown," the Saudi Arabian–born leader of al-Qaeda was widely known as the most dangerous terrorist on the planet. But on May 1, 2011, after years of evading capture, bin Laden was killed by U.S. special operations forces inside a heavily fortified compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, just north of the capital of Islamabad.
While the FBI does not list the 9/11 attacks among bin Laden's crimes, he claimed responsibility for them — and often praised the hijackers for completing their mission. Bin Laden's No. 2, Ayman al-Zawahiri, remains on the FBI's most-wanted list. Another international terrorist who once found his way onto the list is Ramzi Yousef, the mastermind behind the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center. He was caught in 1995 and is serving a life sentence.