Monday, Nov. 16, 1970
WANTED BY FBI
FOR years, U.S. post offices have been adorned with mug shots of the FBI's "ten most wanted fugitives." No longer does the list consist solely of men on the lam for felonies like rape and kidnaping. Young radicals charged with guerrilla violence now dominate the expanded, 16-name list.
The newest additions are three women. Bernardine Dohrn, 28, a leading Weatherwoman, is charged with violating the federal antiriot law in Chicago during last fall's "Days of Rage." Susan Saxe and Katherine Power, 21-year-old former Brandeis students, are wanted, among other things, for taking part in the September robbery of a Boston bank in which a policeman was killed.
Also on the list are four young men who allegedly bombed the University of Wisconsin's Army Mathematics Research Center in August, killing a postgraduate researcher. They are David Fine, 18; Leo Burt, 22; Dwight Armstrong, 19, and his brother Karleton, 24, a former Wisconsin student. Black Militant H. Rap Brown, 27, made the list after he failed to appear before a Maryland court last May for trial on charges of inciting to riot and arson during a 1967 demonstration. The longest search has been for Cameron Bishop, 28, charged with the 1969 dynamiting of electric power lines that supplied Colorado defense plants.
Though nonpolitical crime is far more prevalent than domestic guerrilla warfare, the FBI has clearly decided that violent radicals deserve more publicity than conventional criminals.
This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.