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The youngest people ever on the FBI list are wanted

The youngest people ever on the FBI list are wanted

We like to think that the most-searched FBI list is mostly populated by the hardened criminal, the kind of person who commits crimes for 10 or 15 years before stealing a bank, killing a few passers-by, and fleeing to Mexico, where he usually stays for decades. It's hard to get your mind around the idea that kids and young adults can be hardened criminals, too.

Although it is certainly not as common as the stereotype of the mature criminal boss and the career-turned-out-of-law criminal, people as young as 18 are perfectly capable of committing crimes odious enough to get the attention of the FBI. And while we may not like to think about it, it's probably not a bad idea to recognize that criminals come in all shapes, sizes, genders, and ages. In other words, you can not trust anyone, no matter how innocent they seem. Here are some of the youngest people to ever list the most searched FBI.

Killed a collaborator for the contents of his bank account


In 2016, Sandy loaned him $ 1,000 to 18-year-old Alejandro Rosales Castillo, his colleague at a Charlotte, North Carolina restaurant. Lesson 1: When someone you work with is asking for a loan, say, "We work in the same place, if you do not have that kind of money, what do you think I do?" Do not say, "of course, here's a big one." best scenario, you'll never see your money again. In the worst case, you will be murdered at a gas station and your colleague will drain your bank account and flee to Mexico.

Sandy's body was found in a creek a little over a week after Castillo promised to pay back the $ 1,000 she had loaned him. Lesson 2: When someone says he's going to pay back the money he borrowed, but you have to meet him at a gas station late at night, say, "Hmm, let's meet at Starbucks at lunch time instead, I'll buy you some coffee! "

According to the FBI, Castillo was later spotted crossing the border into Mexico. His girlfriend, who was thought to be an accomplice to the crime, apparently decided that she really did not want to live in Mexico forever on all the money they managed to get out of a 23-year-old account. Bank, and turned to the authorities. When the police failed to capture Castillo, they put him on the most-searched list, giving him the dubious distinction of being one of the youngest ever to finish up there.

He kidnapped a guy, made him play video games, killed him


If you have a name like Jesse James Hollywood, you are destined to be either a criminal, an actor, or maybe a guy who flocks cattle with a helicopter. This particular Jesse James Hollywood went with the first option. According to NBC News, he became a drug kingpin with a lot of people helping him sell drugs, most of which owed him money.

Ben Markowitz owed Hollywood $ 1,200 that he did not feel particularly obliged to pay. Hoping to settle the score, Hollywood and his crew kidnapped Markowitz's 15-year-old brother, Nick, in August 2000. They held him for two odd days, during which he played video games and went to a pool party. But then Hollywood became nervous about the whole "consequences" thing, so he asked one of his mates to take Markowitz to a remote location and shoot him.

Hollywood did not manage to think about it, though. During the strange, two-day kidnapping, Nick had been seen by many people. After his body was discovered, just about everyone knew who was responsible for killing him.

The police stopped the detonator, but Hollywood, 21, disappeared and was placed on the FBI's most sought-after list. He fled to Brazil, where he lived for five years until the authorities tracked him down, mainly because his parents called him and sent him money so he could live forever free of justice. Grandparent, Mr. and Mrs. Hollywood.

3 Shot at his girlfriend and toddler


These stories are all pretty horrible, but nothing is as sickening as the murder of a small child and his mother. In February 2010, 17-year-old MS-13 member Juan Elias Garcia killed his ex-girlfriend Vanessa Argueta, 19, and her 2-year-old son. His reason? Well, both had argued and after he was threatened by members of the rival gang, she had ties. So he decided to make them even more upset by killing her, which seems to be the wrong course, but OK. Anyway, according to the FBI, Garcia invited Argueta to dinner, but then drove her and her son to a wooded area and shot him in the head. He then allowed a gang member to shoot the 2-year-old, because the 2-year-olds make really awesome witnesses at the court.

Garcia fled to Nicaragua, but it was only in 2014, when he was 21, that the FBI finally decided to put him on their most-searched list. Just two days after his picture began to appear on wanted posters around the world, he surrendered and was extradited to the United States, where he pleaded guilty and was sentenced to life in prison.

Stole a bank, forgot the bag


Twenty-one-year-old Malcolm Lorenzo Jones made the most-searched FBI list for a good old bank robbery, which is what people used to get on the FBI's most sought-after list. for the return in more innocent moments, when no one was really afraid of toddlers turning state proof. Anyway, the Cincinnati researcher says on May 22, 2017, Lorenzo went into a bank wearing a black hoodie (because the stereotypes are fun), then pulled out a handgun and told everyone world to get on the floor. A teller was emptying a cash drawer for him when he opened a door to let in his brother, who also wanted to be a bank robber. But then oops, Lorenzo accidentally left the door unlocked and an off duty policeman came inside.

Lorenzo stuffed the money in his pockets because he forgot to bring a bag. Walking the police officer off, who fired his gun. The two exchanged fire, then Lorenzo and his brother escaped through the front door, dropping $ 2,700 of the $ 6,700 they were trying to steal, mainly because of the lack of a bag. Shortly after the robbery, Lorenzo was placed on the most searched list and was captured a few months later after DNA and fingerprints linked him to the crime.

5 Killed a pregnant woman to play music too loud


The next time you're tempted to argue with your neighbor about stupid things like loud music, the length of the grass or how many old cars he has in his driveway, do not do it. Nothing can get you into trouble like a fight with someone you can not escape.

According to Heavy, Shanika Minor, a 24-year-old Milwaukee resident, was annoyed by the fact that her neighbor, nine-month-old Tamecca Perry, was playing loud music. Admittedly, it's really annoying but not really a capital offense. In March 2016, she confronted Perry on the sidewalk with a gun and fired shots in the air. Minor's mother, who probably regretted never having said anything about loud music, defused the situation, but Minor was not finished. She felt that Perry had severely disrespected her, as well as her family. She went back to Perry's house. The next day she shot her in the garden in front of her two children and her boyfriend. Perry dragged herself into the house and died. His unborn baby is dead too.

After that, Minor might have thought, "Shit, being disrespectful may not be so bad as being on the list of the most wanted by the FBI." Be that as it may, she fled and remained on the run for a few days after being added to the list when she was apprehended in North Carolina.

6 Stolen an armory because of the Vietnam War


More than 500 people have been placed on the FBI's most sought-after list since it became a thing back in 1950. The vast majority of these people were men-the number of women on the most-searched list of the FBI. FBI did not even hit two numbers until 2016.

In 1970, an anti-war activist named Katherine Ann Power, his roommate, and three male friends stole an armory from the National Guard and the Bank because the Vietnam War. According to the people, the quintet hoped to use the money, which amounted to about $ 26,000, to buy weapons for the Black Panthers. But things went terribly wrong and the group was upset by a policeman named Walter Schroeder. As the 21-year-old power was sitting in the van car, one of his co-conspirators shot Schroeder in the back so the group could escape.

The three men were arrested a few days later, but the power and his roommate, Susan Saxe, disappeared and were placed on the list of the most sought after. Power remained in general for 23 years. She changed her name, moved to Oregon, opened a restaurant, got married and became a mother. But she was haunted by the memory of her crime, and finally decided to surrender. In 1993, she pled guilty to manslaughter and armed robbery, was sentenced to imprisonment and served six years in prison for a period of 8 to 12 years.

As stolen as sacredly armory because of the Vietnam War


Susan Saxe was Katherine Power's roommate, and was charged with the same crime. She was on the run, too, but did not stay at the top of the police for five years. By the time Katherine Power surrendered, Saxe had already served her prison sentence for the crime and lived as a free woman. In fact, while in prison in the early 1980s, Saxony was also running a successful IT business.

A 1975 article in the New York Times said that in the first years after their crime, Saxony and the power were able to avoid the authorities with the help of some people "in the women's movement," who only its like something a newspaper would say in the 70's, when law-abiding citizens have never done things like asking for equal rights and better pay.

According to Rolling Stone, Saxony lived in Philadelphia when a police officer recognized her in an FBI photograph. She was obviously walking in downtown Philadelphia when the agent spotted her and stopped her. She served eight years from 12 to 14 years and was released in 1982. After being released on parole, she returned to Philadelphia and got work for a Jewish charity.

8 Stole a bank, remembered the bag


The most popular list was just a toddler when Ollie Gene Embry landed there in 1951 for the simple crime of stealing a bank. Embry and three friends took a little over $ 8,000, so they did at least better than Malcolm Lorenzo Jones, and they probably remembered bringing a bag, too.

Embry's co-conspirators were captured shortly after the crime, but Embry remained largely for several months until he was placed on the FBI's Most Wanted List at the age of 22. . The FBI said it was apprehended after a citizen saw his photo on a wanted poster in the post office and recognized him as a gas station attendant. So, yes, standing around bored in the line at the post office is your civic duty. When Embry was caught, he was "armed only with a wiping cloth," so obviously $ 8,000 did not go very far, even in the 1950s.

9 Exploded building because he did not like the Vietnam War


When modern teens want to make a political statement, they organize school walkouts and they write to their senators and they use Twitter to get advertisers to boycott television personalities. Most teenagers recognize that blowing things is not really a great way to make a political statement unless your goal is to gather first-hand knowledge about the nutritional content of prison food.

In September 1970, 18-year-old David Fine and some friends decided to blow up the Sterling Hall Mathematics Building at the University of Wisconsin. According to the Stanford daily, the room was targeted because the United States was still in Vietnam and some of the Sterling Hall projects were contracted by the military. Fine and his friends, who were suspected members of the radical underground movement of time (not to be confused with the strictly meteorological service of the same name) blew up the building just before 4 am, thinking that no one in their right mind could to be I'm working so late. They were wrong, of course, and the blast ended up killing the researcher and the father of three Robert Fassnacht. When fine and his co-conspirators heard someone had been killed, they went on the run, and the FBI put them on the list of the most sought after. Fine lived as a fugitive for over five years until someone spotted him living in California and warned the feds.

10 Also exploded a building because of (what else) the Vietnam War


The bombing of Sterling Hall was the worst incident of domestic terrorism until the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. Including David Fine, there was a total of four men involved. Nineteen-year-old Dwight Armstrong was the younger brother of leader Karleton Armstrong - according to the Wisconsin State Journal, Dwight was "swept into the anti-war movement" by his brother.

Yet at age 19, you should know better, but the men were all convinced that the destructive action was the only way to get the attention of the government. He did it, but probably not the way they wanted. Dwight Armstrong joined his accomplices on the FBI's most sought-after list when he fled with his brother, very well, and a fourth conspirator named Leo Burt. Dwight Armstrong remained on the run for seven years and was finally apprehended in Toronto. His sentence was light enough, really-he served three years in prison and was released on parole, and all that time, he probably thought, "Man, if I had just gone back in 1970 I would be done with all this now. "After another Run-in with the Fa, he ended up becoming a taxi driver and lived happily ever after. His brother, incidentally, has become the successful owner of a sandwich Shop and Juice bar, so yes, you can blow up an entire building and still lead a happy and productive life.

11 "Yes, we can end the Vietnam War by blowing things up"


The fourth co-conspirator in the bombing of Sterling Hall was Leo Burt, who was drastically after a police officer beat him while he was covering the protests that followed the killings at Kent State University. Generally, being beaten by a police officer is high on the list of things that will make people angry, but Burt kind of went a little overboard when he decided that the correct answer to the beating was to blow up a building.

According to the Milwaukee Journal, Leo Burt - who was either 20 or 22 at the time of the bombing, depending on the date of birth, he felt like help - helped to collect supplies and set up the bomb. After the explosion, he escaped with David Fine to Ontario. The two were spotted at a college residence in Peterborough, but they seem to have been warned somehow because they jumped out the window and ran before the police were able to get a warrant and arrest them.

Leo Burt was never caught, and by 2018 he had been in much longer than any other fugitive in the history of the FBI. At this point, it seems likely that we will either never know what has happened to him, or he will tell someone on his deathbed, then lie back and smile, because after all these years he will finally know with certainty that he escaped with her.

12 Retained the stores and the escaped prison


Another pioneer on the FBI's most sought after list was 23-year-old Joseph Franklin Bent, who was described in 1951 by the Albany, New York, Knickerbocker news as a "hardened Hold-up man" who had been in the army and turned to crime for reasons. His MO was stealing stores, and his career dates back to his army days when he stole a postal substation in Colorado, which is exactly why he was no longer in the military. He had stolen so many different establishments, in fact, that at one point the police thought he was three different people.

His life in crime continued until he was captured in 1950. This time he escaped, and soon thereafter ended up on the most searched list, and we'll just add he was probably not super happy with the Wanted poster because it made it look scary.

Bent was apprehended in his apartment after (strangely) an Alaskan resident saw Bent's picture and said the Bent police could be found in Mexico. Alaska was right, and the cops followed him to Texas. The police shot him in the leg as he tried to escape, thus ending his crime frenzy, but permanently immortalizing him on this scary Wanted poster. And a more amusing fact: Bent is obviously the guy who was invented or was an early adopter of the sentence, "they will never be alive to me," even if they did.
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