FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives, 1950s
In the 1950s, the United States FBI began to maintain a public list of the people it regarded as the Ten Most Wanted Fugitives. Following is a brief review of FBI people and events that place the 1950s decade in context, and then an historical list of individual fugitives whose names first appeared on the 10 Most Wanted list during the decade of the 1950s, under FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover.
FBI headlines in decade of 1950s
editIn late 1949 the FBI helped publish an article about the "toughest guys" the Bureau was after, who remained fugitives from justice. The positive publicity from the story resulted in the birth of the FBI's "Ten Most Wanted Fugitives" list on March 14, 1950.
Cases of espionage against the United States and its allies were some of the prevalent investigations by the Bureau during the 1950s. Eight Nazi agents who had planned sabotage operations against American targets were arrested. Organized crime networks and families in the United States also became targets, including those headed by Sam Giancana and John Gotti.
FBI "Most Wanted Fugitives" in the 1950s
editAs wanted fugitives were added, and then later removed, the FBI began to keep track of the sequence number in which each fugitive appeared on the list. Some individuals have even appeared twice, and often a sequence number was permanently assigned to an individual fugitive who was soon caught, captured, or simply removed, before his or her 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 fugitive's sequence number and date of entry on the FBI list appear below, whenever possible.
The most wanted fugitives listed in the decade of the 1950s include (in FBI list appearance sequence order):
Year 1950
editWilliam Francis Sutton
editMarch 20, 1950 #11
William Francis (Willie) Sutton
On February 18, 1952, Sutton was arrested without incident in New York after two years on the list.
Year 1951
editGeorge Arthur Heroux
editDecember 19, 1951 #28
George Arthur Heroux
On July 25, 1952, Heroux, who was a bank robber with accomplice and fellow top Ten Fugitive, Gerhard Arthur Puff, was caught at Miami, Florida after seven months on the list.
Year 1952
editGerhard Arthur Puff
editJanuary 28, 1952 #30 - was added soon after his partner George Arthur Heroux, #28
Gerhard Arthur Puff
Puff, who was a bank robber with accomplice and fellow top Ten Fugitive, George Arthur Heroux, was caught after killing an FBI Agent in a gunbattle after six months on the list. He was executed two years later.
Year 1953
editYear 1954
editYear 1955
editYear 1956
editYear 1957
editYear 1958
editYear 1959
editBy the end of the decade, six of the ten places on the list remained filled by these elusive long-time fugitives, then still at large:
- 1950 #14 (ten years), Frederick J. Tenuto
- 1952 #36 (eight years), James Eddie Diggs
- 1954 #78 (six years), David Daniel Keegan
- 1956 #97 (four years), Eugene Francis Newman
- 1958 #107 (two years), Angelo Luigi Pero
- 1959 #112 (one year), Edwin Sanford Garrison