George Wright Captured - 41 Years on the Run
by NewsMappers
- Friday, November 23, 1962
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Wright was convicted of the 1962 murder of a gas station owner in Wall, New Jersey.
Authorities say Wright and three associates had already committed multiple armed robberies on Nov. 23, 1962, when Wright and another man shot and killed Walter Patterson, a decorated World War II veteran and father of two, during a robbery of the Collingswood Esso gas station. - Wednesday, August 19, 1970
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He received a 15- to 30-year sentence and had served eight years when he and three other men escaped from the Bayside State Prison in Leesburg, New Jersey, on Aug. 19, 1970 by brazenly stealing the warden's car to get away..
- Monday, July 31, 1972
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The FBI says Wright became affiliated with an underground militant group, the Black Liberation Army, and in 1972 he and his associates hijacked a Delta Air Lines flight from Detroit to Miami — and on to Algeria. The group lived as a communal family together in Detroit before the hijacking, according to Associated Press reports at the time. News reports at the time said Wright, then 29, dressed as a priest and used the alias the Rev. L. Burgess to board Delta Air Lines Flight 841 on July 31, 1972, accompanied by three men, two women and three small children.
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The hijackers then forced the plane to Boston, where an international navigator was taken aboard, and the group flew on to Algeria, where the hijackers sought asylum.
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The group was taken in by Eldridge Cleaver, the American writer and activist, who had been permitted by Algeria's Socialist government to open an office of the Black Panther Movement in that country in 1970, after the Algerian president at the time professed sympathy for what he viewed as worldwide liberation struggles. Algerian officials returned the plane and the money to the U.S. at the request of the American government, and briefly detained the hijackers before letting them stay. Coverage of the hijacker's stay in Algeria said their movements were restricted and the president ignored their calls for asylum and requests to return them the ransom money. Wright's associates were eventually tracked down, arrested, tried and convicted in Paris in 1976.
Wright was the last remaining fugitive. -
Wright and the other hijackers left Algeria in late 1972 or early 1973 and settled in France, where they got jobs and lived together, according to Mikhael Ganouna, producer of the 2010 documentary Nobody Knows my Name about the hijacking.
But Wright left the group, and his associates were subsequently tracked down, arrested and convicted in Paris in 1976. The French government, however, refused to extradite them to the United States. -
It is believed that Wright lived openly in Guinea Bissau, West Africa in the 1980s under his real name for years and even socialized with U.S. embassy officials there, a former U.S. ambassador said Thursday.
- Monday, September 26, 2011
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George Wright, 68 was arrested Monday by Portuguese authorities at the request of the U.S. government, the head of the FBI's New Jersey office said.
- total distance: 11,952 miles (19.235 km)
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