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- Q5424624 subject Q6311491.
- Q5424624 subject Q7010824.
- Q5424624 abstract "In 1964, the United States FBI, under Director J. Edgar Hoover, continued for a fifteenth year to maintain a public list of the people it regarded as the Ten Most Wanted Fugitives.As the year 1964 began, nine of the ten places on the list remained filled by these elusive long-time fugitives from prior years, then still at large: 1950 #14 (fourteen years), Frederick J. Tenuto process dismissed March 9, 1964 1956 #97 (eight years), Eugene Francis Newman remained still at large 1960 #137 (four years), Donald Leroy Payne remained still at large 1961 #158 (three years), John Gibson Dillon found murdered March 2, 1964 1962 #170 (two years), Edward Howard Maps remained still at large 1963 #175 (one year), Harold Thomas O'Brien remained still at large 1963 #178 (one year), Howard Jay Barnard arrested April 6, 1964 1963 #181 (three months), Thomas Asbury Hadder arrested January 13, 1964 1963 #182 (one year), Alfred Oponowicz captured December 23, 1964By year end, despite the nearly full list it began the year with, the FBI again had a very productive year of new captures, and added a total of an additional nineteen new Fugitives.Also notable in 1964 was the removal from the list of the Fugitive with the longest time ever spent on the list up to that time, Fugitive #14, Frederick J. Tenuto, who had been listed in the very first year of the first top Ten, although he was not an original Top Tenner. Tenuto's record of fourteen years on the list would not be surpassed until several decades later.".
- Q5424624 thumbnail FBISeal.png?width=300.
- Q5424624 wikiPageExternalLink topten.pdf.
- Q5424624 wikiPageExternalLink fugitives.htm.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q1024037.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q1345.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q1386729.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q163749.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q16553.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q16565.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q18575.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q210435.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q30.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q34404.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q3740173.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q4274300.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q43788.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q491114.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q49255.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q511922.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q52471.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q5424597.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q5424598.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q5424599.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q5424600.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q5424602.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q5424608.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q577862.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q6311491.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q65.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q6580.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q68299.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q7010824.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q755741.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q8333.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q948102.
- Q5424624 wikiPageWikiLink Q954164.
- Q5424624 comment "In 1964, the United States FBI, under Director J. Edgar Hoover, continued for a fifteenth year to maintain a public list of the people it regarded as the Ten Most Wanted Fugitives.As the year 1964 began, nine of the ten places on the list remained filled by these elusive long-time fugitives from prior years, then still at large: 1950 #14 (fourteen years), Frederick J.".
- Q5424624 label "FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives by year, 1964".
- Q5424624 depiction FBISeal.png.