BBC NEWS    BBC Sport >>   Graphics version >>   Change to UK edition >>
News Front Page | Africa | Americas | Asia-Pacific | Europe | Middle East | South Asia | UK | Business | Entertainment | Science/Nature | Technology | Health | Talking Point
Monday, 11 November, 2002, 13:42 GMT

US gang fugitive appears in court

James Kilgore, the last free member of the gang which kidnapped American heiress Patty Hearst, may surrender to face trial in the US, his South African lawyer has said.

Mr Kilgore appeared briefly at a court in Cape Town on Monday at the beginning of extradition proceedings.

He was arrested last Friday after nearly 27 years on the run - the last five of which in Cape Town where he lived under the name Charles William Pape.

US authorities have had him on their most-wanted list for decades for his involvement with the radical Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) which staged a number of bank robberies in the US during the 1970s.

Negotiations

Mr Kilgore's lawyer, Michael Evans, said after the hearing that his client was speaking to US officials about a deal under which he would join four former colleagues sentenced last week for second-degree murder.

"Over the last few months, there have been negotiations with the authorities in California, and we are waiting for further developments in that regard," he said.

"There are attorneys in the United States who are acting on [Mr Kilgore's] behalf.

"It is clearly linked to what has been happening in California and related to the other negotiations."

Mr Kilgore is wanted in connection with an unexploded bomb found with his fingerprints and with the death of bank employee Myrna Opsahl in the 1975 robbery of a bank in Sacramento.

Four former SLA members pleaded guilty to second-degree murder last week and will face six to eight years in prison after a plea bargain deal in connection with the same robbery.

South African law bars the extradition of a suspect to a jurisdiction which could impose the death penalty for the alleged crimes.

Supporters

Mr Kilgore was greeted with applause and shouts of "Viva John" from more than 100 supporters when he arrived in the courtroom.

The BBC correspondent in Cape Town, Alastair Leithead, said Mr Kilgore looked more like the university researcher he had become than a fugitive member of the revolutionary SLA which kidnapped Ms Hearst and then converted her to its cause.

He has worked at the University of Cape Town as a researcher since 1998 and often had articles published in left-wing journals under the name of "Dr John Pape".

Mr Kilgore hugged his wife, academic Terri Barnes, who cried through most of the five-minute hearing.

Our correspondent said it is not known how much of his secret life she knew about, but Mr Kilgore's colleagues and friends in the plush suburb where he lived knew nothing of his revolutionary past.


Related to this story:
SA questions US extradition plan (09 Nov 02 | Africa) Last Hearst gang fugitive arrested (09 Nov 02 | Americas) Hearst gangsters admit murder (08 Nov 02 | Americas) Hearst gang's Olson sentenced (18 Jan 02 | Americas) America's hippy extremists (17 Jan 02 | Americas) Hearst gang fugitive pleads guilty (01 Nov 01 | Americas) Hearst 'kidnapper' arrested (17 Jun 99 | Americas)


Internet links: FBI | The Patty Hearst Page | America's Most Wanted | South African Government
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
News Front Page | Africa | Americas | Asia-Pacific | Europe | Middle East | South Asia | UK | Business | Entertainment | Science/Nature | Technology | Health | Talking Point

^^ Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage | Feedback | ©