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List of kidnappings

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This is a list of kidnappings.

Contents

Modern kidnappings of celebrities or their relatives

Kidnappers interested in getting a large ransom or a political effect often target celebrities or their relatives. Here are some of the people affected by these crimes:

  • Levan Kaladze: In 2001, Kaladze's brother Levan, a medical student, was kidnapped in Georgia, with a ransom of $600,000 demanded.[18] Georgia's president at the time, Eduard Shevardnadze promised "everything is being done to locate him",[63] despite this the only time that Levan was ever seen was in a video where he was shown blindfolded and begging for help.[64] Following the kidnapping, Kaladze threatened to take up Ukrainian citizenship,[17] but reverted his decision stating, "There was a time when I thought about quitting the national side completely, but I couldn’t do it out of respect for the Georgian people and the fans who come and give us such support."[65] Roughly four years later, on 6 May 2005, Georgian police officers found eight dead bodies in the Svaneti region and it was speculated that Levan was among the dead.[66][67] 21 February 2006 was the date when Levan was officially identified among the deceased,[18] after tests from FBI experts.[68] The local media claimed that the ransom was paid by Kaladze's family[68] although another source says that Kaladze's father attempted to meet the kidnappers, who fled as they believed he was followed by the police.[11] Two men were sentenced to prison for the murder; David Asatiani for 25 years and Merab Amisulashvili for five years.[68] On 14 July 2009, Kaladze's wife Anouki gave birth to their first-born son in Milan. The couple named their son Levan, in memory of Kaladze's brother.[69]
  • Cindy Birdsong: A member of the Motown supergroup The Supremes. Birdsong was kidnapped in December 1969, aged 30, at knife-point from her Hollywood apartment and escaped two hours later by jumping from the car at a freeway exit. Charles Collier, the handyman at Birdsong's apartment, was later convicted of the kidnapping.
  • Jorge and Juan Born (1974), scions of the Bunge y Born business were kidnapped in September by the Montoneros and only released after the payment of a $60 million ransom.
  • Riddick Bowe (boxer): Former world heavyweight champion kidnapped his estranged wife, Judy, and their five children from North Carolina in February 1998, hoping to reconcile his marriage. Police captured Bowe in South Hill, Virginia, freeing his family.
  • Jorge Campos (soccer player): In 1999, his father was kidnapped and later found alive in Acapulco, Mexico.
  • Rajkumar (born Singanalluru Puttaswamayya Muthuraju) an actor and singer in Kannada film industry, was kidnapped from the actor's house at Gajanur in Tamil Nadu on 30 July 2000, along with his son-in-law Govindaraju and two others. He was released unharmed on 15 November 2000, after 108 days of captivity.
  • Françoise Claustre: French archaeologist who was kidnapped in Chad by guerillas led by Hissène Habré. Her husband, Pierre, was the head of the French foreign aid mission in Chad and he was also taken hostage when he tried to secure her release.
  • Baron Édouard-Jean Empain: Industrialist who was kidnapped for ransom. His captors cut off one of his fingers in order to bring proof that they held him. He was later released.
  • John Paul Getty III, kidnapped in Italy in 1973. His grandfather, the then world's richest man, American multi-billionaire oil tycoon, J. Paul Getty, refused to pay his $3 million ransom until one of the boy's ears was cut off and sent to a newspaper.
  • Georgiy Gongadze: Prominent Ukrainian journalist kidnapped and later found beheaded in 2000. His disappearance has triggered a major political and diplomatic scandal also involving United States and other Western countries. No details of the crime revealed yet.
  • William Randolph Hearst: His granddaughter Patty Hearst was kidnapped by the SLA in 1974. Her father gave $6 million in food to the poor of the Bay Area as ransom, but she was not released. She became part of her captor's group and was later convicted on bank robbery charges.
  • Jennifer Hudson: Her nephew was kidnapped after her mother and brother were shot to death. He was later found dead.
  • Julio Iglesias: His father was kidnapped in 1985 but found alive and healthy.
  • David Letterman: In 2005, FBI agents and Montana authorities foiled a kidnapping of Letterman's son from his Choteau, Montana home.
  • Charles Lindbergh: The aviator's two-year-old son, Charles Jr., was kidnapped in 1932 and was killed. Bruno Hauptmann was arrested and executed for the crime, but concerns remain regarding Hauptmann's guilt and the fairness of the trial (see Lindbergh kidnapping).
  • Adi Koila Mara Nailatikau: First daughter of Fiji and senator, was kidnapped during a coup against her father. Kidnappers threatened to kill her, but she survived.
  • Yoko Ono: Her second husband Anthony Cox abducted their daughter Kyoko Chan Cox in 1971. Ono and her daughter were finally reunited in 1998, Cox remains in hiding.
  • Carlos Pesquera: Former candidate for governor of Puerto Rico and president of the PNP party, held captive for a few hours on July 2004 in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico; released after paying captors 1,000 U.S. dollars.
  • Veruska Ramirez, former Miss Venezuela, kidnapped in 2003 and released three hours later after signing fifteen (15) autographs for her captors.
  • Ruben Omar Romano, Argentine soccer coach, was kidnapped in Mexico on 19 July 2005 and rescued two months later.
  • Cesar Rosas: Member of Los Lobos whose wife, Sandra, was kidnapped on 23 October 1999 and later found dead. Gabriel Gomez was accused and sentenced for her kidnapping and murder.
  • Hanns-Martin Schleyer: German manager and employer representative. He was kidnapped in Köln in 1977. He was found dead in Mulhouse, France.
  • Daryush Shokof: The artist-filmmaker was kidapped after he screened his films Iran Zendan and hitler's Grave that portrayed the horrible situations of Iranian Political Prisoners in Iran and under the Islamic republic Regime of Iran in Berlin, Germany. He said he was held by Arabic speaking men for 12 days and was released not to publicize the films.He was thrown into the Rhine river in Cologne, Germany.The German Police debates the validity of the incident up to this date.
  • Frank Sinatra, Jr. (1963), son of Frank Sinatra, was kidnapped and released after ransom was paid a few days later.
  • Karl von Spreti: West-Germany's ambassador to Guatemala, was kidnapped in 1970 in Guatemala City and later murdered.
  • Johnny Tapia: The world boxing champion saw his mother raped and kidnapped when he was 8 years old. He was hiding when he witnessed the assault. His mother's body was found on a road days later.
  • Thalía: The Mexican diva's sisters, Ernestina Sodi and actress Laura Zapata, were kidnapped but later both released alive.
  • Nikoloz Tskitishvili: The basketball player, a star in his home country (Georgia), had strangers call to his house and threaten to kidnap his brother and mother after it became known he signed a million-dollar contract with the NBA's Denver Nuggets. As a consequence, he moved all his family to Denver.
  • Victor Li Tzar-kuoi, son of the Hong Kong tycoon, Li Ka Shing: Kidnapped by Cheung Chi Keung, AKA "Big Spender". He was released after the world record payment of a HK$1,000,000,000 (US$134,000,000) ransom. Cheung was later captured and executed in Guangzhou in 2000.
  • Faked kidnappings

  • Fairlie Arrow (1991), an Australian singer, went missing for two days and was found tied up in a road in Queensland. She claimed she had been abducted by a fan but, two weeks later, admitted making up the story to boost her flagging career.
  • Jules Croiset, Dutch actor who faked being kidnapped by neo-Nazis.
  • Joanna Grenside (1992), an aerobics teacher from Harpenden, England, who staged her disappearance to avoid Christmas.
  • Dar Heatherington, Alberta city councillor who claimed to have been abducted in Montana.
  • Audrey Seiler, University of Wisconsin–Madison student who faked her own kidnapping in the spring of 2004.
  • Jennifer Wilbanks (a.k.a. the Runaway Bride): American woman who alleged that she was kidnapped as an excuse for her running away from her own wedding in late April 2005.
  • Michele Sindona, Italian banker; murdered, but kidnapping was fake.
  • Assumed kidnap conspiracies that turned out to be fake

  • Victoria Beckham. A member of the Spice Girls and wife of footballer David Beckham was supposedly planned to be kidnapped on 1 November 2002.
  • Jorge Ursino, the alleged illegal immigrant transporter from Arizona faked his own kidnapping to collect money by making headlines.
  • Suspected kidnappings

  • Haleigh Cummings; the child, according to news reports from CNN and other major television news sources, was being watched by the girlfriend, later wife, of her father, Ronald Cummings, when she disappeared from her mobile home in Satsuma, Florida in February 2009. Two persons of interest in the still unsolved kidnapping were implicated in a drug sting in January 2010, renewing interest in the case.
  • Jimmy Hoffa, American union leader; briefly kidnapped, murdered and body disposed of.
  • Helen Brach millionaire owner of a candy company; an informant claimed she was kidnapped after leaving the Mayo Clinic, then murdered; her remains have never been located.
  • Cédrika Provencher 10-year-old girl from Trois-Rivières, Canada went missing on July 31, 2007. Her remains were discovered on December 11, 2015.
  • Dru Sjodin, American college student seems to have been abducted on 22 November 2003, and was found dead on 17 April 2004.
  • Hassani Campbell; 5-year-old boy with cerebral palsy went missing in Oakland, California on 10 August 2009. Hassani's foster father, Louis Ross, said he left Hassani waiting at the back of the shoe store where Hassani's aunt, Jennifer Campbell, worked while he went around to the front of the store with Hassani's younger sister.
  • Cameron Brett Willis-Exum; 1-year-old boy went missing from the mid-western United States in April 2012 when his aunt who was temporarily caring for him, died suddenly. Investigators briefly found the child in the state of California under the last name of Martinez, where they obtained a DNA sample. Before the positive results were returned identifying the child as Willis-Exum; the current care-giver crossed into Mexico.
  • Aimee Semple McPherson, evangelist who maintained she was kidnapped and held for ransom from 18 May through 23 June 1926 until she escaped. A grand jury inquiry instead charged her with fabricating it. Charges against McPherson were dropped for lack of evidence. No indictments against her described kidnappers were pursued.
  • Kidnapping in lieu of extradition

    See main article: Extradition and abduction
  • Humberto Álvarez Machaín, from Mexico to the United States by locals hired by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in 1990.
  • Jabez Balfour, from Argentina to the United Kingdom in 1895.
  • Ronnie Biggs, from Brazil to the United Kingdom by independent bounty hunters in 1981.
  • Adolf Eichmann, from Argentina to Israel in 1960.
  • Mir Aimal Kasi, from Pakistan to the United States in 1997.
  • Andrew Luster, from Mexico to the United States by Duane Chapman ("Dog the Bounty Hunter") in 2003.
  • Martin Mubanga, from Zambia to Guantanamo Bay by the United States in 2002.
  • Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr, from Italy to Egypt by the CIA in 2005.
  • Morton Sobell, from Mexico to the United States in 1950.
  • Mordechai Vanunu, from Italy to Israel in 1986.
  • Mass kidnappings

  • 1976 Chowchilla kidnapping: 26 children on a school bus and the bus driver were held in a buried moving van, in a quarry.
  • 2010 Kurram agency mass kidnapping: 60 people were taken from the Kurram Tribunial Agency in Pakistan by militants dressed as police officiers.
  • 2014 Chibok kidnapping: More than 200 schoolgirls were taken from their school during an exam. The Boko Haram terrorist group is suspected to have perpetrated the attack.
  • References

    List of kidnappings Wikipedia


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