On August 18, 1970, Angela Yvonne Davis became the third woman ever placed on the FBI’s Top 10 Most Wanted Fugitives list, sought for her supposed involvement in kidnappings and murders growing out of an armed seizure of a Marin County Courthouse in California. Until her arrest two months later, photos of the 26-year-old university professor and activist with her iconic Afro hairstyle appeared on an FBI poster along with a warning that she should be considered “armed and dangerous.”
Davis's arrest was followed by a 16-month incarceration and a huge global campaign to “Free Angela Davis,” leading to her acquittal in 1972. An acclaimed author, academic and advocate for prison reform, Davis has since described those two years as a “formative” period for what became her lifelong work.
Davis Campaigns for the Release of the Soledad Brothers
Davis had gained national notoriety in 1969 when she was fired from her position as a lecturer in the philosophy department at the University of California Los Angeles because of her political activism and declared affiliation with the Communist Party. Davis sued and got her position back, but then left UCLA when her contract expired in 1970. That same year, Davis became involved in a campaign to liberate the so-called Soledad Brothers, three prisoners accused of the murder of a prison guard at a California state prison. The killing had occurred three days after another guard shot and killed three Black prisoners during a riot.
At a press conference in which she announced the formation of the Soledad Brothers Defense Committee, Davis said the charges against the three were the latest in a "long series of repressive and genocidal measures taken by the prisons in the state." A member of that committee was Jonathan Jackson, the blood brother of one of the three men.
The Assault on the Marin County Courthouse
On August 7 Jackson burst into a courthouse in Marin County, California, where Judge Harold J. Haley presided over an assault trial. The Associated Press reported that Jackson carried a bowling bag full of weapons and distributed them to three convicts—one on trial and two there as witnesses.
The armed men took Judge Haley and four other people as hostages and marched them into a small van in the parking lot. Authorities alleged that Jackson intended to trade the hostages for the Soledad prisoners. Police exchanged fire with the abductors as they attempted to flee, and four people were killed in the shootout: the judge, two of the prisoners and Jackson.
Witnesses before a county grand jury testified that several of the weapons used in the courthouse takeover had been purchased by Davis, including a sawed-off shotgun that authorities said was used to kill Judge Haley. Although Davis had not been present, the grand jury returned an indictment charging her with kidnapping, murder and conspiracy.
Davis never denied owning the weapons, but said she was not involved and had no knowledge of her weapons being used in the courthouse assault.
In a 2004 interview on C-SPAN, Davis said that she had received multiple threats following her discharge from UCLA, that she “purchased guns that were used by a number of people who acted as security” for her and that Jackson had been part of that “security detail” with access to the weapons.
Warrant Issued for Davis' Arrest
Two weeks after the assault, on August 14, a judge issued a warrant for Davis’ arrest and an intense police search began. Four days later, on August 18, FBI director J. Edgar Hoover listed her on the agency’s Ten Most Wanted Fugitive List. Davis went underground and fled California. In a 1974 autobiography and in numerous accounts since Davis describes how she changed her appearance, hid in friends’ homes and moved around at night.
On October 13 FBI agents found Davis (wearing a wig) at a Howard Johnson Motor Lodge in New York City and arrested her. She was unarmed and offered no resistance. Photographs of a handcuffed Davis made newspaper front pages around the world. President Richard Nixon congratulated the FBI on its “capture of the dangerous terrorist, Angela Davis.”