Forrest Tucker (criminal)

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Born
Forrest Silva Tucker

(1920-06-23)June 23, 1920[1]
DiedMay 29, 2004(2004-05-29) (aged 83)
Resting placeSkyvue Memorial Gardens, Mansfield, Texas
OthernamesWoody Tucker
Forrest Tucker
Born
Forrest Silva Tucker

(1920-06-23)June 23, 1920[1]
DiedMay 29, 2004(2004-05-29) (aged 83)
Resting placeSkyvue Memorial Gardens, Mansfield, Texas
Other namesWoody Tucker
Known forMultiple escapes from prison detention
AllegianceThe Over-the-Hill Gang
Convictions
  • Armed bank robbery
  • Resisting arrest
  • Escape from federal detention
Criminal charge
Penalty
  • Reform school (as a juvenile)
  • Multiple federal and state prison sentences
Accomplices
  • Richard Bellew
  • Theodore Green
  • William McGirk
  • John Waller
Escaped18+ incidents

Forrest Silva "Woody" Tucker (June 23, 1920 – May 29, 2004) was an American career criminal first imprisoned at age 15 who spent the rest of his life in and out of jail.[3] He is best known as an escape artist, having escaped from prison "18 times successfully and 12 times unsuccessfully", by his own reckoning.[3] The 2018 film The Old Man & the Gun, starring Robert Redford as Tucker, is based on his life.

Forrest Silva Tucker was born June 23, 1920, in Miami, Florida, to Leroy Morgan Tucker (1890–1938) and Carmen Tucker (née Silva; 1898–1964).[1] Leroy Tucker, a heavy-equipment operator, left the family when Forrest was six years old. Forrest was raised in Stuart, Florida by his grandmother Ellen Silva (née Morgan).[1] His first escape from detention happened in the spring of 1936, after he was incarcerated for car theft.[3][4]

Personal life

Tucker married three times and had two children, a boy and a girl; none of his wives knew of his criminal career until they were informed by police.[3][5]

Prison escapes

A former inmate of Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary, Tucker was able to escape from the authorities when he was temporarily moved to a hospital in San Francisco for an operation. He was captured a few hours later still in handcuffs and a hospital gown.[3] His most famous escape was in the summer of 1979 from San Quentin State Prison in California, when he and two confederates built a kayak and paddled away in full view of the guards. He was not apprehended for twenty one years, during which time he and a gang went on a crime spree.[3]

Tucker's crimes of choice were bank robberies. Law enforcement estimates Tucker stole over $4 million from banks during his career.[3] Tucker wrote a number of books about his life, including Alcatraz: The True Story, and The Can Opener,[3] although it is unclear if they were ever published.[6]

While living in a retirement community in Pompano Beach, Florida, at the age of 79 and married for the third time, Tucker by himself robbed an estimated four banks in the local community. In 2000, law enforcement apprehended Tucker; the Court sentenced him to 13 years in prison at the Federal Medical Center, Fort Worth (now known as Federal Correctional Institution, Fort Worth).[5] Tucker did not live out his sentence and died in prison less than 4 years later, on May 29, 2004, at the age of 83. He is buried in Mansfield, TX.[5]

In 2003, David Grann in The New Yorker profiled Tucker in a piece titled "The Old Man and the Gun", which described Tucker's most recent bank robbery.[3]

Film

References

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