Omar August Pinson Explained

Omar August Pinson
Alias:John Omar Pinson
Sam Cignitti
Joseph Anthony Dorian
D.C. Audell
Charge:Murder
Birth Date:31 March 1918
Birth Place:Joplin, Missouri
Death Place:Los Angeles County, California
Added Date:March 18, 1950
Caught Date:August 28, 1950
Number:5
Status:Caught

Omar August Pinson (March 31, 1918  - October 20, 1997), also known as John Omar Pinson, was an American robber and murderer who was on the FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list in 1950.[1] [2]

Biography

Pinson had been released from the Washington State Prison in 1945 after serving time since 1944 for burglary. He also served time at Missouri State Penitentiary for automobile tampering and the Eldora, Iowa State Reformatory on a charge of armed robbery.[3] He had been captured within 24 hours by the Oregon State Police and local officers at Ordnance, Oregon after he shot and fatally wounded Oregon State Police Officer Delmond Rondeau on April 15, 1947, in Hood River, Oregon after a burglary. He had been sentenced on May 24, 1947 to life imprisonment at Oregon State Penitentiary for first degree murder. He became wanted in 1949 in eastern Washington and Idaho for burglary and was charged with unlawful flight on September 7, 1949 when he crossed state lines after he escaped on May 30, 1949 from the Oregon State Prison with a cellmate. He had evaded capture after a shootout with police on January 30, 1950, at Polson, Montana while burglarizing a hardware store. He was a prisoner at Oregon State Penitentiary after being arrested on August 28, 1950 at Pierre, South Dakota by South Dakota Highway Patrol and an FBI National Academy graduate.[4] He was paroled in 1959. In 1975, Pinson, described as a "model parolee", later expressed regret for his crimes.[5] He died in 1997.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Newton, Michael. The FBI Encyclopedia. 16 January 2012. McFarland. 9781476604176. Google Books.
  2. News: Movie Pictures Story of One of Oregon's Most Notorious Convicts, John Omar Pinson. April 15, 1955. The Oregon Statesman. Salem, Oregon. 6.
  3. Book: Swierczynski, Duane. The Encyclopedia of the FBI's Ten Most Wanted List: Over Fifty Years of Convicts, Robbers, Terrorists, and Other Rogues. 4 February 2014. Skyhorse Publishing, Inc.. 9781628739060. Google Books.
  4. Web site: Catching #5 on the FBI's most-wanted fugitive list … in SD. Kaija. Swisher.
  5. News: Thoele. Mike. Journey from Behind Bars. Eugene Register-Guard. October 5, 1975. 1C–2C.