- 6 days ago
Breaking Down the FBI’s Notorious List
#General & Informative #FBI #MostWanted #TrueCrime #CrimeNews #LawEnforcement #CrimeDocumentary #Fugitives
#General & Informative #FBI #MostWanted #TrueCrime #CrimeNews #LawEnforcement #CrimeDocumentary #Fugitives
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00:00For almost 75 years, the FBI's top 10 most wanted list has helped bring down some of
00:05the nation's most dangerous criminals.
00:07As for what makes the list special, it only features criminals that the FBI deems to be
00:11especially serious threats to society.
00:14And to get on it, you basically have to do something extremely messed up or have a very
00:17lengthy record of major crimes.
00:20The story behind the list goes that back in 1949, a reporter asked the FBI to list out
00:24the 10 toughest guys they were trying to catch so they could ask the public for help.
00:29After obtaining the list, the reporter published the criminals' pictures on the front page
00:32of the Washington Daily News, and the rest is history.
00:36Since then, the FBI has been able to catch almost 500 wanted fugitives thanks to public
00:40tips.
00:41These are the current criminals on the list.
00:46Badrash Kumar Shetanbhai Patel
00:49On April 12th, 2015, a CCTV camera captured two Dunkin Donuts employees, one male and one
00:55female walking towards the shop's back room at around 9.30pm before disappearing from view.
01:01A few seconds later, the man comes back into the camera's view, and it seems as if nothing
01:05out of the ordinary took place in the minute that went down between the two clips.
01:09A few minutes later, customers alerted the police when they didn't see any employees in
01:12the shop, and that's when the cops discovered something horrifying.
01:16Lying on the floor of the shop's back room was an Indian woman named Palik, lifeless, who had
01:21been pummeled to death by the man in the footage.
01:24As it was later revealed, the man who took Palik's life was her husband Badrash Kumar.
01:29As the authorities later learned, the couple had been through a series of major arguments
01:32in the months leading up to that day.
01:35According to court documents, the two of their visas were about to expire in a few weeks.
01:40Palik wanted to go back to India, but Badrash Kumar wanted to stay in the US, and it looks
01:44like he couldn't find a better way to communicate his frustration with the situation than to brutally
01:48take his wife's life.
01:51After the crime, Badrash Kumar was last seen taking a taxi from a hotel in New Jersey to
01:55a train station in Newark, but what he did after that is really anyone's guess.
02:00To bring more attention to a suspect who might otherwise walk away scot-free, the FBI placed
02:04him on the most wanted list.
02:06As of today, there's a quarter million dollar reward to bring the suspect into custody, but
02:11almost 10 years after the crime, it looks like that won't happen anytime soon.
02:17Alejandro Rosales Castillo.
02:20The youngest suspect on the most wanted list, 26-year-old Alejandro Rosales Castillo, has
02:24been on the FBI's radar for more than 8 years.
02:28In 2016, he shot his female co-worker Sandy Lee in a wooded area in Cabarrus County, North
02:33Carolina.
02:34A few days later, the female victim's car was located at a bus station in Phoenix, Arizona.
02:39As the authorities later found out, there were multiple people involved in the case, with
02:44the main ones being the victim, a woman named Amia Feaster and Alejandro himself, all of whom
02:49worked together at a restaurant in Charlotte.
02:51During the investigation, the cops learned that Sandy Lee and Alejandro had briefly dated, and
02:56after their breakup, Castillo started dating his other co-worker, Amia Feaster.
03:00According to court documents, Sandy Lee had apparently lent some money to Alejandro, and
03:04on August 9th of that year, he texted her to meet up with him at a quick trip located on
03:09Eastway Drive in Charlotte, claiming that he was going to pay her back.
03:12Disturbingly, that's when Castillo decided to rob her at gunpoint, take her life, and flee
03:17to Mexico.
03:18In an eerie clip of CCTV footage that was later released by the authorities, the suspect can
03:23be seen crossing the Mexican border through Nogales, Arizona, along with his girlfriend,
03:27Amia.
03:28A couple of months later that same year, Amia turned herself into the authorities in Mexico,
03:32and was charged with accessory after the fact of felony murder and larceny of a motor
03:36vehicle.
03:37Based on her testimony, she and Alejandro had been staying with the killer's cousin.
03:42At some point, Castillo had once again disappeared with no explanation, and that's when she decided
03:46to turn herself in.
03:48As of 2024, the FBI has no further clues that could lead to Castillo's arrest.
03:53Right now, all they know is that he's probably still living in Mexico.
03:56The last time he was seen, he wore his hair short and shaved on the sides, but that's pretty
04:01much all they have to go on.
04:03As of today, there's still a quarter million dollar reward out for his arrest, but there
04:06have been no further updates on his case.
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05:38Ruja Ignatova.
05:40In 2016, the Bulgarian entrepreneur Ruja Ignatova stepped on stage in a beautiful red dress at
05:46the Coin Rush global event in Wembley, London to talk about her vision for the future of
05:50her crypto company OneCoin.
05:52During the presentation, she claimed that in two years, everyone would forget about Bitcoin
05:56and that OneCoin would dominate the crypto world as the one true cryptocurrency.
06:01It's hard to imagine that any of her excited, applauding investors knew that they were stepping
06:05into what was later described by the New York Times as one of the biggest scams in history.
06:10For several years, Ruja, or the crypto queen as she's known nowadays, promised her buyers
06:15a five-fold and even ten-fold return on their investment in OneCoin.
06:19Normally, these kinds of claims are an immediate red flag, but because the entire world was scrambling to get on the crypto action, a ton of investors jumped at
06:26the opportunity without thinking twice, resulting in a massive OneCoin buying frenzy.
06:32Between 2014 and 2016, OneCoin raked in more than $4 billion from unsuspecting investors, with more than $50 million coming from investors in the US.
06:43As the investors learned when they bought into OneCoin, the company was pretty much a pyramid scheme in which they were rewarded for recruiting their friends to buy it as well.
06:51And for a while, the shady multi-level marketing model seemed to be working for Ruja.
06:55However, in 2016, a lot of her investors started complaining that they were really struggling to sell their OneCoin, and that they didn't see how they'd ever recoup their investments.
07:04Word started to spread online that OneCoin was a scam, which drew the attention of the media as well as federal investigators.
07:11Unfortunately, it was a little too late by then.
07:13Less than a year and a half after her presentation in Wembley, Ruja got on a plane from Bulgaria to Greece, and was never seen again.
07:21Disturbingly, during the investigations, a bunch of really messed up emails written by Ruja were leaked by federal investigators,
07:27in which the crypto queen made it more than clear that she knew she was scamming people out of their hard-earned money from the very start.
07:34In some of her emails, she admitted that the company wasn't actually mining any coins, that her coin was trash,
07:39and that her investors were idiots for trusting her.
07:42In one of her emails, she proposed an exit strategy to her partner Carl Greenwood,
07:46which consisted of taking the money, running away, and blaming somebody else for the whole thing.
07:51During the investigation, Carl ended up pleading guilty to wire fraud and conspiracy to launder money,
07:56for which he was sentenced to 20 years in prison.
07:59As it was later revealed, the FBI had been on to Ruja long before she fled from Bulgaria,
08:03even recruiting her American boyfriend to look into her company's practices for them.
08:07After learning about her extremely sketchy business practices and her grand scheme to steal billions of dollars from investors all around the world,
08:14she was charged with wire fraud, money laundering, and securities fraud.
08:18This promptly landed her a spot on the FBI's most wanted list, becoming only the 11th woman to earn that distinction.
08:24Looking into her past to find clues as to what could have influenced Ruja to do something so nefarious,
08:30federal investigators found some pretty interesting stuff.
08:33As it turns out, Ruja was fluent in 4 languages, was extremely intelligent, once had a job at a high-ranking consulting firm,
08:40and had been obsessed with fashion and maintaining her image from a very young age.
08:44It was only with the benefit of hindsight that prosecutors were able to clearly see how she used all these qualities to carry out her malicious plans.
08:51Unfortunately, it doesn't look like the FBI will find her anytime soon.
08:55It's been rumored that after fleeing the country, the Crypto Queen may have drastically altered her appearance with plastic surgery,
09:02and is believed to travel with armed guards at all times.
09:05Disturbingly, there have also been several allegations that she was murdered by an accomplice, but this hasn't been proven.
09:11If she is still alive, the FBI suspects Ruja is traveling on a German passport to the United Arab Emirates,
09:17Bulgaria, Germany, Russia, Greece, and multiple countries in Eastern Europe.
09:22Considering how elusive she's been since her disappearance almost 8 years ago,
09:25it's unlikely the FBI will ever find out what became of Ruja Ignatova after pulling off one of the largest financial scams in history.
09:36Arnaldo Jimenez
09:37On May 12, 2012, Arnaldo Jimenez and his wife Estrella went out to celebrate their wedding in a black 2006 four-door Maserati.
09:46Less than 24 hours after the couple had said their vows, Arnaldo knifed his wife to death in the car,
09:52dragged her into the bathroom tub of her apartment in Burbank, Illinois, and disappeared without a trace.
09:57When Estrella didn't come back to pick up her kids at school the next day,
10:01her family called the cops, who ended up finding Estrella's remains still in her wedding dress in her bathtub.
10:06Immediately, a nationwide search for Arnaldo was launched, but by that time the suspect was long gone.
10:12During the investigation, it was revealed that Jimenez had reached out to a friend before fleeing and told him,
10:18if anyone asks where I am, tell them I went to Mexico.
10:21Since then, the authorities have received multiple tips that Jimenez may have fled to Durango or Tamaulipas, Mexico,
10:27where he is believed to be hiding out with family members.
10:29Initially, a $100,000 reward was issued for anyone with information that could lead to his arrest,
10:35but four years after he was placed on the most wanted list, the FBI increased the reward to a quarter million dollars.
10:41Burbank police have stated that in the past 12 years they've received hundreds of tips about Arnaldo's whereabouts,
10:46but none of them have led to anything significant.
10:49After the crime, investigators traced his phone and determined that he had traveled from Chicago to Tennessee,
10:55then to Arkansas, and from there to Hidalgo, Texas, very close to the Mexican border.
11:00They were, unfortunately, unable to determine where he went after that.
11:04Police have also revealed that the car in which Arnaldo carried out his heinous crime was never found.
11:08If the suspect is ever caught, he'll be spending the rest of his life in prison for first-degree murder
11:14and unlawful flight to avoid prosecution.
11:17But, based on how things have played out since the last time he was seen,
11:20it's unlikely Arnaldo will ever pay for his atrocious crime.
11:26Vattel Oum Innocent
11:27As the leader of one of Haiti's largest and most violent criminal gangs, Crazebari,
11:33Vattel Oum Innocent, which, do not let his name fool you, he is indeed not innocent,
11:37has terrorized the region for years, earning a spot on the FBI's most-wanted list
11:41for his role in a string of brutal kidnappings and murders.
11:45In October 2021, he collaborated with the notorious 400 Mawozo gang
11:49to carry out the high-profile kidnapping of 17 Christian missionaries in Haiti.
11:55Disturbingly, five of the kidnapping victims were children, one as young as eight months old.
12:00Held at gunpoint, the hostages were reportedly kept captive for two months
12:04while the gangs demanded a ransom of $1 million per hostage.
12:08It was only after an anonymous donor paid an undisclosed sum to Crazebari and 400 Mawozo
12:13that the missionaries were finally released.
12:16Based on court documents, Innocent and his crew ended up spending the ransom money on weapons.
12:21That same year, the Haitian president was assassinated,
12:24which caused Innocent's influence to grow exponentially in the chaos that engulfed the country.
12:28In the aftermath of the assassination, Crazebari claimed new territories
12:32and expanded their ranks quicker than the cops could even keep track of.
12:36In 2023, Crazebari boasted an estimated 600 members,
12:40many of whom were young children who were involuntarily recruited to serve Innocent's criminal organization.
12:46Almost exactly one year after the kidnapping of the Christian missionaries,
12:49Crazebari kidnapped two U.S. citizens under Innocent's orders,
12:53Marie Odette Franklin and Jean Franklin.
12:55Unfortunately, one of the victims did not survive,
12:59while the other was held for a $300,000 ransom.
13:02Somehow, Innocent still managed to walk away scot-free.
13:06In April 2024, CNN released an interview where Innocent brazenly showed off his luxury home,
13:12which sticks out like a sore thumb in the extreme poverty surrounding him.
13:16Surrounded by gold-rimmed couches and chairs,
13:18Innocent explained to the reporter how he came to power.
13:22In the interview, he shamelessly blamed Haiti's corruption on the country's politics,
13:25refusing to take any responsibility for his own actions.
13:30Interestingly, he also alleged that before becoming the leader of Crazebari,
13:33he had once owned multiple legitimate businesses,
13:36including a hotel and a rental car company,
13:38but said his companies were destroyed by the government.
13:41According to multiple crime analysts,
13:43Innocent was once a political activist before he turned to violent crime to maximize his influence.
13:48Back in the U.S., Innocent is wanted by the FBI for an insanely long list of crimes,
13:53including kidnapping for ransom, theft, murder, assault, vehicle theft, and destruction of property.
14:00There's a $2 million reward for information leading to his arrest,
14:03but with powerful connections and an armed gang,
14:06it'll be pretty tough to ever bring him to justice.
14:08Omar Alexander Cardenas
14:13In 2022, the FBI released two eerie before and after clips of a man walking into
14:20and then running away from a shopping mall area on August 15th, 2019.
14:25The man seen in the video is 29-year-old Omar Alexander Cardenas,
14:29and let's just say that he didn't exactly go shopping in the time that elapsed between those two clips.
14:34After disappearing from the camera's view,
14:37Omar walked up to a man standing outside the Hair Icon Barbershop at an outdoor shopping center
14:42and fired several rounds from his semi-automatic handgun at his head, killing him instantly.
14:47Immediately after committing the crime, Omar fled the scene a little after 4 p.m.,
14:51as he can be seen in the eerie FBI footage.
14:54A suspected member of the Pierce Street Gang in Los Angeles,
14:57and often going by the nickname Dollar,
14:59Omar is suspected to have fled to Mexico to seek refuge among his relatives.
15:03In September 2021, a federal arrest warrant was issued for the suspect
15:07after he was charged with murder and unlawful flight to avoid prosecution,
15:11thanks to which he was pinned on the most-wanted billboard.
15:15Even though he committed a brutal crime pretty much in broad daylight
15:18and didn't exactly shy away from the cameras after doing it,
15:21the cops seem to know surprisingly little about Omar.
15:24The only things they really know about him are that he's around 300 pounds,
15:28wears thick prescription glasses,
15:29has at least one tattoo,
15:31and is considered armed and dangerous.
15:33Which, alone, is hardly enough to track down a criminal
15:36who's crossed international borders to flee prosecution.
15:39With time, hopefully more information will surface
15:42leading to his potential extradition and arrest.
15:44But for now, it looks like Omar will remain a most-wanted criminal.
15:50Yulan Adonai Archaga Carayas
15:53Back in the 80s, a gang known as the Mara Salvatrucha was set up to protect Salvadorian immigrants from other gangs in the Los Angeles area.
16:01Fast forward a couple of decades, and the Mara, or the MS-13 for short,
16:05had become one of the most brutal and violent criminal organizations in the world.
16:10Nowadays, MS-13 has a strong presence in El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, the U.S., Canada, and even Spain.
16:17They engage in all kinds of criminal activity, from drug trafficking, human trafficking, extortion, murder, and racketeering,
16:25often using extreme violence to maintain their influence and control.
16:29For many years, a man named Yulan Adonai Archaga Carayas
16:33operated as the head of MS-13's criminal activities in Honduras,
16:36providing support and resources to the gang in Central America and the U.S.
16:40with firearms, narcotics, and loads of cash.
16:43Often operating under his alias Porky,
16:45Yulan is wanted by the FBI for trafficking multi-ton loads of drugs through Honduras to the U.S.,
16:50and for the killing of several rival gang members.
16:54Among Porky's colorful criminal charges,
16:56you'll find everything from murder, to racketeering conspiracy,
16:59to drug importation, to possession of machine guns.
17:03Even though he's only around 160 pounds,
17:05Yulan is considered one of the most powerful men in Honduras,
17:08as the MS-13 gang has had the country in a chokehold for years.
17:12The most shocking part of the story is that at one point,
17:15Porky had already been apprehended by the Honduran authorities,
17:17and was even taken to a courthouse for a hearing on charges of murdering two Honduran prosecutors.
17:23But, during the hearing,
17:2420 armed men dressed up in the same clothes as the anti-gang police units
17:28walked into the building escorting a veiled suspect,
17:31and suddenly opened fire on the guards.
17:33In just a few seconds, the men subdued the guards
17:36and safely escorted Porky out of the courthouse,
17:38killing four police officers in the process.
17:41For obvious reasons, Porky is considered armed and extremely dangerous.
17:44Due to the sheer nature of his crimes,
17:47the FBI is offering $5 million to anyone who can provide information leading to his arrest.
17:52One of the things that makes it extremely difficult to track a suspect like Porky down
17:56is that he's taken every possible measure to fly under the radar.
18:00Although he's believed to still be in Honduras,
18:02he and his security team use untraceable numbers from Israel and Poland,
18:06and he goes to extreme lengths to keep his whereabouts a secret when he contacts his family.
18:10Although the hunt for Porky is far from over,
18:12he's likely to remain one of the most elusive and dangerous fugitives
18:16on the FBI's Most Wanted list for years to come.
18:21Alexis Flores
18:22One seemingly peaceful afternoon in July 2000,
18:26five-year-old Ariana De Jesus was playing on the street in Philadelphia
18:29with her sister and friends when her mom went out for a quick trip to the store.
18:33When her mom came back, she started living every parent's worst nightmare.
18:38Ariana had been taken by a suspicious man.
18:40Immediately, her mother reported her missing,
18:43triggering a city-wide search for the five-year-old girl.
18:46In a desperate effort to bring more attention to the disappearance,
18:49Ariana's family and friends covered every neighborhood wall,
18:52light post, and stop sign with flyers and missing posters,
18:55but nobody had any clue what had happened to the little girl.
18:58Unfortunately, after a few weeks of searching,
19:01the cops found her unresponsive in the basement of an abandoned apartment building
19:04just a few blocks away from where she had been taken.
19:06Disturbingly, the authorities also found a t-shirt featuring a bold political logo at the crime scene,
19:13which they deduced belonged to the suspect.
19:15During the investigation, a man came forward stating that he was pretty certain the t-shirt
19:19had belonged to a guy he only knew as Carlos,
19:21a drifter he had once employed as a handyman.
19:23Unfortunately, despite the promising lead, the case went cold for several years,
19:28leaving Ariana's family devastated and confused.
19:32It wasn't until 2007 that the authorities were able to analyze the shirt again
19:35thanks to recent advances in DNA technology,
19:38and what they found changed the course of the investigation forever.
19:41The DNA in the shirt was a perfect match with that of a man named Alexis Flores,
19:46who had been arrested in Arizona in 2002 for shoplifting and in 2004 for forgery.
19:50Unfortunately, by the time his DNA was linked to the crime,
19:54he had already been deported to Honduras years earlier for other, less serious crimes.
19:58As the police would later find,
20:00finding Alexis Flores was going to be a lot more difficult than they initially thought.
20:04Throughout his colorful criminal career,
20:06Alexis had provided multiple fraudulent dates of birth and names.
20:10Despite his inclusion in the most wanted list,
20:12the only things the FBI really knows about him
20:14are that Alexis is around 5'4", 130 pounds,
20:17and has visible scars on his forehead and right cheek.
20:21Due to his crimes,
20:22he's obviously also considered armed and extremely dangerous.
20:25With a quarter million dollar reward on his head for the crimes of kidnapping and murder,
20:29you would think that someone would have come forward with information on this guy,
20:33but 24 years after the crime,
20:35Alexis has remained unfound.
20:36The National Liberation Army, or ELN,
20:44is a Marxist-Leninist guerrilla insurgency group in Colombia,
20:48often referred to as Colombia's last true insurgency
20:51and one of Latin America's most powerful criminal organizations.
20:55In the past few years,
20:56the ELN has expanded aggressively into Venezuela,
20:59thanks to which the National Liberation Army now has over 6,000 active members.
21:03Interestingly, for the first few decades after its foundation,
21:07the group mostly focused their efforts on kidnapping,
21:09extortion, and attacking oil infrastructure.
21:12But over time,
21:13the ELN stopped shying away from drug trafficking
21:16and became deeply involved in the international drug trade,
21:19earning them the attention of the FBI.
21:21In 2023,
21:23Wilbur Villegas Palomino became the 530th addition
21:26to the FBI's most wanted list on multiple serious charges
21:29ranging from narco-terrorism to murder to drug trafficking.
21:33Often running under the alias The Hog,
21:36Palomino is a high-ranking member of the National Liberation Army
21:39who has been involved in a 20-year conspiracy
21:41to distribute drugs from Colombia to the U.S.,
21:44thanks to which a warrant for his arrest was issued back in 2020.
21:48Wilbur has also been accused of murdering multiple human rights advocates
21:51in Venezuela and the Catatombo region in Colombia between 2017 and 2019.
21:56Due to his high rank
21:57and his responsibility in flooding the streets of Houston
22:00and other major U.S. cities with drugs,
22:02the United States Department of State's Narcotics Rewards Program
22:05is offering a reward of up to $5 million
22:07for information leading to Palomino's arrest.
22:10As of today,
22:11it's a complete mystery where this guy is,
22:13but considering the ELN oversees the production
22:15of over 200 tons of drugs
22:17which are later distributed worldwide,
22:19obviously including the U.S.,
22:21it makes sense why he was put on the list.
22:23Donald Eugene Fields II
22:27Since 2022,
22:30Donald Eugene Fields has been wanted by the FBI
22:32for the alleged trafficking of at least one child in Missouri
22:35between 2013 and 2017.
22:39According to the authorities,
22:40Fields took a 14-year-old girl
22:42and offered her to his friend Ted Sartori Jr.
22:44in exchange for cash,
22:46cars,
22:47motorcycles,
22:48vacations,
22:48and Christmas presents.
22:50Last known to live in Franklin County, Missouri,
22:53Fields has apparently been moving around the country
22:55since 2022,
22:56working sporadic jobs as a tree trimmer
22:58and independently selling used cars
23:00in an effort to fly under the radar.
23:02Based on court documents,
23:04it's believed that Donald probably took more than one victim
23:06and that he might be hiding out
23:07with his girlfriend Jennifer Iskrigs
23:09who is also wanted on a felony warrant
23:11for failure to provide child support.
23:14Since 2022,
23:15the cops have received multiple tips
23:16indicating that Fields spent some time in the Tampa area
23:19and as soon as they heard that,
23:20they started running Facebook ads with his face
23:22on a most wanted poster
23:23to ask for the public's assistance in locating him.
23:26Unfortunately,
23:27it's likely that by then,
23:28Fields had already fled to Stover, Missouri.
23:31The FBI has also placed large billboards
23:33with Fields' face in cities
23:34where he's known to travel,
23:35but so far,
23:36it seems like he's managed to stay a step ahead of the cops.
23:39Earlier in 2024,
23:41Sartori,
23:42Fields' partner in crime,
23:43pleaded guilty to his charges
23:44and will face up to 30 years in prison.
23:47He'll also likely have to pay $25,000
23:49in restitution to his victim.
23:52Based on court documents,
23:53he'll be officially sentenced in early November 2024.
23:57As per the FBI's description of the suspect,
24:00Fields has multiple scars on his body
24:01as well as a tribal print tattoo on his right shoulder.
24:05With such a big effort being made by the FBI
24:07to make this guy's face known,
24:08hopefully someday he'll be recognized by someone
24:11and promptly turned into the authorities.
24:13But for now,
24:14the cops have urged the public
24:15to consider him armed and dangerous.
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