Ben Golden McCollum
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Ben Golden McCollum (1909 – August 12, 1963) was an outlaw in Oklahoma[1][2] during the 1920s who was nicknamed the "Sheik of Boynton". McCollum robbed banks in both Prague, Oklahoma[3] (where he got away with US$3400) and Checotah, Oklahoma ($4700) in 1929. He was captured on the streets of Boynton, Oklahoma[4] shortly after the Checotah heist.
Background
McCollum was convicted of both bank robberies and sentenced to a forty-year term at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester, Oklahoma. On April 15, 1934, McCollum knifed two fellow inmates to death in a dispute over a card game. He was originally sentenced to death for the murders, but the sentence was later reduced to a life term. McCollum escaped prison in 1954 and was added to the FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list on January 4, 1957.[5] He was captured on March 7, 1958 in a rooming house in Indianapolis, Indiana and returned to McAlester. McCollum was paroled in 1961, at which time he relocated to Marcum, Kentucky.
McCollum was shot-gunned to death at his home by a pair of youthful burglars on the night of August 12, 1963,[6] whose identities are unknown.
See also
Books
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- Daily Oklahoman and Muskogee Phoenix...Numerous articles from 1929—1934---1954-1958-
- Personal Interview with nephew of Ben Golden "Goldie" McCollum in Fall 2007
References
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- FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives
- 1909 births
- 1963 deaths
- American bank robbers
- American escapees
- American people convicted of murder
- American prisoners sentenced to death
- Fugitives
- Criminals from Oklahoma
- Deaths by firearm in Kentucky
- Escapees from Oklahoma detention
- Murdered American criminals
- People murdered in 1963
- People convicted of murder by Oklahoma
- People paroled from life sentence
- Prisoners sentenced to death by Oklahoma
- Unsolved murders in Kentucky