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On July 15, 1976, kidnappers abducted 26 children, ages 5 to 14, and their school bus driver in Chowchilla, California. The kidnappers eventually transported their victims from Chowchilla to a quarry in Livermore, California, and loaded them into a buried moving box truck. After about 16 hours, the driver and children were able to dig themselves out and escape unharmed. Police soon arrested the quarry owner's son and his accomplices.


Video 1976 Chowchilla kidnapping



Kidnapping and escape

On July 15, 1976, 26 children and their bus driver were kidnapped in Chowchilla, California, by armed men who blocked the road around 4 p.m. The students, who were attending summer classes at Dairyland Elementary School, were being dropped off on their way back from a field trip at the Chowchilla fairgrounds' swimming pool. The kidnappers hid the bus in the Berenda Slough and drove the children and bus driver around in two vans for 11 hours, eventually taking them to a quarry (37°39?48?N 121°48?29?W) in Livermore, California. There, the kidnappers imprisoned the victims inside a buried moving van with a small amount of food and water and a number of mattresses.

After many hours, bus driver Frank Edward "Ed" Ray and the children stacked the mattresses, enabling some of them to reach the opening at the top of the truck, which had been covered with a metal plate and weighed down with two 100-pound industrial batteries. They wedged the lid open with a stick, Ray moved the batteries, and they removed the remainder of the debris that blocked the entrance. After 16 hours underground, they emerged and walked to the quarry's guard shack near the Shadow Cliffs East Bay Regional Park. All were "in good condition".


Maps 1976 Chowchilla kidnapping



Investigation, arrests, and convictions

The truck was registered to the quarry owner's son, Frederick Newhall Woods IV. Under hypnosis the bus driver remembered the license number of one of the vans. Woods was arrested after fleeing to Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. His accomplices, Richard and James Schoenfeld, surrendered to authorities in California. (James was caught shortly before he was able to do so.)

The kidnappers had been unable to call in their ransom demand because telephone lines to the Chowchilla Police Department were tied up by media calls and families searching for their children. A draft ransom note was also found. Some details of the crime corresponded to details in "The Day the Children Vanished", a story by Hugh Pentecost that was published in Alfred Hitchcock's Daring Detectives (1969). A copy of this book was in the Chowchilla public library, and police theorized that it had inspired the kidnappers.

All three were sentenced to life in prison. Richard Schoenfeld was released in 2012. James Schoenfeld was paroled August 7, 2015.

Frederick Woods was denied parole on November 19, 2015 because he continued to minimize his crime and had disciplinary infractions, including "three for possession of pornography...and two for possessing contraband cellphones..." He will not be eligible for another parole hearing until 2018. Similar problems were noted at his 2012 parole hearing. Woods was married twice while in prison.


Digging up the truck trailer used to hold children in the 1979 ...
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Impact

Frank Edward "Ed" Ray (February 26, 1921 - May 17, 2012) received a California School Employees Association citation for outstanding community service. Before he died in 2012, he was visited by many of the schoolchildren he had helped save. Every February 26 has been declared Edward Ray Day in Chowchilla.

A study found that the kidnapped children suffered from panic attacks, nightmares involving kidnappings and death, and personality changes. Many developed fears of such things as "cars, the dark, the wind, the kitchen, mice, dogs and hippies," and one shot a Japanese tourist with a BB gun when the tourist's car broke down in front of his home. Many of the children continued to report symptoms of trauma at least 25 years after the kidnapping, including substance abuse and depression, and a number have been imprisoned for "doing something controlling to somebody else."


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In popular culture

The Chowchilla kidnappings were featured on episode 7 of season 2 of the program House of Horrors: Kidnapped, which airs on the American cable network Investigation Discovery. The episode, Buried Alive, first aired on April 21, 2015, and was told from the point of view of Michael Marshall, who at age 14 was the oldest of the children on the bus.

A two-hour made-for-TV movie about the event aired on the ABC Network on March 1, 1993 titled: They've Taken Our Children: The Chowchilla Kidnapping. It starred Karl Malden as bus driver Ed Ray, and Julie Harris as his wife. It was Malden's final on-screen role before retirement.

A second-season episode of Millennium, 19:19, involves the kidnapping of a busload of school children, as well as their bus driver, who are then taken to an aluminium quarry and hidden in an underground bunker.

A fourth-season episode of Walker, Texas Ranger, involves the kidnapping of a busload of school children buried alive in a landfill, with the kidnappers demanding a $10 million ransom.

An episode of Inside Edition reunited some of the kidnapped women to tell their stories of the kidnappings. The bus from the kidnappings, which is now stored in a Chowchilla farm warehouse, was also seen in the episode.


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See also

  • 2013 Alabama bunker hostage crisis
  • Faraday School kidnapping

Chowchilla school bus kidnap victims file lawsuit nearly 40 years ...
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References

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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