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<h1><b>Former SLA member James Kilgore paroled</b></h1><font size=3>Don
Thompson, Associated Press<br><br>
Monday, May 11, 2009 <br><br>
<b>(05-11) 04:00 PDT Sacramento</b> -- <br><br>
The last captured member of the Symbionese Liberation Army, the radical
1970s-era group notorious for bank robberies, killings and the kidnapping
of Patricia Hearst, was released from a California prison Sunday
morning.<br><br>
James William Kilgore was paroled from High Desert State Prison in
northeastern California after serving a six-year sentence for the murder
of suburban Sacramento housewife Myrna Opsahl during an April 1975 bank
robbery.<br><br>
State Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation spokesman Oscar
Hidalgo said Kilgore was met by his wife after parole agents picked him
up at the prison in Susanville (Lassen County) and processed him
there.<br><br>
That allowed the couple to travel directly to their home in Illinois,
rather than have Kilgore wait to check in Monday with a parole agent in
Sacramento before leaving the state. He now has two weeks to report to
Illinois parole officials. Kilgore's wife moved to Illinois after he was
arrested in 2002 in Cape Town, South Africa, after nearly three decades
on the run.<br><br>
Kilgore, 61, eluded arrest longer than any of his fellow SLA
fugitives.<br><br>
His cover unraveled after the 1999 arrest of his former girlfriend Sara
Jane Olson, who had built a new life as a doctor's wife in St. Paul,
Minn. Olson, formerly known as Kathleen Soliah, was paroled from a
California prison in March and returned to her Midwestern home.<br><br>
Besides kidnapping Hearst, the group of mostly white, privileged would-be
revolutionaries led by a black ex-convict was responsible for the murder
of Oakland school superintendent Marcus Foster, bank robberies, and the
attempted bombings of Los Angeles police cars. Joseph Remiro is serving a
life sentence for Foster's 1973 murder.<br><br>
Kilgore, a native of Portland, Ore., joined the SLA after graduating from
UC Santa Barbara in 1969. He escaped a 1974 shootout with Los Angeles
police in which six of the SLA's original members died.<br><br>
He disappeared on Sept. 18, 1975, as the FBI arrested Hearst and other
SLA members in San Francisco.<br><br>
He resurfaced as University of Cape Town Professor Charles William Pape.
He was so bold as to write a South Africa high school textbook titled
"Making History" under that alias.<br><br>
There he married an American woman and fathered two sons. His wife,
Teresa Barnes, is now an associate professor of gender and women's
studies at the University of Illinois in Champaign. She declined to
comment when reached by the Associated Press.<br><br>
Kilgore served his state sentence after finishing a 54-month federal
prison term for using a dead baby's birth certificate to obtain a
passport in Seattle and for possessing a pipe bomb in his San
Francisco-area apartment in 1975.<br><br>
California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation officials say
Kilgore was a model prisoner who tutored other inmates. Even Jon Opsahl,
whose 42-year-old mother was shot to death by another SLA member as she
deposited a church collection 34 years ago, expressed sympathy in a
recent interview for a man he called an idealist who "got in with
the wrong crowd."<br><br>
"I wish him well and I'm glad he served his time," Opsahl
said.<br><br>
<a href="http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/05/11/BAV517I3NL.DTL" eudora="autourl">
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/05/11/BAV517I3NL.DTL<br>
<br>
</a>This article appeared on page <b>B - 2</b> of the San Francisco
Chronicle<br><br>
<br><br>
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