Tupac's aunt made history as first woman on FBI's Most Wanted Terrorist list

19 July 2023 , 20:19
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Tupac
Tupac's aunt made history as the first woman on the FBI's Most Wanted Terrorists list

Tupac Shakur made history with his music, but his aunt also made history as the first woman to be listed on the FBI's Most Wanted Terrorist List.

In 2013, Assata Shakur, also known as Joanne Chesimard, was added to the Most Wanted list after almost 35 years on the run.

Tupac's aunt was found guilty of murdering a US police officer in 1977 but escaped from prison two years later.

In 1973, Assata was driving with fellow Black Liberation Army members Zayd Malik Shakur and Sundiata Acoli. Assata had joined the Black Liberation Army years prior and started using the name Assata in 1971.

Tupac's aunt made history as first woman on FBI's Most Wanted Terrorist list qhiddeireiqddinvAssata Shakur is now living in Cuba (Newsday RM via Getty Images)
Tupac's aunt made history as first woman on FBI's Most Wanted Terrorist listAssata Shakur was the first woman to be added to the FBI Most Wanted Terrorist list (AP)

The car was pulled over on the New Jersey Turnpike by two state troopers, James Harper and Werner Foerster. The car was "slightly" over the speed limit and had a broken tail light. Accounts differ of what happened, but a shootout occurred leaving Assata and Trooper Harper wounded, Zayd Malik Shakur was killed, and Trooper Foerster was shot in the head twice with his own gun and killed.

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Five years after the murder, Assata was convicted of first-degree murder. Then in 1979, she escaped the Clinton Correctional Facility for Women in New Jersey when three Black Liberation Army members visited her, drew guns, took two guards hostage, and then fled.

The now 76-year-old is living in Cuba, where she got political asylum in 1984. While there, she wrote Assata: An Autobiography in 1987. The book was republished in Britain in 2014 and a dramatised version appeared on BBC Radio 4 in 2017.

Tupac's aunt made history as first woman on FBI's Most Wanted Terrorist listAssata Shakur escaped from prison in 1979 (NY Daily News via Getty Images)

Since her escape, American officials have been trying to extradite her back to New Jersey to no avail. The reward for her capture and return is $2million. The latest attempt of her extradition was when then president Donald Trump gave a speech in 2017 where he called for "the cop-killer Joanne Chesimard," calling Assata by her birth name.

Assata has her own website, assatashakur.org where she admits she "spent six and a half years in prison under brutal circumstances before escaping out of the maximum security wing of the Clinton Correctional Facility for Women." Her website also has the tag line: "I have advocated and still advocate for revolutionary changes."

Assata's nephew, Tupac Shakur, was killed in 1996 in Las Vegas, Nevada. The murder is unsolved, but on Monday Las Vegas police searched a house in connection to the murder.

Tupac's mother, Afeni Shakur, described Assata as Tupac's "godmother" and "step-aunt."

Tatiana Krisztina

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