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Some of the most dangerous men who once served in the worlds most secure prison, ADX Florence supermax, committed the worst crimes and spent years inside the facility, including one who was the basis for its original construction.
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NewsTranscript
00:00ADX Florence Prison holds only the most dangerous prisoners on the planet, and one violent prisoner
00:06in particular was the original catalyst for its construction.
00:11But do you know who it was?
00:13Stay tuned as we explore the life crimes and incarceration of the 15 former most dangerous
00:19prisoners held at ADX Florence Supermax Prison, America's most secure penitentiary.
00:26If you enjoyed the video, please drop a comment down below and let me know if I missed anybody,
00:31and don't forget to drop a like on it.
00:32Also we are now available for the hype feature, so if you want to hype the video, please go
00:37ahead, it really will help.
00:39Number 15, Richard McNair.
00:42McNair's criminal history began on November 17th 1987 in Minow, North Dakota.
00:49During a botched burglary at a grain elevator, he murdered one man, Jerry Ties, and shot a
00:56second man four times who survived.
01:00For these crimes, McNair was sentenced to two consecutive life sentences for murder and
01:05attempted murder, along with a 30-year prison sentence for burglary.
01:10Known for his repeated prison escapes, he first escaped from the Minow Municipal Police
01:15Station in 1988 by using lip balm to slip out of the handcuffs.
01:21In 1992, he escaped from the North Dakota State Penitentiary by crawling through a ventilation
01:27duct.
01:28His most famous escape occurred in 2006 from a federal prison in Pollock, Louisiana, where
01:36he mailed himself out in a pallet of mail bags.
01:40On April 13th 2006, U.S. Marsles added McNair to their 15 most wanted list.
01:47They noted that McNair was the first prisoner to escape from a federal prison since 1991.
01:54Currently incarcerated at U.S.P. McCreary in Kentucky, McNair spent a considerable amount
02:01of time at ADX Florence due to his previous escapes and described the facility in detail.
02:08McNair described the location as the most secure section of the most secure prison in
02:13the world, but expressed reservations about discussing specific details of his incarceration.
02:20Thank God for prisons, McNair wrote.
02:23There are some very sick people in here, animals who you would never want living near your family
02:29or the public in general.
02:31I don't know how correction staff deal with it.
02:34They get spit on, mentally abused, and I have seen them risk their own lives to save another
02:39prisoner's lives many times.
02:41McNair has also spent 11 days at the Federal Transfer Center in Oklahoma City.
02:47Number 14, Joseph Kanupka.
02:50Known as Dr. Chaos, Kanupka engaged in a series of criminal acts between 1997 and 2001, often
03:00with accomplices he recruited online.
03:04He was responsible for 28 power failures and 20 other service interruptions at Wisconsin power plants, affecting
03:13over 30,000 power customers and causing more than $800,000 in damages.
03:20He also disrupted radio and television broadcasts, disabled an air traffic control system and damaged
03:28computer systems of internet service providers.
03:32He pleaded guilty to arson, including setting fire to a building where sauerkraut was being manufactured.
03:39In 2002, he was arrested for trespassing in steam tunnels and found with sodium cyanide.
03:47He claimed he intended to use the cyanide for suicide and had no plans to harm others.
03:54Kanupka was sentenced to 13 years in prison for the cyanide possession in 2003.
04:00In 2004, he received a 21 year sentence for arson, vandalism and trespassing, which was later overturned on appeal.
04:10He pleaded guilty again and received an additional seven year sentence.
04:16He served a total of 16 years of a 20 year prison sentence.
04:21Joseph Kanupka served the majority of his sentence at the Alcatraz of the Rockies
04:27and he was later transferred to the Chicago Metropolitan Correctional Center a few months before his release in 2019.
04:3713. Omar Abdel Rahman
04:41Often referred to as the Blind Shaikh, Rahman was an Egyptian cleric convicted of multiple crimes in the United States related to terrorism.
04:51He was convicted on October 1st 1995 of seditious conspiracy for masterminding a foiled plot to bomb prominent targets in New York City,
05:01including the United Nations headquarters, the Lincoln and Holland Tunnels and the George Washington Bridge.
05:09Prosecutors described this as preparing a war of urban terrorism in New York City.
05:16He was also convicted of solicitation to murder Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and conspiracy to murder President Mubarak.
05:24Further convictions included solicitation to attack a US military installation and conspiracy to conduct bombings.
05:32Although not directly convicted of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, which killed six people and injured over a thousand,
05:41his prosecution grew out of investigations into that attack and a number of those accused of carrying it out worshipped at his mosque.
05:51He and his followers were found guilty of conspiring with the perpetrators of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.
05:59He was linked to the 1990 murder of Rabbi Meir Kahani and in 1996 Omar Abdel Rahman was sentenced to life in solitary confinement without parole for his convictions.
06:15He served a portion of his life sentence at ADX Florence in near continuous solitary confinement to limit his ability to direct operations from behind bars.
06:27He was later transferred to the Federal Medical Center Butner in North Carolina, where he died of natural causes on February 18th 2017 at the age of 78.
06:39Number 12 Theodor Kaczynski, famously known as the Unabomber, carried out a nearly two-decade-long bombing campaign that terrorised the United States.
06:50His actions were driven by a radical anti-technology ideology.
06:55Between 1978 and 1995 Kaczynski mailed or hand-delivered a series of increasingly sophisticated homemade bombs.
07:05His targets were individuals and institutions he believed were advancing modern technology and destroying the natural environment.
07:14In total his campaign involved 16 bombs resulting in three deaths.
07:20His first bomb in 1978 exploded at a Chicago university causing minor injuries.
07:26He also attempted to blow up a commercial airliner in 1979, but the device only caused smoke and forced an emergency landing.
07:36Kaczynski often left misleading clues and inscribed the initials FC, for Freedom Club, on parts of his bombs.
07:45The FBI's investigation into the UNABOM was one of the longest and most expensive in US history.
07:57The breakthrough came in 1995, when Kaczynski sent a 35,000-word manifesto, Industrial Society and Its Future, to media outlets, threatening more attacks if it wasn't published.
08:13In a controversial decision, the Washington Post, in conjunction with the New York Times, published the manifesto.
08:21Kaczynski's brother, David Kaczynski, recognised the writing style and ideas, leading him to alert the FBI.
08:29Theodore Kaczynski was arrested in April 1996 at his remote cabin in Montana, where investigators found bomb components, detailed journals and even a live bomb.
08:41He pleaded guilty in 1998 to 13 bombing-related charges, avoiding the death penalty.
08:48He was sentenced to four consecutive life sentences, plus 30 years, without the possibility of parole.
08:56Theodore Kaczynski spent the majority of his sentence at ADX Florence, was part of what was informally known as Bomber's Row.
09:05A section of the prison that housed several other domestic terrorists convicted of using explosives, including Timothy McVeigh.
09:13Number 11. Charles Harrelson.
09:16Contract killer and organised crime figure.
09:20Harrelson had a history of criminal activity dating back to the 1960s and was convicted of armed robbery in 1960 and was later connected to multiple murders.
09:31Harrelson was convicted of the murder for hire of grain dealer Sam de Gilia Jr. for $2,000.
09:39He was initially sentenced to 15 years in prison in 1973, but was released after five years for good behaviour in 1978.
09:49He was hired by drug kingpin Jamiel Chagra to assassinate Judge John H. Wood Jr., a federal judge known as Maximum John, for his harsh sentences in drug cases, and this became known as his most infamous crime.
10:06Wood was shot and killed outside his San Antonio home.
10:09Harrelson was convicted in December 1982 for the murder of a federal judge, conspiracy to murder, and conspiracy to obstruct justice, receiving two life sentences.
10:21The FBI investigation into Wood's murder was one of the most extensive since the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
10:28He was serving his sentence at a federal prison in Atlanta before attempting to escape using a rope.
10:35Charles Harrelson spent his final years incarcerated at USP Florence ADMAX.
10:43He was transferred there after his attempted escape from the Atlanta prison.
10:47He died in his cell at ADX Florence on March 15, 2007 at the age of 68 due to severe coronary artery disease.
10:57Number 10, Mutalu Shakur.
11:00An American activist and member of the Black Liberation Army, Mutalu Shakur was convicted of conspiracy under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organisations Act, more well known as RICO, in connection with a 1981 robbery of a Brinks armoured truck.
11:21In October 1981, Mutalu Shakur was involved in the robbery of a Brinks armoured truck in Nanuet, New York.
11:29During the robbery, a Brinks guard and two police officers were killed.
11:34Shakur was the alleged ringleader of the group and evaded capture for over five years, becoming the 381st person added to the FBI 10 Most Wanted Fugitives list in July 1982.
11:49He was arrested in California in February 1986.
11:54In May 1988, he was convicted and sentenced to 60 years in prison for his involvement in the robbery, as well as racketeering and conspiracy to commit racketeering.
12:06The charges also encompassed other robberies and engineering, the 1979 prison escape of Assata Shakur.
12:15Mutalu Shakur was incarcerated in federal prisons, and at some point he was held at ADX Florence in Fremont County, Colorado in the 1990s.
12:27In 2022, after a diagnosis of terminal bone marrow cancer, the Parole Commission reconsidered his case after multiple denials.
12:37Mutalu Shakur was granted parole in November 2022, effective December 16th 2022.
12:46Due to his declining health, he was released from Federal Medical Centre Lexington on December 16th 2022 and passed away on July 7th 2023 at the age of 72.
13:00Number 9, Salvatore Gravano.
13:03More well known as Sammy the Bull, this former underboss of the Gambino crime family later became a government witness.
13:11Gravano confessed to involvement in at least 19 murders as part of his agreement to testify against John Gotti and other mob figures.
13:21These murders included the 1977 killing of a 16-year-old boy who witnessed a drive-by shooting.
13:28His first murder was in 1970 of Joseph Colucci, a fellow associate.
13:34Gravano was involved in racketeering, loan sharking and operating illegal poker games.
13:40He made millions in mob-connected construction businesses and played a key role in planning and executing the murder of Gambino boss Paul Castellano in 1995.
13:53After entering the witness protection program and later leaving it, Gravano moved to Arizona.
14:00In the late 1990s, he became involved in a major ecstasy trafficking organisation, reportedly grossing as much as $500,000 per week.
14:12Gravano and his son were indicted on federal and state charges related to the ecstasy ring.
14:19In 2002, Gravano was sentenced in New York to 20 years in prison and in Arizona to 19 years to run concurrently.
14:29Salvatore Gravano served part of his sentence for the drug-related convictions at ADX Florence
14:35and was transferred there after his re-arrest in the ecstasy trafficking case.
14:41He was later released from prison in 2017 after serving nearly two decades for his drug conviction.
14:48Number 8. Barry Mills
14:50A prominent figure in the Aryan Brotherhood, a prison gang and organised crime syndicate,
14:56Mills entered the California state prison system after being convicted of armed robbery in 1996.
15:04He was convicted of the near-decapitation of another inmate, John Marsloff, over a gambling debt at USP Atlanta.
15:13Along with Tyler Bingham, Mills expanded the Aryan Brotherhood's operations into narcotics, dealing and racketeering.
15:21In 2006, Mills and Bingham were indicted for numerous crimes, including murder, conspiracy, drug trafficking and racketeering.
15:30Mills and Bingham were convicted of ordering the murders of at least three inmates, Ava Ray, Frank Joyner and Abdul Salam.
15:39The latter two were members of a rival prison gang, the DC Blacks, against whom Mills reportedly ordered a race war.
15:48Overall, Mills was convicted of at least four murders and was allegedly responsible for more.
15:55Mills was transferred to ADX Florence after his conviction in 2006 for murder, murder conspiracy and racketeering.
16:03Mills died in his cell at ADX Florence on July 8th 2018, the day after his 70th birthday.
16:12His death was reported as not suspicious, with signs indicating a natural death due to coronary artery disease.
16:20Number seven, Anthony Casso.
16:22Known for his extreme violence, Casso was a notorious mobster and former underboss of the Lucchese crime family and was suspected of committing dozens of murders, confessing to involvement in between 15 and 36.
16:37He confessed to his involvement in the murders of Frank DiCicco, Roy DiMeo and Vladimir Reznikov.
16:44He also admitted to multiple attempts to murder Gambino family boss John Gotti.
16:50Casso engaged in various illicit activities, including running a loan sharking operation and using violence for gambling and drug dealing rackets.
17:00He was also involved in the Bypass Gang, a burglary ring suspected of stealing over $100 million from banks and jewellery stores.
17:10A significant aspect of Casso's criminal history involved two highly decorated New York Police Department detectives, Stephen Caracapa and Louis Eppolito.
17:21Casso revealed that these detectives were on his payroll and carried out at least eight murders under his orders, also leaking sensitive law enforcement information that led to other killings.
17:33After his arrest in 1993, Casso became one of the highest ranking Mafia members to turn informant.
17:41He entered a plea agreement pleading guilty to 70 crimes, including racketeering, extortion and 15 murders.
17:49However, his cooperation agreement was later rescinded in 1998 due to infractions, including bribing guards and assaulting other inmates while in prison.
18:01After his plea agreement was rescinded and he was removed from the Witness Protection Programme, Anthony Casso was sentenced in 1998 to 455 years in prison for racketeering, extortion and murder.
18:15He was subsequently incarcerated at Florence, mainly for his own protection and was known to be among its most notable inmates due to the risks on his life.
18:25Casso died on December 15, 2020, at the age of 78 while in prison in Tucson, Arizona due to complications from Covid-19.
18:37Number six, Joel Kakase.
18:39Also known as Joe Waverley, this prominent figure in the Colombo crime family was involved in extortion, illegal gambling and the hijacking and selling of truckloads of cigarettes.
18:52After being ambushed and shot, Kakase disarmed one of his assailants and shot him at point-blank range.
18:59Imprisoned Colombo boss Carmine Persico ordered Kakase to kill federal prosecutors William Aronwald and Rudy Giuliani.
19:09Kakase arranged for the murder of Aronwald and although the intended target was William Aronwald, the actual victim was his father, George Aronwald, who was mistakenly killed.
19:23Furious about the Aronwald murder, the heads of the other New York Five families demanded the killing of the hitmen, brothers Vincent and Eddie Carnini.
19:33Kakase then recruited others to kill the Carnini brothers.
19:37Concerned about the loyalty of his own assassins, Kakase allegedly decided to murder them as well.
19:44Kakase was also involved in the unrelated murder of former New York Police Department officer Carlo Antoninio.
19:52During the Colombo war, Kakase, supporting the Victor Orina faction, attempted to kill Gregory Scarpa, a hitman aligned with the Persico faction on two separate occasions.
20:07Scarpa escaped unharmed from both attempts.
20:10On August 13th 2004, Kakase pleaded guilty to charges of extortion, illegal gambling and the four murders of Antonino, Aronwald, Variale and Santora.
20:24He was sentenced to 20 years in prison on September 8th 2004.
20:29On December 18th 2008, Kakase was charged with ordering the 1997 murder of NYPD officer Ralph Doles.
20:39He was later acquitted of this charge in 2013.
20:43Joel Kakase was imprisoned at ADX Florence in Florence, Colorado, following his 2004 conviction before being transferred to other facilities,
20:53including the United States Penitentiary, Beaumont in Texas, the Tucson Federal Correctional Institution in Arizona and FCI Ashland in Kentucky.
21:05He was released from prison on May 22nd 2020.
21:09And interestingly, since his release, he is the alleged current underboss of the family.
21:16Number five, Dandini Munoz Mosquera, also known as La Quica.
21:21Mosquera was a notorious hitman for the Colombian Medellín cartel led by Pablo Escobar.
21:28He was described as Escobar's chief assassin and is linked by US authorities to the deaths of over 220 people,
21:37including members of both the Medellín and Cali cartels, police officers and government officials.
21:44Colombian authorities connect him to the deaths of over 40 police officers and other crimes, including terrorism, murder, drug trafficking, forgery and the 1989 bombing of Avianca Flight 203, which killed 110 civilians.
22:01He was the first person to be convicted under a 1956 federal law that made bombing a civilian aircraft a crime and a 1986 terrorism statute that allows the trial of foreign citizens in the United States if at least one victim was an American citizen.
22:19Other convicted crimes included conspiracy to import and distribute cocaine, participating and conspiring to participate in a racketeering enterprise and engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise.
22:34He was also convicted in 1991 for being one of the main conspirators in the assassination of Luis Carlos Galán, a candidate in the Colombian presidential election.
22:45Dandini Munoz Mosquera was arrested on September 25th 1991 in Queens, New York for travelling with a fake passport.
22:54He was initially sentenced to six years for lying to a federal officer and possessing a fake passport.
23:01In 1994, after a mistrial in his first attempt, he was convicted on all 13 counts in his second trial and sentenced to 10 consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole, plus 45 years.
23:18While he was initially housed at United States Penitentiary Marion and later listed as a former inmate at ADX Florence, he is currently incarcerated at United States Penitentiary at Water in California and has served time at USP Lee.
23:38Number 4, Nicodemo Scarfo
23:42Known as Little Nicky, Scarfo was a prominent American mobster who served as the boss of the Philadelphia crime family from 1981 to 1990 and his leadership marked a particularly violent period for the family.
23:56Scarfo's criminal history began early with a conviction for manslaughter in 1963 for fatally stabbing a longshoreman, a crime which he served time for in prison.
24:09As the boss of the Philadelphia South Jersey mob, Scarfo engaged in a wide range of illegal activities including racketeering and racketeering conspiracy, murder, extortion, loan sharking and bookmaking.
24:25In 1989, he was sentenced to life in prison, later overturned for the 1985 slaying of bookmaker Frank Frankie Flowers, D'Alfonso.
24:37He was also involved in ordering many other murders. Five members of his crime family turned state's evidence against him and their testimony detailed assassinations ordered by Scarfo when victims broke the organisation's rules.
24:51In 1988, he was acquitted in the 1984 murder of Salvatore Testa, but was sentenced to a 14-year term in 1988 for extorting a developer to pay a $1 million bribe to a Philadelphia city councilman.
25:07While briefly held at ADX, Scarfo was transferred to the FCI Butner Medium, a medium security facility but died at the Federal Medical Center in North Carolina in 2017 while serving his 55-year sentence.
25:27Number three, Ossiel Cardenas Guillén, known by various nicknames such as El Loco, El Patron, Padrino, Memo, El Viejon and El Mata Amigos.
25:39Guillén was a prominent Mexican drug lord who led the Gulf Cartel from 1996 until his capture in 2003.
25:49He was known for his ruthlessness and for forming the cartel's armed wing, Los Zetas, by recruiting over 30 deserters from the Grupo Aeromóvil de Fuerzas Especiales.
26:02He was convicted of conspiracy to possess cocaine and marijuana with intent to distribute.
26:08He also solidified alliances with Colombian cartels, overseeing numerous cocaine shipments from South America to Mexico.
26:15He was convicted on three counts of threatening to assault and murder federal agents.
26:20This stemmed from an incident where he allegedly threatened to kill a Texas sheriff's deputy working as an undercover ICE agent because the agent refused to deliver a large quantity of marijuana.
26:33Guillén was involved in murders, earning him the nickname Friend Killer after assassinating Salvador Gomez Herrera, co-leader of the Gulf Cartel and a close friend.
26:46Mexican authorities also have pending charges against him for homicide.
26:51In 1989 he was arrested in Matamoros for homicide, abuse of trust and property damage.
26:57He was released on bail.
26:59In 1990 he was imprisoned again for threats and injuries but released the same day on bail.
27:06Ossiel Cardenas Guillén was extradited to the United States on January 19, 2007 to face 19 charges in a Houston court and was sentenced to 25 years imprisonment and a $50 million fine after pleading guilty to the charges on February 24, 2010.
27:29During his incarceration in the US he was imprisoned at various facilities that included USP Florence High, USP Lewisburg and USP Terre Haute but was most notably held at ADX.
27:44After his release from USP Tere Haute on August 30, 2024 he was deported to Mexico and immediately arrested there with his current accommodation listed as the maximum security Altiplano prison outside Mexico City.
28:03Number 2 Thomas Silverstein
28:06One of America's most famous criminals, Silverstein's criminal history began with armed robbery.
28:12He was initially sent to San Quentin prison in California in 1971 for armed robbery.
28:18After being paroled he was arrested again for three armed robberies in 1977 and sentenced to 15 years to be served at the United States Penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kansas.
28:30Silverstein was convicted of the murder of inmate Danny Atwell after he reportedly refused to serve as a mule for heroin being moved through Leavenworth prison.
28:42Silverstein was sentenced to life for this but the conviction was overturned in 1985 after it was revealed that jailhouse informants had perjured themselves.
28:53Silverstein and another inmate were convicted of strangling Robert Chappelle, a member of the DC Blacks prison gang, with a cord through cell bars at USP Marion in 1981.
29:06In 1983 Silverstein killed again, this time with inmate Clayton Fountain who attacked Frank Lee Smith with improvised weapons, stabbing him 67 times.
29:19They then displayed his body to other prisoners and Silverstein was convicted of first degree murder for killing Smith and received another life sentence.
29:29While at USP Marion, Silverstein killed Officer Klutz. He was let out of his cell for a shower and used a ruse to get Klutz to walk ahead of him, obtaining a homemade knife from another inmate to attack Klutz.
29:44Silverstein later claimed he murdered Klutz in retaliation for harassment, including the alleged destruction of his artwork.
29:52This event, along with the murder of another officer by Clayton Fountain, was a catalyst for the design of ADX Florence.
30:01Following the murder of Officer Klutz in 1983, Silverstein's security status was recorded as no human contact.
30:10He was held in extreme solitary confinement for 36 years, reportedly the longest held prisoner in solitary confinement within the Bureau of Prisons at the time of his death.
30:23While at ADX the prison built primarily due to his extreme behaviour, he was housed in a specially designed cell, sometimes referred to as Range 13, which was soundproof.
30:37While inside Florence, he had a window, access to television and art supplies, and frequent contact with staff, but died on May 11, 2019, at the age of 67 after undergoing heart surgery.
30:53Number 1. Kalfan Kamis Mohamed
30:56Kamis Mohamed
30:57A Tanzanian national, Kamis Mohamed was a key figure in the 1998 United States Embassy bombings, and was one of four individuals convicted for their roles in the attacks.
31:08He was found guilty of murdering 11 people in the Dar es Salaam attack.
31:13He was also convicted of murdering two US employees due to their duties and destroying US property, which resulted in death.
31:22Convicted of conspiracy to kill Americans and participate in a terrorist conspiracy against Americans, evidence presented during his trial indicated he was recruited by Al-Qaeda, received militant training in Afghanistan, and helped assemble the bomb used in Dar es Salaam.
31:41He rented the truck and house used as the bomb factory, assisted in grinding the TNT, and rode part way to the embassy with the suicide bomber before cleaning up the house to remove evidence.
31:53While awaiting trial, on November 2, 2000, Mohamed and another Al-Qaeda suspect, Mamdou Mahmoud Salim, attacked a federal prison guard in a failed escape attempt that left the officer severely injured.
32:10Kalfan Kamis Mohamed was arrested in Cape Town, South Africa, on October 5, 1999, and extradited to New York the following day.
32:20In May 2001, he was convicted by a federal jury.
32:24Although prosecutors sought the death penalty due to the threat he posed, including the attack on the prison guard, the jury was unable to reach a unanimous verdict for capital punishment.
32:35Consequently, in July 2001, Kalfan Kamis Mohamed was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.
32:42He was held in a high security federal prison, including a period at ADX Florence, but was transferred from ADX Florence to the neighbouring USP Florence High, where he remains to this day.
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