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1974 Huntsville Prison Siege : ウィキペディア英語版
1974 Huntsville Prison siege

The 1974 Huntsville Prison siege was an eleven-day prison uprising that took place from July 24 to August 3, 1974 at the Huntsville Walls Unit of the Texas Department of Corrections in Huntsville, Texas. The standoff was one of the longest hostage-taking sieges in United States history.〔
== Siege ==
From July 24 to August 3, 1974, Federico "Fred" Gomez Carrasco and two other inmates laid siege to the education/library building of the Walls Unit. “Fred” Carrasco, the most powerful heroin kingpin in South Texas, was serving a life sentence for the attempted murder of a police officer. He was also suspected in the murder of dozens of people in Mexico and Texas.〔 Having smuggled pistols and ammunition into the prison, he and two other convicts took eleven prison workers and four inmates hostage.
At the precise moment that a one o’clock work bell sounded, Carrasco walked up a ramp to the third-story library and forced several prisoners out at gunpoint. When two guards tried to go up the ramp, Carrasco fired at them. His two accomplices, who were also armed, immediately joined him in the library.〔
The prison warden and the director of the Texas Department of Corrections immediately began negotiations with the convicts. FBI agents and Texas Rangers arrived to assist them, as the media descended on Huntsville.〔 Over the next several days the convicts made a number of demands, such as tailored suits, dress shoes, toothpaste, cologne, walkie-talkies and bulletproof helmets, all of which were provided promptly.〔 With the approval of Texas Governor Dolph Briscoe, an armored getaway car was rolled into the prison courtyard. Carrasco claimed that they were planning to flee to Cuba and appeal to Fidel Castro.〔
After a grueling eleven-day standoff, the convicts finally made their desperate escape attempt just before 10 PM on Saturday August 3, 1974. They moved out of the library toward the waiting vehicle in a makeshift shield consisting of legal books taped to mobile blackboards that was later dubbed by the press the “Trojan Taco”. Inside the shield were the three convicts and four hostages, while eight other hostages ringed the exterior of the “taco”.〔〔
Acting on a prearranged plan, prison guards and Texas Rangers blasted the group with fire hoses. However, a rupture in the hose gave the convicts time to fatally shoot the two women hostages who had volunteered to join the convicts in the armored car.〔 When prison officials returned fire, Carrasco committed suicide and one of his two accomplices was killed.〔 Syndicated columnist Cal Thomas, who was an onsite reporter for Houston’s KPRC-TV at the time, later wrote, “It is a tragedy that two hostages died. It is a miracle all the rest lived.”〔William T. Harper. "(Book Review: Eleven Days in Hell )", Texas Ranger Dispatch Magazine. Retrieved on 2008-07-13.〕
The two female hostages who died during the incident were Yvonne Beseda and Julia Standley.〔"(Ignacio Cuevas )." Texas Department of Criminal Justice. Retrieved on December 4, 2010.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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