Duane Earl Pope

Duane Earl Pope

Duane Earl Pope, born 1943, is a convicted murderer serving a life sentence for one of the bloodiest bank robberies in modern times, the 1965 robbery of the Farmers State Bank in Big Springs, Nebraska.

Born in 1943, Pope grew up on a small, 160-acre (0.65 km2) farm outside of Roxbury, Kansas, an unincorporated town in the northeast portion of McPherson County. He was one of eight children. Shy, quiet, and athletic as a child, Pope grew up with a fascination for guns and tractors, neither of which is particularly unusual for a farm boy.[1]

He graduated in 1965 from McPherson College in McPherson, Kansas with a degree in industrial education, although he lacked the teaching component of that degree that would led him get a job teaching high school industrial arts.[2] He excelled in football but was a mediocre student.

Pope got the idea to rob the Big Springs bank while working in wheat fields there one summer while he was in college[3]. While in college, he bought several Caterpillar tractor/bulldozers and was contemplating starting an excavation businesses but needed money for a trailer.[4] In preparation for the Big Springs robbery, he built handmade silencers for his pistols in the machine shops at his college and experimented with them in his family's barn. He also fashioned a breastplate out of a piece of a bulldozer blade. Two days after graduating from college, Pope borrowed fifty dollars from his father and said he was heading for Oklahoma to look for work. Instead, he went to Salina, Kansas, rented a new car, and drove to Nebraska. Late in the morning of June 4, 1965, after circling the bank and watching for the morning customers to clear out, Pope conversed with a banker pretending to be a landowner seeking a loan, and then pulled a Ruger .38 semiautomatic pistol and ordered the bank employees to fill his briefcase with cash. After getting what he could (about $1,600), Pope ordered the four bank workers to lie face down on the floor, where he shot them execution-style in the back and in the neck. Three of the victims, bank president Andreas (Andy) Kjeldgaard, 77; cashier Glenn Hendrickson, 59, and bookkeeper Lois Ann Holthan, 35, died instantly. The fourth, Franklin Kjeldgaard, 25, survived his wounds but was paralyzed for life.[5]

Pope made a circuitous exit from Big Springs, spotted by several witnesses. He tossed his gun and breastplate along the road; they were recovered by the FBI. He dropped some of the money off at his family home, then returned the car to Hertz in Salina. He then traveled by bus and plane to Tijuana, Mexico by way of Fort Worth and El Paso, Texas. While holed up in San Diego, Pope discovered that authorities had deduced he was the killer. Pope next went to Las Vegas, Nevada, where he gambled and enjoyed himself.[6] Pope appeared on the FBI 10 Most Wanted List for one day.[7] Upon reading an appeal for him to surrender issued by the president of his college, Pope flew to Kansas City, Missouri, where he turned himself in. He gave a 19-page confession to Kansas City police and was extradited to Nebraska.[8]

Pope was tried in 1965 in U.S. District Court in Lincoln, Nebraska in front of a jury and in 1970 in state court by a judge in Deuel County, Nebraska. Both times, he was found guilty and sentenced to death. His federal sentence was upheld by the Eighth Circuit in 1967, with Judge Harry Blackmun writing the court opinion. His sentence was commuted to life in prison by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1972 as part of the Furman v. Georgia package of cases that determined that the death penalty, as then practiced, was unconstitutional. As of 2011, Pope remains in federal prison in El Reno, Oklahoma. If he is ever granted federal parole, he will begin serving three life sentences in Nebraska.[9]

From 1978 to 1983, while incarcerated, Pope was married to a college girlfriend, Ramona Lowe.[10]

References

  1. ^ Noel Grove, Anyone But Duane, Authorhouse, 2008.
  2. ^ Noel Grove, Anyone But Duane, Authorhouse, 2008.
  3. ^ Noel Grove, Anyone But Duane, Authorhouse, 2008.
  4. ^ Noel Grove, Anyone But Duane, Bloomington, Ind.: Authorhouse, 2008.
  5. ^ "North Platte Bulletin". http://www.northplattebulletin.com/index.asp?show=news&action=readStory&storyID=15616&pageID=3. Retrieved 2010-07-26. 
  6. ^ Noel Grove, Anyone But Duane, Authorhouse, 2008.
  7. ^ "Chronological Listing of The FBI’s “Ten Most Wanted Fugitives” March 14, 1950 - March 1, 2010". http://www.fbi.gov/publications/top_ten_60th/list.htm. Retrieved 26 July 2010. [dead link]
  8. ^ Noel Grove, Anyone But Duane, Authorhouse, 2008.
  9. ^ Noel Grove, Anyone But Duane, Bloomington, Ind.: Authorhouse, 2008, p. 361.
  10. ^ Noel Grove, Anyone But Duane, Bloomington, Ind.: Authorhouse, 2008, pp. 360-361.

Noel Grove, Anyone But Duane, Bloomington, Ind.: Authorhouse, 2008. ISBN 9781438909905.

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