James C. Lucas | |
---|---|
Born | 1912 |
Died | 1963 Alcatraz Penitentiary |
(age 50)
Charge(s) | Bank robbery (before 1935) Murder (1938) |
Penalty | Life imprisonment |
Spouse | Cheryl Lucas |
Children | Charlene, Jimmie, James L, Emma, James C, Kimberly, Shawna, Stephen, Shelly, Landon |
James C. Lucas (1912–1963) was an American criminal who served a life sentence in Alcatraz. He is best known for being part of an attempted escape from Alcatraz Penitentiary in 1938, and for attacking Al Capone in the prison's laundry room on June 23, 1936.
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Lucas was originally sentenced to thirty years' imprisonment for bank robbery[1] and violation of the Dyer Act (interstate trafficking of stolen vehicles). He arrived at Alcatraz in January 1935 from the Texas State Prison[2] and was known there as James "Texas Bank Robber" Lucas.
On June 23, 1936, Lucas stabbed Al Capone in the back with a pair of shears from the prison barber shop. Capone had been working in the laundry area 10 feet (3 m) away.[3] Lucas was sent to solitary confinement for his brutal attack on Capone.[4]
In the spring of 1938, James Lucas, Thomas R. Limerick and Rufus Franklin planned an escape from Alcatraz. Their escape plan began by incapacitating an unarmed custodial worker supervising a work detail on the top floor. Once the supervising worker was rendered unconscious, the convicts would escape through a window to the rooftop, where they would incapacitate an armed guard and leave the island via a seized police boat. They enacted their escape plan on May 23, 1938 in the prison's mat shop, where they assaulted custodial worker Royal Kline with hammer blows to his head. They proceeded to the roof, where an armed guard shot both Franklin and Limerick, although Lucas wasn't shot. Other guards arrived at the scene. Franklin, Limerick and Lucas were cornered and surrendered to the guards.[5] [5]
The custodial worker died of his injuries the next day, and Thomas Limerick, one of the wounded convicts, also died.[6] Lucas and the other surviving convict, Rufus Franklin, were tried for murder[7][8][9] and sentenced to life imprisonment.[10][11]