Ex-State Dept man on FBI wanted list

This undated handout image provided by the FBI shows the FBI's ten most wanted fugitive poster for William Bradford Bishop Jr. Bishop, diplomat suspected of killing his wife, mother and three sons in 1976 has been added to the FBI's list of "Ten Most Wanted Fugitives." Bishop Jr. allegedly bludgeoned his family to death in their suburban Washington home. (AP Photo/FBI)

This undated handout image provided by the FBI shows the FBI's ten most wanted fugitive poster for William Bradford Bishop Jr. Bishop, diplomat suspected of killing his wife, mother and three sons in 1976 has been added to the FBI's list of "Ten Most Wanted Fugitives." Bishop Jr. allegedly bludgeoned his family to death in their suburban Washington home. (AP Photo/FBI)

Published Apr 10, 2014

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Washington - The FBI on Thursday added a former US State Department employee who allegedly bludgeoned his family to death with a hammer 38 years ago to its Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list.

Investigators say William Bradford Bishop, Jr. brutally murdered his wife, mother and three sons aged 5, 10 and 14 at their home in Bethesda, Maryland, near Washington on March 1, 1976.

Dubbing him a “family annihilator,” they say he was last seen a day later further south in North Carolina, where he is believed to have buried his victims' remains in a shallow grave and set them on fire.

Describing Bishop as a “highly intelligent” former State Department employee, the Federal Bureau of Investigation is offering a reward of up to $100 000 for information leading directly to his arrest.

A Yale graduate, he is also described as someone who speaks several languages and traveled extensively for work.

“There is no indication that Bishop is dead,” special agent Steve Vogt was quoted as saying on the FBI website.

“If Bishop is living with a new identity, he's got to be somebody's next-door neighbor.”

In the hopes of tracking down the now 77-year-old, the FBI has issued photos of an age-progressed bust, warning he could be hiding in plain sight.

“When Bishop took off in 1976, there was no social media, no 24-hour news cycle,” Vogt said. “There was no sustained way to get his face out there like there is today. And the only way to catch this guy is through the public.”

No tip was too small, Vogt added.

“Don't forget that five people were murdered,” he said. “Bishop needs to be held accountable for that.”

AFP

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