Hijacking and extortion On July 31, 1972, Wright, then 29, together with: • George Brown, then 28, of
Elizabeth, New Jersey, (alias Harry Singleton) with whom Wright escaped from prison • Joyce Brown (aka Tillerson), then 31, of
Spartanburg, South Carolina, accompanied by her 2-year-old daughter • Melvin McNair, then 23, born in
Greensboro, North Carolina • Jean Carol Allen McNair, then 25, from
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, accompanied by her 1-year-old daughter and 2-year-old son boarded
Delta Air Lines Flight 841 in
Detroit. The
DC-8 flight was bound for
Miami. Wright was dressed allegedly as a priest and, using the alias the Rev. Larry Darnell Burgess, he smuggled a handgun aboard the flight in a hollowed-out Bible. One passenger described the apparent ringleader as a black man, about 30, wearing a black mohair suit which others described as a clerical outfit. The pilot of the hijacked Detroit-Miami flight, Captain William Harold May, then 41, and a 20-year Delta employee, said Wright was the group's leader. The hijackers, allegedly members of the
Black Liberation Army, seized the plane as it approached Miami, where they demanded that FBI agents (dressed only in bathing suits) deliver $1 million ransom to the plane; the FBI complied. The hijackers allowed the 86 hostage passengers to leave the plane in Miami, but kept the flight crew. They then ordered the plane to fly to
Boston, where they refueled and took on an international navigator. They then directed the plane to
Algiers, where they sought
political asylum since the Algerian government had shown compassion towards revolutionaries. May told reporters that two of the hijackers smoked marijuana continuously during the flight, and commented, "They said they were revolutionaries, that America is a decadent society and they didn't want to live here anymore." Upon arrival in Algeria, Melvin McNair had parting words for his pilot: "We're famous", he said, "Send us a copy of your paper." On Wednesday, August 2, 1972, federal complaints of air piracy charges were filed in Miami, naming the five accomplices as defendants.
Asylum in Algeria Wright and his associates were briefly taken into custody but were released after a few days. Reportedly, Wright and his group were taken in by the American writer and prominent Black Panther
Eldridge Cleaver, whom Algeria's sympathetic
socialist government allowed to open an office. Cleaver wrote an open letter to the then Algerian president,
Houari Boumediene, in part: This hijacking represented the final test of the Third World nation's commitment to supporting some contingents of the African American freedom movement. At the request of the U.S. government, the Algerian government confiscated and returned the $1 million in ransom money to the U.S. After the hijackers' calls to have the ransom money restored to them were ignored by the Algerian government, Wright and his associates disappeared. Allegedly, in early 1973, the group traveled by ship to France and lived and worked there with new identities.
Apprehension and refused extradition of accomplices On May 26, 1976, Wright's four associates were located in
Paris and arrested by the
National Police for carrying false U.S. passports. Facing extradition to the United States, the four issued an appeal to the French people on October 11, 1976, claiming that while they were "ready to face the consequences of our act", they could not expect a fair trial in America and "would be condemned to spend the rest of our days in infernal prisons". French authorities declined the American extradition request in November 1976, holding the four defendants in
Fleury-Mérogis Prison, awaiting trial on hijacking charges. On November 24, 1978, the four were convicted by a French court for the hijacking. All received five-year sentences, but two years were suspended from the women's terms. In the United States, they would have faced a minimum of 20 years. The jury had found them guilty but noted "extenuating circumstances". George Brown and Melvin McNair were released in 1981. In 2012, a documentary titled
Melvin & Jean: An American Story was made by director Maia Wechsler. Melvin McNair and his wife, Jean, work at an orphanage in
Caen, where reportedly they have turned their lives around completely. McNair also coaches youth in
baseball. In 2010, a documentary titled
Nobody Knows My Name was made about the hijacking. According to Mikhael Ganouna, producer of the film, Wright's hijacking accomplice, George Brown, lives in Paris, but isn't worried about being extradited because he has already served his sentence.
Extradition in a similar preluding hijacking The Flight 841 hijacking was a
copycat of a similar incident two months earlier, involving the hijacking of
Western Airlines Flight 701 from
Los Angeles to
Seattle on June 3, 1972, by Willie Roger Holder, a black Vietnam veteran, and Catherine Marie Kerkow, his white girlfriend. The hijackers claimed they had a bomb in an attaché case and demanded $500,000. After allowing all 97 passengers to get off in San Francisco, they flew to Algeria where they were granted political asylum. The Algerian government confiscated and returned $488,000 of the ransom money to US officials. On January 25, 1975, the two hijackers, carrying passports under the names Leavy Forte and Janice Ann Forte, were arrested on illegal entry charges by French police. On April 15, 1975, a French court refused a US extradition request for the pair on grounds the hijacking was a political act. In July 1986, French authorities moved to deport Holder to the US after he completed his sentence for 1984 assault charges. Kerkow went missing, was never extradited, and her whereabouts and status remain unknown. ==Life after hijacking==