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Daily Record
Daily Record
World
Tim Hanlon & Chloe Burrell

Man who abducted and buried alive bus full of kids is approved for parole

A man who abducted a bus full of school children and buried them alive in 1976 has been approved for parole after spending over 45 years behind bars in California, it has been reported.

Frederick Newhall Woods, now aged 70, and two accomplices took 26 kids, aged between five and 14, along with the bus driver, near the town of Chowchilla, 125 miles from San Francisco.

He and the other two kidnappers, Richard and James Schoenfield, buried the little ones alive in a bunker that had an air vent at a quarry that was owned by Woods' father, The Mirror reports.

They then demanded a $5 million ransom from the Board of Education in the largest mass kidnapping in US history and it is believed to be inspired by a plot from the movie Dirty Harry.

The children and the driver were kidnapped at a location around 125 miles from San Francisco (ALAMEDA COUNTY D.A.'S OFFICE)

However, the 27 captives were able to dig themselves out after 16 hours underground while the three kidnappers were sleeping.

All three conspirators, who came from wealthy San Francisco families, pleaded guilty to kidnapping and were given 27 life sentences without the possibility of parole.

An appeals court later ruled that the three should have the chance for parole and first Richard Schoenfeld was to be released in 2012 before his brother James in 2015.

The children and the driver were able to escape while the kidnappers slept (Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Woods has now also been approved for parole, said California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation spokesperson Joe Orlando, reported CNN.

Some of the children who were kidnapped have spoken of the anxiety and nightmares that they still suffer following the incident.

Darla Neal, who was 10 at the time, told CNN in 2015, that she has not been able to get over it.

James Schoenfeld, Fred Woods and Richard Schoenfeld (left to right) who were convicted of the kidnappings (Bettmann Archive)

"I'm overwhelmed to the point that I had to leave work," she said.

"I tell myself I should be able to shake this off and deal with it. Yet here I am, a mess."

It was Woods' 18th parole hearing held last Friday at California Men’s Colony, a state prison in San Luis Obispo.

Some of the children have since spoken of the anxiety they have suffered (48 hours)

The parole decision will become final within 120 days and then the governor has 30 days to review it.

He can either allow it to stand or refer it to the full board for a review but as Woods wasn’t convicted for murder, the governor cannot reverse the decision.

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