The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

FBI agent delivered ransom in Sinatra Jr. case

Officer assembled first SWAT team in Los Angeles.

- By Steve Marble

LOS ANGELES — Jerome Crowe, a former L.A.-based FBI agent who delivered the ransom money in the Frank Sinatra Jr. kidnapping and led a SWAT team in the bloody SLA shootout, has died after a long struggle with Alzheimer’s disease.

A lifelong law enforcemen­t officer who is credited with assembling the FBI’s first SWAT team in Los Angeles, Crowe died Nov. 26 in Hawthorne, his son Jerry said. He was 93.

Crowe was also a noted firearms instructor, and the FBI Regional Tactical Training Center at the former El Toro Marine base in Irvine was renamed in his honor in 2011.

In 1963, Crowe was handpicked to take the lead in a case that quickly captured the nation’s attention — the kidnapping of Frank Sinatra’s 19-year-old son.

Sinatra, according to the biography “Sinatra: Behind the Legend,” had been contacted by the kidnappers, who initially seemed uncertain how much ransom money to demand. While Sinatra waited, the kidnappers finally settled on $240,000.

“What the hell?” Sinatra replied. “What kind of figure is that?”

Eager to have his son freed, Sinatra pulled the money out of the bank and the FBI photograph­ed each bill. Then, Crowe and the singer set off to make the ransom drop.

The two were initially told to go to Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport, and then a gas station, and then another gas station. Finally, they were instructed to drop off the attache case with the cash between a pair of school buses parked outside a Texaco station. Two undercover agents kept surveillan­ce on the scene from an ice cream truck.

Sinatra Jr. was released quickly and the kidnappers — a trio of out-of-work house painters — were later arrested. Most of Sinatra’s money was recovered.

It was a grimmer scene a decade later when Crowe took a lead in the two-hour shootout with members of the Symbionese Liberation Army, a radical crew from the San Francisco Bay Area that had made headlines after kidnapping Patty Hearst, the granddaugh­ter of famed newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst.

The shootout at a house in South Los Angeles was one of the fiercest gun battles in the city’s history, with thousands of rounds fired. More than 500 officers were called to the scene and the shootout was carried live on television.

In the end, the house caught on fire — perhaps from a tear gas canister or a bullet striking a Molotov cocktail — and six SLA members who’d holed up in the house were found dead. No law enforcemen­t officers or civilians were injured, even though the neighborho­od teemed with spectators during the spectacle.

But any hope of capturing Hearst, now regarded as a fugitive after participat­ing in a bank robbery with SLA members, dissolved when the smoke cleared. She’d left the house the previous day.

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