March 17, 2009 12:34 PM

Former '70s Radical Freed From Prison

(CBS/AP)  Sara Jane Olson, a 1970s radical who assumed a new identity as a Minnesota housewife and spent a quarter century as a fugitive, was released from a California state corrections facility today.

Spokeswoman Terry Thornton said Olson was released early Tuesday from the Central California Women's Facility in Chowchilla, in the heart of the state's farm country about 150 miles southeast of San Francisco.

Olson will be paroled to Minnesota, where she had been living as a fugitive until her arrest in 1999.

Olson has served seven years - half her sentence - since pleading guilty to placing pipe bombs under Los Angeles Police Department patrol cars and participating in the deadly robbery of a bank in a Sacramento suburb.

She was released by mistake a year ago after California corrections officials miscalculated her parole date, joining her family for five days before she was re-arrested. Authorities now say she has served the proper seven-year sentence.

One of her attorneys, David Nickerson, said his client is likely to head to her mother's home in Palmdale after she is freed and check in with her parole agent in Los Angeles County.

She then will be allowed to fly home with her husband, Dr. Gerald "Fred" Peterson, to St. Paul, Minnesota.

Critics have been urging Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to have Olson serve her time in California. They include Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty and police protective leagues in Los Angeles and Minnesota, which say Olson should finish her parole where her crimes were committed.

On Monday, California state Sen. Jeff Denham invoked the bank robbery in a letter to Schwarzenegger asking that Olson not be allowed to return to her adopted state.

In the 1975 robbery of Crocker National Bank near Sacramento, Myrna Opsahl, a 42-year-old mother of four who was trying to deposit a church collection, was killed by a shotgun blast.

"She fled the state, changed her name, and lived a leisurely life of lies and deception in Minnesota, while the children of Myrna Opsahl were forced to grow up without a mother," Denham said in his letter.

Nickerson, an Olson attorney, noted that corrections officials in Minnesota have said Olson can serve her parole there if California officials decide to send her home.

"Everyone she knows is in Minnesota. The statute says she's to be paroled to the place where she has the best chance to succeed. That's where her family, friends and home are. She's served her time, she's paid her debt. Now they want to punish her some more. This is just being vindictive."

Schwarzenegger deferred to the corrections department.

"We kind of let them continue taking care of those issues and they will find the right solutions for the problem," he said Monday.

Olson, 62, will now return to the type of comfortable, middle class lifestyle she once denounced as a member of the Symbionese Liberation Army, settling into her St. Paul neighborhood among lawyers, doctors and professors.

In Minnesota, Olson developed an identity that was worlds apart from her California past. She volunteered in social causes and acted in community theater while raising the couple's three daughters. The Olson home was a frequent site of dinner parties.

Her past resurfaced in 1999, when she was arrested while driving a minivan after she was profiled on the television show "America's Most Wanted."

(AP Photo)
(Left: Kathy Soliah speaking at the Angel Atwood Memorial held in Ho Chi Minh Park, Berkeley, Calif. in May 1974. After fleeing California Soliah assumed the name Sara Jane Olson.)

The SLA was a band of mostly white, middle class young people best known for kidnapping newspaper heiress Patty Hearst. It also claimed responsibility for assassinating Oakland Schools Superintendent Marcus Foster and was involved in a shootout with Los Angeles police officers that killed five SLA members.

In a sign of those turbulent times, the group adopted a seven-headed snake as its symbol and the slogan, "Death to the fascist insect that preys upon the life of the people."

All but one other former SLA member have been released from prison after pleading guilty in 2002 to taking part in the Sacramento bank robbery.

"We were young and foolish. We felt we were committing an idealized, ideological action to obtain government-insured money and that we were not stealing from ordinary people," Olson wrote in an apology before her sentencing for the bank robbery. "In the end, we stole someone's life."

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 38 Comments
by rrozsa March 18, 2009 9:56 AM EDT
By the way, remember that a lot more than 4 children were orphaned because of the Bush invasion of Iraq.
Posted by omded at 11:30 AM

=================

Just remember that a lot more children's lives were potentially saved due to Hussein's overthrow. Have you forgotten his mass murder of his own people?
Reply to this comment
by rrozsa March 18, 2009 9:55 AM EDT
70s radical?

How about 70s murderer
Posted by summarex at 12:13 PM : Mar 17, 2009

==============

I was thinking the same thing. I remember when the whole Patty Hearst/ Symbionese Liberation Army thing was on the news every day. The headline makes it sound like she wrote some very over-the-top treatise or something.....
Reply to this comment
by aziridine March 17, 2009 9:39 PM EDT
It's odd that the SLA folks are out after a very few years, but Sirhan Sirhan is still in jail 40 yrs after his crime. Was Sirhan's victim any more meaningful than the SLA's? Or is there perhaps a man of power who is making sure Sirhan stays in jail?

Are not all lives equal? Tell us TED.....
Reply to this comment
by ozus March 17, 2009 9:05 PM EDT
A parallel to this is Ronnie Biggs in the UK. He was involved in a robbery, someone was killed (not by him) and he fled to avoid jail, enjoying a comfortable life in Brazil for many years. When he returned to the UK he was jailed where he remains.
Reply to this comment
by brainteaser2 March 17, 2009 8:08 PM EDT
Sarah Jane Olson was arrested, tried, convicted and has served her time in prison. The story is over she doesn't owe anyone anything anymore. Let her go home and be with her children.
Reply to this comment
by ozus March 17, 2009 7:08 PM EDT
It has been argued that she did not pull the trigger. As far as I know accessory to murder is still a crime and I think others involved in a bank robbery- murder have served more than just a bit over three years.

She seems to have led a comfortable, possibly wealthy existence in Minnesota. Maybe the four children of the slain woman can sue her.
Reply to this comment
by skeetchamp March 17, 2009 6:58 PM EDT
They killed someone while robbing a bank and they got OUT of prison? Felony murder -- when you commit a felony (say, bank robbery) and somebody ends up dead during your crime -- usually is a life term. Well, it is if you're poor and otherwise not like the criminals in this case.
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by txlakeside March 17, 2009 6:52 PM EDT
Unless you lived through the 60's as an adult you have no clue to the turmoil and social unrest. She has served her time, end of story. Let her be!
Reply to this comment
by toolmangler-2009 March 17, 2009 6:08 PM EDT
Nationalism is power hunger tempered by self-deception.
Posted by rave_on3 at 12:40 PM : Mar 17, 2009




Good point
Reply to this comment
by bajajohn1 March 17, 2009 5:04 PM EDT
The real radicals are the extremist free-enterprisers who have ripped this nation's economy apart. They are called right-wing radicals. Mostly Republican and very greedy creatures who would steal a child's candy.
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