June 8, 1968: The morning they caught King's killer
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June 8, 2026
Non-graphic · Sensitive events discussed without explicit detail.
June 8, 1968: The morning they caught King's killer
On the morning of June 8, 1968, a slight, bespectacled traveler handed a Canadian passport to an immigration officer at London's Heathrow Airport. He was booked on a flight to Brussels under the name Ramon George Sneyd. The officer asked him to step into an office "for some routine questions." The man's composure collapsed almost at once. "Oh God," he said, "I feel so trapped." In his pocket was a loaded .38-caliber revolver — and a second passport in yet another name. The traveler was James Earl Ray, and his arrest that morning closed the largest manhunt the FBI had ever conducted.
Two months earlier, on April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. had been shot dead on the second-floor balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee. The single shot was fired from the bathroom window of a rooming house across the street, where a man calling himself John Willard had taken a room hours before. Near the scene investigators recovered a bundle — a Remington rifle, binoculars, and a transistor radio — carrying a set of fingerprints. Within days the FBI matched those prints to James Earl Ray, a career criminal and escaped convict who had broken out of the Missouri State Penitentiary in 1967 while serving twenty years for armed robbery.
Ray was already gone. Born in Alton, Illinois, in 1928, he had spent much of his adult life in and out of prison, and he proved an unusually capable fugitive. After the assassination he drove to Atlanta, then to Toronto, where he acquired a Canadian passport under the name Ramon George Sneyd. On May 6 he flew to London. From there he traveled to Lisbon — reportedly seeking passage to white-ruled Rhodesia or South Africa, or work as a mercenary — before returning to London on May 17. For two months his trail crossed an ocean and several countries while the FBI, Scotland Yard, and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police tried to close the net.
It was a clerical detail that finally caught him. The name "Sneyd" had been placed on an RCMP watchlist, and when Ray tried to check in at Heathrow the flag came up. After his detention, Scotland Yard's Detective Chief Superintendent Tommy Butler — famous for hunting down the Great Train Robbers four years earlier — arrived to make the formal arrest. Ray was extradited to Memphis on July 19, 1968.
What followed has fueled debate for more than half a century. On March 10, 1969 — his forty-first birthday — Ray pleaded guilty to King's murder, forfeiting his right to a trial, and was sentenced to ninety-nine years in prison. Within days he recanted, insisting he had been manipulated by a shadowy figure he knew only as "Raoul" and that he was a patsy in a larger conspiracy. He offered scant evidence, and no court ever granted him the trial he then spent the rest of his life demanding. In June 1977 he briefly escaped from Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary in Tennessee, remaining free for some fifty-four hours before recapture.
The questions did not die with the guilty plea. In 1978 Ray testified before the House Select Committee on Assassinations, which concluded the following year that King had likely been the victim of a conspiracy, even as it identified Ray as the man who fired the shot. In a striking turn, members of the King family came to publicly support Ray's request for a trial, expressing doubt that he had acted alone. A 1999 civil suit in Memphis produced a jury verdict pointing to a conspiracy; a separate U.S. Justice Department review completed in 2000 found no reliable evidence to support those claims.
James Earl Ray died on April 23, 1998, in Nashville, aged seventy, of complications from liver disease — still insisting on his innocence, still without the trial he had sought for nearly three decades. His capture at Heathrow on June 8, 1968, answered the most urgent question of that spring: who had fled the rooming house in Memphis. The questions it did not answer have outlived everyone who might once have settled them.
Also on this day
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Ikeda Elementary School Massacre — Osaka, Japan, June 8, 2001 · WikipediaOn June 8, 2001, Mamoru Takuma forced his way into Ikeda Elementary School in Osaka, Japan, and fatally stabbed eight children aged six to eight, wounding fifteen others and a teacher. The deadliest school attack in modern Japanese history, it prompted sweeping changes to school security and to laws on offenders with mental illness. Takuma was convicted and executed in 2004.
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Akihabara Truck-and-Knife Massacre — Tokyo, Japan, June 8, 2008 · WikipediaOn June 8, 2008, Tomohiro Kato drove a rented truck into a crowd in Tokyo's Akihabara shopping district, then got out and stabbed bystanders with a dagger, killing seven people and injuring ten. Kato was arrested at the scene, convicted of murder, and executed in 2022. The attack remains one of Japan's most notorious modern mass killings.
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Las Vegas Police Ambush by Jerad and Amanda Miller, June 8, 2014 · WikipediaOn June 8, 2014, anti-government extremists Jerad and Amanda Miller ambushed and killed Las Vegas police officers Igor Soldo and Alyn Beck as they ate lunch, then fatally shot bystander Joseph Wilcox inside a nearby Walmart. Both shooters died in the ensuing gunfight; the case drew national attention for its ties to the anti-government militia movement.
Sources used/checked for this issue
- James Earl Ray | Biography, Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., & Conspiracy Theories, Encyclopaedia Britannica — "James Earl Ray," Encyclopaedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/biography/James-Earl-Ray
- June 8, 1968: James Earl Ray is captured, American Bar Association — "June 8, 1968: James Earl Ray is captured," ABA Journal. https://www.abajournal.com/magazine/article/june_8_1968_james_earl_ray_is_captured
- Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., Wikipedia — "Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.," Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assassination_of_Martin_Luther_King_Jr.
Today in True Crime by Case Bound — 2026-06-08