In 1958, the United States FBI, under Director J. Edgar Hoover, continued for a ninth year to maintain a public list of the people it regarded as the Ten Most Wanted Fugitives.
Also notable in 1958, the longest wanted Fugitive, Henry Randolph Mitchell, #4 from the original list of Ten published in 1950, after eight years at large, became the first Top Tenner to ever be removed for reason other than capture or death.
April 4, 1958 #104 Two weeks on the list Frank Aubrey Leftwich - U.S. prisoner arrested April 18, 1958 in Chicago, Illinois April 16, 1958 #105 Two months on the list, and later reappeared as Fugitive #188 in 1964 Quay Cleon Kilburn - later was wanted as Fugitive #188 in 1964; U.S. prisoner arrested June 2, 1958 in Los Angeles, California by the FBI after a citizen recognized him from an Identification Order in a local post office.
May 9, 1958 #106 One year on the list Dominick Scialo - U.S. prisoner surrendered July 27, 1959 to the FBI in Brooklyn, New York June 16, 1958 #107 Two years on the list Angelo Luigi Pero - PROCESS DISMISSED December 2, 1960 by the United States attorney in New York City June 17, 1958 #108 One year on the list Frederick Grant Dunn - FOUND DEAD September 8, 1959 by a farmer who located skeletal remains along a stream bank near Ellsworth, Kansas, and contacted the sheriff.
September 10, 1958 #109 Seven months on the list Frank Lawrence Sprenz - U.S. prisoner arrested April 15, 1959 in Laredo, Texas