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Burt has few living relatives, and his father and stepmother have long been deceased. The FBI says his relatives have cooperated with the investigation but could shed no light on Burt's whereabouts. A half brother, Donald Burt, declined comment. Joe Brennan Jr., a writer whose father rowed with Burt at Monsignor Bonner High School in Drexel Hill, Pa., said he believes he is living under another identity in the St. Catharines area of Canada. He said Burt had traveled there every summer as a youngster to watch a boat race. Brennan, who hopes to publish a manuscript about Burt, said he believes Burt has been able to live underground because "he is quite simply a highly disciplined and driven individual, very unlike the other student radicals you saw from that period." Burt's former rowing coach at Wisconsin, Randy Jablonic, said he was one of the hardest working athletes he saw in 40 years of coaching, his muscles bulging with strength from doing squats up and down the steps of Camp Randall Stadium. "If he used that same persistence to be evasive, he'd be very tough to find," Jablonic said. Burt also had luck. Shortly after the bombing, then-Sauk County Sheriff's Deputy Daniel Hiller was patrolling northwest of town and pulled over a light-colored Corvair matching the description of one seen near the blast. The four men inside said they were going camping, and Hiller let them go after a Madison police dispatcher could not send an officer to question them. "It's one of those things where you had them in your hand, and they slipped away," Hiller said recently, recalling Leo Burt wearing round glasses as a passenger in the car. FBI Special Agent Kevin Cassidy said Burt was last seen escaping with Fine out the back of a boarding house in Peterborough, Canada, days after the bombing while authorities arrived in the front. He left behind a wallet with a fake ID. Cassidy said he assumes Burt is still alive. After the case aired recently on "America's Most Wanted," dozens of tips poured in but none panned out. Burt stayed on the "Most Wanted" list until 1976. He beat the odds: The FBI says 463 out of 494 fugitives who have been on the list since 1950 have been apprehended or located. Holzhueter, the instructor who had urged Burt to write for the Daily Cardinal, said he remains haunted by Burt's disappearance. "Whatever Leo did, it was principled," he said. "He was a man of great integrity. Some would say he was a killer and stop there, but he was far more complex than that."
[Associated
Press;
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