Three prison staff who had been assigned to Biggs' bedside have
been withdrawn following UK Justice Minister Jack Straw's decision to
authorize his release, a Ministry of Justice spokesperson told CNN.
"The medical evidence clearly shows that Mr Biggs is very ill and that
his condition has deteriorated recently, culminating in his
re-admission to hospital," Straw said in a statement Thursday. "His
condition is not expected to improve."
Biggs' son, Michael
Biggs, said his father was "over the moon" that he had been released on
the eve of his 80th birthday. Speaking to reporters outside the
hospital, he confirmed his father had been handed his release papers.
"As a family, we are absolutely thrilled," Michael Biggs said, according to the UK's Press Association.
Biggs is unable to walk, barely able to communicate and no longer able
to eat or drink, Michael Biggs said, adding that the family was "very
hopeful that my father will be able to survive the next few days."
Biggs' legal advisor Giovanni Di Stefano told journalists that Biggs
was unlikely to ever leave his hospital bed. "This man is ill, he's
going to die... he is going to stay in hospital," he said.
Saturday also marks the 46th anniversary of the infamous 1963 heist
dubbed the "crime of the century" that transformed Biggs from a petty
London thief into one of the most wanted men in Britain.
Biggs and 14 other professional criminals made off with more than
£2.5 million ($4.2 million) in used bank notes -- the equivalent of
around £40 million ($67 million) today -- after holding up a mail train
from Glasgow to London in the early hours of the morning. In the course
of the robbery the train driver was badly beaten with an iron bar.
Most of the gang, including Biggs, were soon picked up in a massive
manhunt after police discovered fingerprints at a farmhouse hideout
where the robbers had holed up to split their spoils.
Biggs was
sentenced to 30 years in prison but escaped over the wall of a London
prison after serving just 15 months -- and spent most of the rest of
his life as a celebrity fugitive.
After undergoing extensive
plastic surgery in Paris, Biggs made his way to Australia, living there
with his wife and two children. Tracked down by police, Biggs fled
again in 1969, this time to Brazil.
Five years later, Biggs was
traced once more by a newspaper reporter. Metropolitan Police Detective
Superintendent Jack Slipper, who had led police efforts to bring the
train robbers to justice, flew out to Rio de Janeiro to arrest Biggs,
allegedly greeting him at a beachside hotel: "Long time no see, Ronnie."
But efforts to bring Biggs home were frustrated because by then he had
fathered a Brazilian-born son -- Michael Biggs -- and authorities
rejected British requests for his extradition.
Biggs continued
to live openly in Rio, trading on his notoriety by entertaining
tourists, selling t-shirts and even recording with the Sex Pistols.
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