We define a sample of 27 radio-excess AGN in the Chandra Deep Field North by
selecting galaxies that do not obey the radio/infrared correlation for
radio-quiet AGN and star-forming galaxies. Approximately 60% of these
radio-excess AGN are X-ray undetected in the 2 Ms Chandra catalog, even at
exposures of > 1 Ms; 25% lack even 2-sigma X-ray detections. The absorbing
columns to the faint X-ray-detected objects are 10^22 cm^-2 < N_H < 10^24
cm^-2, i.e., they are obscured but unlikely to be Compton thick. Using a local
sample of radio-selected AGN, we show that a low ratio of X-ray to radio
emission, as seen in the X-ray weakly- and non-detected samples, is correlated
with the viewing angle of the central engine, and therefore with obscuration.
Our technique can explore the proportion of obscured AGN in the distant
Universe; the results reported here for radio-excess objects are consistent
with but at the low end of the overall theoretical predictions for
Compton-thick objects.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal, 15 pages, 10
figures, 4 table