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Manhunt continues for convicted murderers who escaped maximum-security prison

, June 8 at 9:42 PM, Source

 

As a massive manhunt continued for a pair of “dangerous individuals” who pulled off an elaborate escape from a maximum-security prison in upstate New York, Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) said they are investigating whether civilian workers or contractors may have helped the two convicted killers escape.

 

“I think they had help. I don’t believe they could have acquired the equipment that they needed to do this without help,” Cuomo (D) told NBC News. “And we have a separate investigation that’s going through exactly that question.”

 

More than 250 law enforcement officers using bloodhounds, helicopters and other tools continued to search for 48-year-old Richard Matt and 34-year-old David Sweat on Monday while authorities investigating the pair’s brazen escape from the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, N.Y., were “looking at everything” — though they were primarily focused on whether any assistance came “from the inside,” Cuomo said.

 

“I would be shocked if a guard was involved, and that’s putting it mildly,” Cuomo told CNN. “But we’re looking at the civilian employees now and the private contractors to see if possibly if a civil employee or contractor was assisting this escape, because they wouldn’t have equipment on their own, that’s for sure.”

 

After the escape, Cuomo announced a reward for information that would help investigators capture the inmates, who left the prison either Friday night or Saturday morning.

 

“This really could have been a movie script,” Cuomo told the “Today” show. “And, if you saw it as a movie script, it would have been unbelievable, frankly.”

 

State, federal and local law enforcement agencies were investigating approximately 300 leads, New York State Police said in a statement. At the same time, the statement said, local, state and federal agents were conducting “grid searches of region around the facility.” The statement added that “additional investigative services are being applied statewide and nationally.”

 

The two men were referred to as “dangerous individuals” by Cuomo, who joined searchers to examine the prisoners’ escape route before holding a news conference outside the prison.

 

“It was an elaborate plot,” he said, noting that it was the first time that anyone had escaped from the maximum-security portion of the institution, which has been open since 1865 and is known as “Little Siberia” because of its isolated location and the region’s harsh winters.

“You look at the precision of the operation,” he added. “It was truly extraordinary.”

 

The escape, in which the men used power tools to drill through the prison’s steel walls and pipes, brought to mind the infamous escape from Alcatraz by three inmates in 1962.

 

Authorities discovered that the two men’s adjoining cells were empty during a morning check at 5:30 a.m. on Saturday, the New York State Police wrote on Facebook. Cuomo said the men left clothing and other items in their beds to make it appear that they were asleep, according to Reuters.

 

Officials immediately locked down the prison and began investigating the men’s disappearance, according to the New York Times.

 

“A search revealed that there was a hole cut out of the back of the cell through which these inmates escaped,” Anthony Annuci, the acting state corrections commissioner, told the AP. “They went onto a catwalk which is about six stories high. We estimate they climbed down and had power tools and were able to get out to this facility through tunnels, cutting away at several spots.”

 

Before exiting the prison, the men left a yellow sticky note on a pipe, according to news reports.

 

“Have a Nice Day!” it said.

 

“I have a lot of friends whose family members got calls from the officers on duty telling them to lock their doors and keep the kids inside,” one local resident, 41-year-old Francine Mitchell, told the Times Union. “It freaked the kids out. A lot of them slept with their parents last night.”

 

Cuomo said Monday that the escaped convicts may have crossed the Canadian border, about 20 miles from the prison, or gone elsewhere.

 

“They are killers; they are murderers,” Cuomo said on NBC. “They could be anywhere given this period of time.”

How did the inmates acquire power tools?

Cuomo said the facility undergoes regular maintenance and officials are looking into whether the tools came from outside contractors who enter the prison to work on various construction projects. Officials said their internal inventory of tools has been accounted for.

 

“I chatted with a couple of the inmates myself and said, ‘You must be a very heavy sleeper,'” the governor said, according to the Times. “They were heard, they had to be heard.”

 

Also in question, officials said, was how the men discovered their complicated escape route from the facility.

 

“We hope when we capture these individuals to learn from them how they discovered the right route to go to,” Annuci said. “It may have been over a period of time. It may have been trial and error. We don’t know.”

 

State police told CNN that Sweat is serving a sentence of life without parole after he was convicted of killing a Broome County sheriff’s deputy in 2002. Matt was convicted of three counts of murder and kidnapping and is serving a sentence of 25 years to life for the death of a man in 1997. He has at least one escape attempt from a jail or prison facility, according to a 2008 story in the Lockport Union-Sun & Journal.

 

The New York Times reports that Matt was convicted in the murder of his former employer, William Rickerson. Reports the Times:

In 1986, he had escaped from a jail in Erie County. About a decade later, after Mr. Rickerson’s death, Mr. Matt fled to Mexico, where he killed an American man at a bar and served several years in prison before being brought back in 2007 to stand trial here in Niagara County.

 

“You can never have enough security with him,” said Gabriel DiBernardo, a retired captain with the North Tonawanda Police Department who was the chief of detectives leading the investigation into Mr. Rickerson’s death. “You can never trust him. You can never turn your back on him.”

 

Mr. DiBernardo, who retired in 1998, offered a sentiment echoed by others in law enforcement here: “He is the most vicious, evil person I’ve ever come across in 38 years as a police officer.”

Matt and Sweat were last seen at 10:30 p.m. Friday during a standing count, authorities said.

 

Facility Supervisor Steven Racette told CNN that head counts occur every two hours during the night when guards visually confirm whether inmates are in their bunks.

 

Maj. Charles Guess, the State Police commander of the region said law enforcement is conducting a full investigation involving multiple agencies, including the FBI, New York State Police and the U.S. Marshals Service.

 

“We are putting on the full court press,” he said.

 

That effort included setting up checkpoints at crucial roads throughout the region, where motorists were engaged by law enforcement and trunks were searched.

 

Paula Ashley, who lives within several blocks of the manhole that the prisoners emerged from, told NBC News that she was shocked the escape was unfolding in her small town of 5,000 people.

 

“Is this a drill or is this for real?” she said. “This is very scary. This is my backyard. This is where my son plays outside.”

The prison is the state’s largest, with a population of 2,689 inmates, the corrections department reported, according to CNN. Officials told the New York Times that 2003 was the last year a prison escape occurred from the New York State system. That year, a pair of convicted murderers escaped a facility in Elmira, N.Y., before being apprehended the next day.

 

Should someone encounter the latest pair of escaped killers, Cuomo stressed that no one should engage the men.

 

“These are not people to be trifled with,” he said.

 

This post, originally published on June 7, has been updated.

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Police Swarm Upstate Town in Search of Escaped Killers

 

A days-long manhunt for two escaped killers prompted a burst of police activity on Tuesday as investigators converged on an upstate town about an hour from the prison where the men had been incarcerated.

The prisoners, Richard W. Matt and David Sweat, were discovered missing from their cells at 5:30 a.m. on Saturday at Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, N.Y., 25 miles from the Canadian border.

 

On Tuesday, law enforcement officials swarmed Willsboro, a small town about 40 miles southeast of Dannemora.

 

The Willsboro town supervisor, Shaun Gillilland, said there was a report of a sighting of two men on foot early Tuesday morning near Middle Road, at the southern end of the town, setting off a frenzy of law enforcement activity.

 

“The police reacted to it immediately,” Mr. Gillilland said, though he added that officials had not yet confirmed that the two men were the escaped prisoners.

 

 

On Monday, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said the evidence in the escape increasingly pointed to an inside job.

 

“I think they had help,” he said. “I don’t think they could have acquired the equipment they needed to do this without help.”

 

A woman who works at the prison, though not as a guard, was being questioned in connection with the escape and has been removed from duty, according to a person who had been briefed on the investigation.

 

Mr. Matt and Mr. Sweat are believed to have used power tools to cut through the walls of their adjoining cells, escaping onto an internal catwalk. They then snaked their way down through the bowels of the prison and into a two-foot pipe they had cut a hole in. They crawled under Clinton’s soaring concrete walls and emerged onto the streets of Dannemora from a manhole several hundred feet from the prison.

 

Guards at the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, N.Y., on Sunday. Two inmates were discovered to be missing a day earlier. Credit Nancie Battaglia for The New York Times

FM

Escaped NY Murderers Were on 'Honor Block' for Well-Behaved Inmates, Source Says

 

The two inmates who escaped from a maximum-security prison were serving time for murder, but they were apparently well-behaved members of the prison community.

 

Richard Matt and David Sweat were on the "Honor Block" at the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, New York, before they elaborately escaped from their cells Saturday morning, a source told ABC News. And investigators say they are now looking into whether the inmates' looser restrictions may have played a role in their escape.

 

The Honor Block gives well-behaved inmates certain privileges regarding laundry, cooking, phone use and recreation, according to state Department of Corrections regulations.

 

Honor Block inmates can even work as assistants to plumbers and electricians, a source said.

 

 

PHOTO: Undated photos released by the New York State Police show Richard Matt, who escaped from the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora.
New York State Police
PHOTO: Undated photos released by the New York State Police show Richard Matt, who escaped from the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora.

 

PHOTO: Undated photos released by the New York State Police show David Sweat who escaped from the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora.
New York State Police
PHOTO: Undated photos released by the New York State Police show David Sweat who escaped from the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora.

 

But the most telling privilege may be clothing: Honor Block inmates are permitted to wear civilian clothes instead of prison-issued informs, a source said.

 

Two Dannemora residents told ABC News that they spotted two men, whom they believe to be the fugitives, in their backyard early Saturday, in plain clothes. Both men wore jeans and one wore a white T-shirt, one witness said.

 

Matt and Sweat each had one blemish on their disciplinary records while incarcerated at Clinton Correctional facility, according to state records obtained by ABC News.

 

In 2011, Matt was charged with smuggling, tattooing and providing false information, according to the records. He received 30 days of confinement in his cell and loss of recreation, phone and commissary privileges.

 

In 2014, Sweat was charged with interference and harassment, the records show. His punishment was suspended.

 

About 300 leads have been developed so far in the search for Matt and Sweat, State Police said Monday.

 

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has urged anyone with information to come forward.

 

"This was the first breakout [at the prison's maximum security portion] since 1865 and I want to make sure that it's the last," Cuomo said.

 

Matt is described as standing 6 feet tall, weighing 210 pounds and having black hair and hazel eyes. He has tattoos reading "Mexico Forever," a heart on his chest and left shoulder, and a Marine Corps badge on his right shoulder, police said.

 

Sweat is described as 5-foot-11, weighing 165 pounds and having brown hair and green eyes. He has tattoos on his left bicep and his right fingers, police said.

 

New York State is offering a $100,000 reward for information leading to Matt and Sweat's apprehension and arrest.

 

PHOTO: Undated photos released by the New York State Police show Richard Matt, who escaped from the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora.
New York State Police
PHOTO: Undated photos released by the New York State Police show Richard Matt, who escaped from the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora.

 

 

PHOTO: Undated photos released by the New York State Police show David Sweat, who escaped from the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora.
New York State Police
PHOTO: Undated photos released by the New York State Police show David Sweat, who escaped from the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora.

 

ABC News' Gio Benitez and Aaron Katersky contributed to this report.

FM

Female employee of N.Y. prison arrested in convict escape

 

Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin (L) and New York Governor Andrew Cuomo take part in a news conference at the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, New York June 10, 2015.
Reuters/Chris Wattie

 

A female employee of an upstate New York prison has been arrested on charges that she helped two inmates stage a daring escape from the maximum security facility, New York State Police said on Friday.

 

Joyce Mitchell, an industrial training supervisor at the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, is suspected of having smuggled contraband into the prison, where convicts Richard Matt and David Sweat were discovered missing last weekend, authorities said.

 

Mitchell, 51, is charged with promoting prison contraband and criminal facilitation, both felonies, according to a statement issued by the New York State Police.

 

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In making their escape last weekend, the convicted murderers slipped through holes cut into steel walls and a steam pipe, and popped out a manhole in the street.

 

Authorities have not disclosed what kind of contraband Mitchell allegedly smuggled into the prison, located about 20 miles (32 km) south of the Canadian border.

 

The manhunt for Matt and Sweat on Friday involved more than 800 law enforcement officers, along with sniffer dogs and aviation units, who scoured woods just a few miles from the prison.

 

Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie said earlier that the woman was the subject of a previous investigation into allegations that she had a close relationship with Sweat, who worked at a prison shop that Mitchell helped supervise.

 

He said the investigations turned up insufficient evidence to bring charges, although action had been taken to separate the two for a period of time.

 

(Reporting by Ellen Wulfhorst and Barbara Goldberg; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn and Lisa Shumaker)

FM

Joyce Mitchell, N.Y. prison employee, arrested for allegedly helping inmates escape

Mitchell, 51, accused of supplying convicts with contraband, faces numerous charges

The Associated Press Posted: Jun 12, 2015 9:10 AM ET, Last Updated: Jun 12, 2015 6:46 PM ET, Source

 

Joyce Mitchell, an employee at Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, N.Y., allegedly provided contraband to the two murderers who cut their way out of a maximum-security prison in northern New York last weekend.

Joyce Mitchell, an employee at Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, N.Y., allegedly provided contraband to the two murderers who cut their way out of a maximum-security prison in northern New York last weekend. (Facebook)

 

New York State Police have arrested Joyce Mitchell, a prison employee accused of helping two murderers escape from a maximum-security prison.

Police say Mitchell, 51, provided "material assistance" to Richard Matt and David Sweat, who escaped last weekend and are still on the lam.

 

She has been charged with several offences, including promoting prison contraband, a felony, and criminal facilitation, a misdemeanour.

 

Mitchell had been questioned earlier Friday about her suspected role in the escape of two killers. Prosecutors accuse her of providing the two convicts with contraband.

 

District attorney Andrew Wylie would not specify the prohibited items that Mitchell allegedly supplied but said they weren't the power tools that Sweat and Matt used to cut through steel pipes and tunnel their way out of the prison last weekend.

 

Contraband behind bars can include such things as cellphones, weapons, drugs, tools and unauthorized clothing.

 

USA-NEW YORK/PRISONERS escape

Law enforcement agents ride in the back of a truck during a search of a wooded area near Cadyville, N.Y., on Thursday for two prison escapees. (Chris Wattie/Reuters)

 

Wylie said authorities are "learning more and more information each day from her as far as establishing a timeline on how this process occurred and what her involvement was." 

 

Mitchell is an instructor at the prison tailor shop, where the two convicts worked.

 

Mitchell's family has said she wouldn't have helped the convicts break out.

 

Escaped Prisoners Steam Pipe

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo looking at the area where two convicted murderers used power tools to cut through steel pipes at the Clinton Correctional facility in Dannemora, N.Y. (Darren McGee, New York State Governor's Office/Associated Press)

 

On Thursday, a person close to the investigation said that Mitchell had befriended the two men and agreed to be the getaway driver but never showed up. The person was not authorized to discuss the case and spoke on condition of anonymity.

 

Sweat, 34, and Matt, 48, cut through steel and bricks and crawled through a steam pipe, emerging from a manhole outside the 12-metre walls of the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, about 32 kilometres south of the Canadian border.

Investigated about possible relationship

Mitchell has a $56,000-a-year US job overseeing inmates who sew clothes and learn to repair sewing machines at the maximum-security Clinton Correctional Facility. The garment shop is intended to give prisoners job skills and work habits. In general, an inmate assigned to such a job might work several hours a day there, five days a week, meaning he would have significant contact with supervisors.

 

Wylie said there was an investigation within the past year into a possible relationship between Mitchell and Sweat.

 

"My information is that it was unfounded," the district attorney said. "There wasn't sufficient information to either block her out of the facility, have some sort of formal charges within the facility filed against her. But action, I think, was taken to separate the two of them for a period."

 

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Thursday that investigators are "talking to several people who may have facilitated the escape." He warned that the law will come down hard on any prison system employee who crosses the line.

 

"If you do it, you will be convicted, and then you'll be on the other side of the prison that you've been policing, and that is not a pleasant place to be," the governor said.

'She's a good, good person,' says neighbour

A longtime neighbour was stunned by the suspicions swirling around Mitchell.

 

"I just can't believe she'd do something so stupid," neighbour Sharon Currier said. She said Mitchell is "not somebody who's off the wall."

"She's a good, good person," said Currier.

 

She said Mitchell is a former town tax collector in Dickinson, a community near Dannemora. Skilled at sewing, she has worked for at least five years at the prison, where her husband is also employed, Currier said.

 

Mitchell's union, Civil Service Employees Association Local 1000, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

 

But her daughter-in-law, Paige Mitchell, said this week that her mother-in-law never mentioned Sweat, Matt or any other inmates she encountered. "She doesn't get too involved," Paige Mitchell told the Press-Republican of Plattsburgh.

 

And Mitchell's son Tobey told NBC that she would not have helped the inmates escape and that she checked herself into a hospital with chest pains on Saturday, the day the breakout was discovered.

Hole cut with 'high degree of professionalism'

An engineer who has done work at the prison said that the cutting of the cell walls and steam pipe was done with a high degree of professionalism, suggesting the two convicts were either highly proficient with the tools or had help.

 

"I could have sent my best man up there with an acetylene torch or a plasma cutter and I couldn't have a better hole," Larry Jeffords said.

 

Jeffords said the cutting of the walls and pipe would have taken about four hours of continuous work. He said he couldn't believe that no one heard the noise or saw anything.

 

"I'm assuming it was a grinder, and then you were to start that grinder and (begin) cutting your way out. The grinding dust is tremendous — sparks, smoke," he said.

Local schools closed for second day

About 500 state, federal and local law enforcement officers Friday began a seventh day of trying to track down the convicts, and schools in Dannemora were closed for a second day.

 

Law enforcement officers refocused their search on a new area after residents reported seeing two men jumping a stone wall.

 

State troopers lined a rural road outside Dannemora on Friday morning as they focused their efforts on a new search area southwest of the wooded, swampy landscape that police combed through Thursday.

FM

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