*** Two killers escape New York prison; leave 'have a nice day' note | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Two killers escape New York prison; leave 'have a nice day' note

New York

 

In a sensational “Shawshank Redemption”-style prison break, two convicted murderers used power tools and tunnels to escape an upstate maximum-security prison near the Canadian border.

A massive manhunt was underway after killers Richard Matt, 48, and David Sweat, 34, were discovered missing from the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, about 25 miles from Canada, officials said.

The inmates made their extraordinary dash to freedom after faking out guards with makeshift dummies made out of hooded sweatshirts to appear as if they were still sleeping inside their cells. And once officials discovered they were gone, they found a note from convicts telling them to "Have a nice day!"

“It was an elaborate plot,” Gov. Cuomo said after joining law enforcement authorities inside the prison, retracing the prisoners’ route.

“These are dangerous people,” he said. “They are nothing to be trifled with.”

Matt and Sweat were last seen in their adjoining cells at 10:30pm on Friday, officials said.

The inmates, stealing from the film “Ferris Bueller,” set up decoys in their cells, tricking the nighttime guards who run checks every two hours. 

It wasn’t until a 5:30am bed check that guards finally realized Matt and Sweat were missing, said Anthony Annuci, the acting state corrections commissioner.

Officials quickly went to work to figure out how the men managed to sneak out of the prison.

Wielding power tools, the inmates broke through the cells’ thick walls.

They then scaled a 6-foot-high catwalk and navigated an elaborate maze of pipes into tunnels, cutting away at several spots.

They finally emerged outside the prison’s 30-foot walls after climbing out of a manhole, officials said.

“We went back and pieced together what they did,” Cuomo said. “It was elaborate. It was sophisticated. It encompassed drilling through steel walls and pipes, so this was not easily accomplished.” 

“When you look at how the operation was done,” the governor said,“ it was extraordinary.”

Hours after the two cells were found empty, officials were still grappling to understand how the two men pulled it off. The pair didn't leave any clues in a yellow note they left wishing authorities a nice day on one of the prison's pipes. 

“We want to find out exactly how it happened,” Cuomo said. “How did they get the power tools? From who? How?”

Annucci said prison authorities are checking to see if any power tools were missing from contractors at the facility.

“It may have been over a period of time,” Annucci said. “It may have been trial and error. We don’t know.” 

The prison, built in 1845, is the state’s largest with a population of 2,689 inmates, officials said.

The manhunt included bloodhounds, aerial surveillance and searches of adjoining woods.

Roadblocks with heavily armed troopers were set up in the area, WIRY-AM reported.

 


 

 

WHO ARE THE ESCAPED KILLERS?

 

Richard Matt, a career criminal who fled to Mexico after kidnapping and killing a man in Tonowanda in 1997, was serving 25 years to life.

David Sweat was convicted of first-degree murder for killing Broome County Sheriff’s Deputy Kevin Tarsia, 36, in 2002. He was sentenced to life without parole.