Albany Times Union

Local echo in escape try

Prison guard subdues man convicted in 1986 Lansingbur­gh deaths

- By Bethany Bump Marcy

A correction­s officer thwarted an inmate’s attempt to escape from the Marcy Correction­al Facility on Oct. 1, the New York State Correction­al

Officers & Police Benevolent Associatio­n said.

NYSCOPBA did not release the inmate’s name, but released enough details for the inmate to be identified as Richard J. Wright — a 52-year-old Lansingbur­gh man who was convicted twice of arson and murder in connection with a 1986 fire that killed two teenage girls in Lansingbur­gh.

Wright was walking down a sidewalk near the prison infirmary at around 4:35 p.m. when an officer questioned him, NYSCOPBA said. The inmate didn’t answer the officer and instead ran toward a fence lining the prison’s perimeter and scaled it, making it as high as the top razor wire, the group said.

The officer ran to the fence and fired pepper spray, causing

the inmate to fall to the ground, they said. He was handcuffed and removed from the area without further struggle.

After the escape attempt the inmate was transferre­d to Five Points Correction­al Facility in Seneca County and placed into a special housing unit, NYSCOPBA said.

Criminal charges are pending, they said.

“The officer did an excellent job stopping the inmate from escaping the facility,” said Bryan Hluska, vice president of NYSCOPBA’S Central Region. “The inmate was able to scale the fence to the top of the razor wire when the officer’s alert and quick actions stopped him. He was quickly subdued and handcuffed without any staff being injured. There is no telling, based on his violent history, what he could have been capable of if he was successful getting over that fence.”

Thomas Mailey, a spokespers­on for the state Department of Correction­s and Community Supervisio­n, confirmed that an inmate attempted to scale a fence at Marcy, but said there was never any danger to the public.

“Because this was an inner fence, there was never a threat of an escape and the public was not in jeopardy,” he said.

The inmate sustained minor injuries following the attempt, he said.

Wright is serving a 25-yearto-life sentence for the 1986 deaths of 13-year-old Meredith Pipino and 14-year-old Tara Gilbert. Pipino and Gilbert died in a Lansingbur­gh house fire that investigat­ors say was arson.

He was originally convicted of their murders in 1988, but that conviction was overturned in 2018. He was retried and convicted again on four counts of second-degree murder and one count of first-degree arson for the deadly blaze.

Wright has maintained his innocence over the years.

 ?? Skip Dickstein / Times Union ?? Richard J. Wright speaks at his sentencing on Sept. 6, 2018, at the Rensselaer County Courthouse in Troy. He has been convicted twice of arson and murder in connection with a fire that killed two teenage girls.
Skip Dickstein / Times Union Richard J. Wright speaks at his sentencing on Sept. 6, 2018, at the Rensselaer County Courthouse in Troy. He has been convicted twice of arson and murder in connection with a fire that killed two teenage girls.

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