New York Post

SEX WAS SEW-SEW

- By JOE TACOPINO and CARL CAMPANILE ccampanile@nypost.com

Convicted killers David Sweat and Richard Matt used their prison tailor shop as a lurid sex den for their escapades with “Shawskank” supervisor Joyce “Tillie” Mitchell and proved to be “master manipulato­rs” by having her coordinate their escape.

The illicit workshop affairs were cited in a scathing report on the escape. The report also said the inmates left behind a picture of “Sopranos” star James Gandolfini with a mocking message to guards: “Time to go, Kid!” when they broke out of the upstate Clinton Correction­al Facility last year.

Mitchell is portrayed in the report as a sex-crazed rube who sought attention from the prisoners and got taken advantage of.

“She always flirted around the shop and laughed and stood close to all inmates,” prison worker Vicki-Lynn Safford testified. “But it was more so with Sweat and Matt.”

Mitchell began her affair with Matt by offering him “cookies, cakes” and even a Big Mac.

Eventually, the relationsh­ip became physical, as Mitchell described their first sexual encounter.

“Matt grabbed me . . . and he kissed me . . . I was scared sh-tless,” she told an investigat­or.

When asked if she was “scared but excited?” Mitchell responded, “Yeah.”

The kiss led to “almost daily” sex acts in the tailor shop between the two.

But Sweat and Matt had ulterior motives, luring Mitchell into a trap to help them escape.

The report, by state Inspector General Catherine Leahy Scott, was issued Monday — on the anniversar­y of the escape’s detection — and concluded that “myriad failures” provided the cunning cons with a route to freedom.

Sweat and Matt were well aware of the “long-standing” safety lapses and negligence at the prison, allowing them to meticulous­ly plot their escape “almost in plain sight,” said the IG report.

“The extent of complacenc­y and failure to adhere to the most basic security standards uncovered by my investigat­ion was egregious and inexcusabl­e,” Scott added.

“These systemic deficienci­es led to the escape of two convicted murderers, striking fear in communitie­s and placing brave law-enforcemen­t personnel at risk, at a high cost to the state.”

A three-week manhunt involving 1,300 officers cost the state $22.8 million in overtime alone.

Matt was shot and killed 20 days after the escape, and Sweat was shot and captured two days later.

As an example of the slipshod security, the IG report said an unannounce­d cell search on March 21, 2015, failed to detect a gaping 18¹/2-by-14¹/2-inch hole in a rear wall of the convict’s cell. Among the other findings:

Regular nighttime sweeps of inmates were not conducted, allowing Sweat to build tunnels underneath his cell undetected for 85 nights.

Officers violated safety rules by failing to properly screen employees entering and leaving the prison.

Mitchell pleaded guilty to smuggling hacksaw blades in a shipment of frozen hamburger meat to Matt.

She was sentenced to 2¹/3 to seven years in prison. A guard. Gene Palmer, was sentenced to six months in prison for bringing in tools used in the escape.

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