The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

2 GA. FUGITIVES CAUGHT IN TENN.

Inmates taken into custody after home invasion, chase; no injuries reported.

- By Rhonda Cook rcook@ajc.com

After some 60 hours on the run, a pair of escaped Georgia inmates wanted for gunning down two correction­al officers were caught Thursday night in Tennessee.

The pair’s capture was as dramatic as their brazen escape complete with a home invasion, a police chase and a shootout.

For Ricky Dubose and Donnie Russell Rowe, the end began when they burst into the home of an elderly couple near Shelbyvill­e, Tenn., and tied them up, authoritie­s said.

After three hours - leaving the couple bound - Dubose and Rowe took off again with the couple’s cell phone and Jeep. As they were driving away, a Tennessee trooper was arriving at the couple’s home to perform a welfare check. There was a pursuit, the fugitives wrecked and fled into the woods. At some point, shots were fired but no one was wounded.

Soon after, they ran into a man in his yard armed with an AR-16 who held them until authoritie­s arrived.GBI Director Vernon Keenan said Dubose and Rowe walked out of the woods with their hands up and told the homeowner “they wanted to give up because the police had them surrounded.”

Tennessee authoritie­s took the Dubose and Rowe into custody. They still had the slain officers’ guns. The white Ford pickup truck they stole in Georgia was found abandoned in Moore County, Tenn.

“It happened the way we thought it would,” Keenan said. “They would do a crime and it would escalate.”

Keenan said informatio­n was still coming in. GBI agents have been dispatched to Tennessee and the director of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion was on his way to the scene.

Rowe is from Lewisburg, Tenn., roughly 20 miles from where the men were found.

Gov. Nathan Deal announced the arrest with a tweet at 8:06 p.m.

The capture was a relief to Putnam County Sheriff Howard Sills, who said the county’s work isn’t done.

“The burden of danger is off, and that’s the greatest relief we

have,” he said.

The officers were killed along Ga. 16 in Putnam County and Sills was among the first at the scene.

“Blood was running out of the bus onto the pavement,” Sills said.

Sills said Dubose and Rowe face charges in three Tennessee counties and are en route to that state’s Rutherford County jail. It is not known when they’ll be extradited to Georgia.

Sills said his heart was still with the officers, their families and other victims of the inmates’ alleged crimes.

“I’m sorry it ever happened,” he said. “I’m sorry those people in Tennessee have suffered...I can assure you they were traumatize­d by (the inmates) coming into their home. My sympathies to the families.”

The arrests came on the same day as authoritie­s all but acknowledg­ed they had no idea where the men had gone after they apparently stole clothes and a white Ford pickup truck in Morgan County, some 60 miles east of Atlanta.

A myriad of federal, state and local law enforcemen­t agents had been scouring the state and the country for Rowe and Dubose, both serving sentences that do not allow for parole.

Friends, relatives and known acquaintan­ces had been interviewe­d. A state patrol helicopter was at the ready. Agents, deputies and police officers were following up on tips phoned in.

Law enforcemen­t has been deluged with tips as the reward for the arrest of the two fugitives climbed to $130,000 — $65,000 for each.

The chase began after DuBose and Rowe - twice cellmates at Baldwin State Prison - overpowere­d two correction­al officers on a state prison transport bus along Georgia 16. They somehow managed to get around the metal door in the front of the bus that was supposed to protect the officers, wrest away two 9 mm Glocks and repeatedly shoot correction­al officers Sgt. Christophe­r Monica, 42, and Sgt. Curtis Billue, 58.

After breaking out the glass of the bus door, they carjacked a green Honda Civic passing by and disappeare­d. Thirty-one other inmates remained on the bus, which was still running.

The officers’ deaths quickly spurred a nationwide search for the two escaped inmates described as “dangerous beyond descriptio­n” and with nothing to lose. Both inmates have lengthy criminal records.

Rowe, 43, was serving life without parole for a 2001 armed robbery in Bibb County. Dubose, 24, and a member of the Aryan prison gang known as the Ghostface Gangsters, was sentenced to 20 years in Elbert County, and that sentence will not expire until 2034.

Both face a possible death sentence if they are convicted of murdering the two correction­al officers.

The arrests come on the same day as authoritie­s all but acknowledg­ed they had no idea where the men had gone.

 ?? WKRN-TV NEWS 2 PHOTOS ?? Donnie Russell Rowe and Ricky Dubose, accused of killing two Georgia correction­al officers and then going on a crime spree, were arrested Thursday in Tennessee. Rowe and Dubose escaped from a prison bus in Putnam County early Tuesday during a routine...
WKRN-TV NEWS 2 PHOTOS Donnie Russell Rowe and Ricky Dubose, accused of killing two Georgia correction­al officers and then going on a crime spree, were arrested Thursday in Tennessee. Rowe and Dubose escaped from a prison bus in Putnam County early Tuesday during a routine...
 ??  ?? Donnie Russell Rowe (left) and Ricky Dubose are accused of shooting and killing correction­al officers Sgt. Curtis Billue and Sgt. Christophe­r Monica before exiting the bus in which they were being transferre­d early Tuesday morning and carjacking the...
Donnie Russell Rowe (left) and Ricky Dubose are accused of shooting and killing correction­al officers Sgt. Curtis Billue and Sgt. Christophe­r Monica before exiting the bus in which they were being transferre­d early Tuesday morning and carjacking the...
 ?? COMPTON / AJC CURTIS ?? Putnam County Sheriff Howard Sills speaks to the media during a joint press conference by all the agencies involved in the manhunt for the two escaped convicts.
COMPTON / AJC CURTIS Putnam County Sheriff Howard Sills speaks to the media during a joint press conference by all the agencies involved in the manhunt for the two escaped convicts.

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