The Mercury News

Ex-prison officer dead, inmate she helped to escape is captured

- By Kim Chandler

A former Alabama jail official has died after shooting herself when she and the murder suspect she was accused of helping to escape were captured Monday in Indiana after more than a week on the run, according to officials.

The capture ended the manhunt through three states but did not resolve the mystery of why Vicky White, 56, a respected jail official, would help Casey White, 38, a hulking inmate with a violent and frightenin­g history.

The two fugitives were caught in Evansville, Indiana, when U.S. Marshals pursued their vehicle and then crashed into it, authoritie­s said. Casey White surrendere­d and Vicky White was taken to a hospital after shooting herself, authoritie­s said. Vanderburg­h County Coroner Steve Lockyear said White died from her injuries.

“We got a dangerous man off the street today. He is never going to see the light of day again. That is a good thing, for not just our community. That's a good thing for our country,” Lauderdale County Sheriff Rick Singleton of Alabama said.

The manhunt began April 29 when Vicky White, the assistant director of correction­s for the jail in Lauderdale County, allegedly helped engineer the escape of Casey White, who was awaiting trial in a capital murder case. Vicky White had told co-workers she was taking the inmate from the jail for a mental health evaluation at the courthouse, but the two, who are not related, instead fled the area.

The car they took off in was later found abandoned in Tennessee, but there was no trace of the pair until U.S. Marshals received a tip Sunday that surveillan­ce photos from an Evansville car wash showed a man who closely resembled Casey White exiting a 2006 Ford F-150 pickup truck, the Marshals Service said. White stands 6 feet, 9 inches tall and weighs about 260 pounds.

On Monday, officials learned that the pair was spotted near the sheriff's office, said Vanderburg­h County Sheriff Dave Wedding in Indiana. As officers arrived, the pair fled in a vehicle and led police on a pursuit, he said. U.S. Marshals collided with them “to try to end the pursuit,” he said. Casey White was injured, not too seriously, in the crash and Vicky White then shot herself, causing “very serious” injuries, he said.

“We're lucky that no law enforcemen­t was injured, no innocent civilians were injured, the pursuit was short in nature and we have both people in custody,” Wedding said.

Casey White was serving a 75-year prison sentence for attempted murder and other charges at the time of his escape. He was awaiting trial in the stabbing of a 58-year-old woman during a burglary in 2015. If convicted, he could face the death penalty.

“We got a dangerous man off the street today. He is never going to see the light of day again. That is a good thing, for not just our community. That's a good thing for our country,” Singleton said.

Federal and local law enforcemen­t officials have also learned Casey White threatened to kill his former girlfriend and his sister in 2015 and said “that he wanted police to kill him,” the Marshals Service said.

A warrant was issued on May 2 for Vicky Sue White charging her with permitting or facilitati­ng escape in the first degree.

Vicky White's family members and co-workers said they were stunned by her involvemen­t. Singleton said she had been an exemplary employee but, in hindsight, it appeared the plan had been in the works for some time. Jail inmates said the two had a special relationsh­ip and she gave Casey White better treatment than other inmates.

In the past several months, she bought a rifle and a shotgun and also was known to have a handgun, U.S. Marshal Marty Keely said.

She sold her house for about half of market value and bought a 2007 orange Ford Edge that she stashed at a shopping center without license plates.

 ?? U.S. MARSHALS SERVICE, LAUDERDALE COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE VIA AP ?? Casey White, left, was captured Monday after more than week on the run after escaping from an Alabama prison, assisted by Assistant Director of Correction­s Vicky White, who authoritie­s said shot herself to death.
U.S. MARSHALS SERVICE, LAUDERDALE COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE VIA AP Casey White, left, was captured Monday after more than week on the run after escaping from an Alabama prison, assisted by Assistant Director of Correction­s Vicky White, who authoritie­s said shot herself to death.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States