National Post

Killing of husband discussed with convicts

- By Mary Esch

•A prison worker charged with helping two convicted murderers escape from a maximum-security facility had discussed hiring them to kill her husband, a district attorney confirmed Wednesday.

Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie said at a news conference that Joyce Mitchell had talked to inmates Richard Matt and David Sweat about a murder-for-hire plot involving her husband, Lyle.

Both Joyce Mitchell and Lyle Mitchell work at the Clinton Correction­al Facility in Dannemora, near the Canadian border. Sweat and Matt escaped from the 170-year-old prison on June 6.

Lyle Mitchell arrived at the state police barracks in Malone with his lawyer late Wednesday morning to talk to authoritie­s, the Press-Republican of Plattsburg­h reported.

Investigat­ors have no informatio­n that Lyle Mitchell knew about the escape plan or assisted in it, Wylie said.

Meanwhile, state police expanded the search for the killers beyond a 16-squaremile area of woods, fields and swamps where the manhunt has been most intense. Police stepped up roving patrols and were checking the hundreds, if not thousands, of seasonal homes and hunting camps in the region. Officials said the number of law enforcemen­t officers involved in the search had been reduced from more than 800 earlier in the week to about 600 Wednesday.

Sweat, 35, was serving a life sentence without parole in the killing of a sheriff ’s deputy. Matt, 48, was doing 25 years to life for the kidnap, torture and hacksaw dismemberm­ent of his former boss.

Joyce Mitchell is charged with helping the killers flee by providing them with hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools. She was visited in jail Tuesday by her husband. Clinton County Sheriff David Favro described her as “composed” during the visit.

Prosecutor­s say Mitchell, a prison tailoring shop instructor who befriended the inmates, had agreed to be the getaway driver but backed out because she still loved her husband and felt guilty for participat­ing.

She was charged last week with supplying contraband, including a punch and a screwdrive­r, to the two inmates. She has pleaded not guilty and has been suspended from her job overseeing inmates who sew clothes and learn to repair sewing machines.

Authoritie­s say the convicts used power tools to cut through the backs of their adjacent cells, broke through a brick wall and then cut into a steam pipe and slithered through it, finally emerging outside the prison walls through a manhole.

Wylie says they apparently used tools stored by prison contractor­s, taking care to return them to their tool boxes after each night’s work.

 ?? G.N. Miler / NY Post VIA AP ?? Joyce Mitchell
G.N. Miler / NY Post VIA AP Joyce Mitchell

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