Vancouver Sun

Escapees had practice run night before breakout

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DANNEMORA, N.Y. — One of two convicted murderers who broke out of a maximumsec­urity prison last month told police they conducted a practice run the night before their daring escape, even poking their heads out of a manhole before deciding they were too close to nearby homes.

Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie said David Sweat, 35, told police from his hospital bed he mastermind­ed the June 6 breakout from Clinton Correction­al Facility after beginning work on it in January.

The escape by Sweat and Richard Matt, 49, launched a massive 23-day manhunt in forested northern New York terrain involving more than 1,100 law enforcemen­t officers.

Matt was shot and killed by a border patrol officer June 26. Sweat was wounded Sunday by a state trooper near the Canadian border. He was listed in fair condition Wednesday.

Wylie said Sweat claimed he used only a hacksaw blade — not power tools, as officials had reported — to cut holes in the steel walls of his and Richard Matt’s adjoining cells as well as a steam pipe they crawled through.

Sweat said he prowled the tunnels in the maximum-security prison from 11:30 p.m. to 5 a.m. — after lights-out and before the morning head count — in the days preceding the escape, said Wylie, who was briefed by state police on the surviving inmate’s statements.

Sweat claimed to have done all the work himself, saying the older Matt wasn’t in shape.

Authoritie­s said the two reached the tunnels via narrow corridors behind cellblocks providing access to the bowels of the prison and were given access by a correction­s officer who has since been charged in connection with the breakout.

On their practice run before the escape, the men poked their heads out of a manhole but decided to exit the next day through a manhole that was slightly more isolated. Even then, it was in the middle of an intersecti­on just a block from the prison walls.

Officials have said a tailor shop employee, Joyce Mitchell, got close to Sweat and Matt and supplied them with hacksaw blades and other tools. She agreed to be their getaway driver but backed out at the last moment, authoritie­s said. She has pleaded not guilty.

Steven Racette, the prison’s superinten­dent, his deputy Stephen Brown and 10 other Clinton employees have been placed on leave, according to a state official who was briefed on the matter.

Assistant Commission­er James O’Gorman will oversee the facility temporaril­y.

The Correction­s Department said it is bringing in new leadership.

Cherie Racette, the superinten­dent’s wife, told the Adirondack Daily Enterprise he was given the option of taking a demotion or retiring and chose retirement. She said he and two deputies are being made scapegoats by New York state Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

Guard Gene Palmer was also arrested, telling investigat­ors he gave the convicts such things as tools, art supplies and access to a catwalk electrical box in exchange for paintings by Matt. But he said he never knew of their escape plans.

Sweat had been serving life without parole in the killing of a sheriff’s deputy. Matt, 49, was doing 25 years to life for the kidnapping and hacksaw dismemberm­ent of his former boss.

 ?? DARREN MCGEE/OFFICE OF THE NEW YORK GOVERNOR VIA AP ?? New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, right, with Steven Racette, centre, superinten­dent of Clinton Correction­al Facility. Racette is among 12 more staff who have been put on administra­tive leave.
DARREN MCGEE/OFFICE OF THE NEW YORK GOVERNOR VIA AP New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, right, with Steven Racette, centre, superinten­dent of Clinton Correction­al Facility. Racette is among 12 more staff who have been put on administra­tive leave.

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