Arab Times

‘Captured convict critical but stable’

‘Careful plans’

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MALONE, New York, June 29, (AP): The escaped murderer who was shot by a state trooper near the Canadian border is in “critical but stable” condition at an Albany hospital, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Monday.

Cuomo told CNN that David Sweat’s condition initially was listed in stable condition but was downgraded to critical after being flown to Albany Medical Center on Sunday night.

Sweat is one of two prisoners who escaped from a maximum-security New York prison three weeks ago. The other escapee, Richard Matt, was killed in a confrontat­ion with law enforcemen­t on Friday.

Cuomo said Sweat had a bag containing maps, tools, bug repellent and Pop Tarts when he was shot twice by Sgt. Jay Cook on Sunday afternoon in a farm field less than two miles from the border in Constable, New York.

The daring escape from Clinton Correction­al Facility in Dannemora was “done with facilitato­rs, it was done with cooperator­s,” Cuomo said.

“This was ‘Cool Hand Luke’ meets ‘Shawshank Redemption,” he said on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.”

Some of the same state troopers who’d been hunting down the convicts since their escape found themselves scrambling to get the lone survivor to a hospital, hoping to make him well enough to share the tale of how the pair managed to escape and stay on the run for so long.

Sweat, 35, was shot and captured Sunday afternoon when a single state police sergeant spotted a suspicious man walking on a rural road in Constable, near the Canadian border.

His capture came two days after Matt was killed in Malone, just south of Constable, while holding a shotgun. Sweat was unarmed when he was shot twice by Sgt. Jay Cook as the fugitive ran for a tree line.

The men had been on the loose since June 6, when they cut their way out of the prison in Dannemora, about 30 miles from Malone, using power tools. Two prison workers have been charged with helping them.

Clinton correction officer Gene Palmer, charged with promoting prison contraband, tampering with physical evidence and official misconduct, is due in court Monday. His attorney has said he will plead not guilty.

Officials said Palmer gave the two prisoners frozen hamburger meat that a prison tailoring shop instructor had used to hide the tools she smuggled to Sweat and Matt. Palmer’s attorney said he had no knowledge that the meat contained hacksaw blades, a bit and a screwdrive­r.

Prosecutor­s said the tailor shop worker, Joyce Mitchell, got close to the men while working with them and had agreed to be their getaway driver but backed out because she felt guilty for participat­ing in the escape. Authoritie­s also said Mitchell had discussed killing her husband as part of the plot.

Mitchell pleaded not guilty June 15 to charges including felony promoting prison contraband.

Sweat’s capture ended an ordeal that sent 1,300 law enforcemen­t offi- cers into the thickly forested northern reaches of New York and forced residents to tolerate nerve-wracking armed checkpoint­s and property searches.

“The nightmare is finally over,” Cuomo declared at a news conference.

Cook, a 21-year veteran, was alone and on routine patrol when he stumbled upon Sweat in Constable, about 30 miles northwest of the prison. He gave chase when Sweat fled and decided to fire fearing he would lose Sweat in the trees, state police said.

“I can only assume he was going for the border,” Superinten­dent Joseph D’Amico said.

D’Amico said the men may have used black pepper to throw off their scent from the dogs that were tracking them; he said Sweat’s DNA was recovered from pepper shakers found at one camp where the fugitives may have spent time.

Cuomo said many questions remained unanswered in the case, including whether the inmates had other accomplice­s.

“We have already started a full investigat­ion,” he said. “But today ends with good news. These were dangerous, dangerous men.”

Sweat had not been formally interviewe­d by investigat­ors as of late Sunday, but any informatio­n he provides could be critical to the investigat­ion, Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie said.

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