Kapiti News

JAIL break

FBI re-creates decoy heads Alcatraz inmates used in escape

-

Half a century after a notorious prison escape from Alcatraz Island, the FBI has created replicas of decoy heads that inmates used to distract guards from a plan that still captivates researcher­s and tourists.

Authoritie­s have unveiled 3D-printed copies of the decoys that inmates Frank Morris and John and Clarence Anglin constructe­d with soap, plaster and human hair.

Morris and the Anglin brothers placed the decoys in their beds and climbed through a wall to escape the island prison in San Francisco Bay. The men were never found. Inmate Clayton West also created a head but never made it out of the maximumsec­urity prison that housed dangerous criminals like Al Capone and offenders with a history of escaping.

Authoritie­s said they made the replicas to share with the public because the original decoys are fragile and are evidence in the still-open investigat­ion into the escape by the US Marshals Service.

“We understand the original items can’t be out here — they’ve got to be archived,” says John F Bennett, FBI special agent in charge in San Francisco. “But we recognise that those items are also part of the rich and historic fabric and the landmark of this city.”

Bennett says a team from the FBI’s laboratory in Quantico, Virginia, travelled to San Francisco to scan the original decoys. Staff at the lab donated their own hair to accurately re-create the original masks, which included human hair the inmates had collected from the prison barber shop.

“The hair and the paint on here is exactly what the prisoners did.” .

The FBI investigat­ed the prison break — which was featured in the 1979 movie Escape

from Alcatraz starring Clint Eastwood — for 17 years before it was turned over to the Marshals Service.

Now, Alcatraz visitors can see models of the heads on display that were used in the movie. The FBI hopes the public will soon be able to view the agency’s replicas, which were unveiled to some media outlets along with “Wanted” signs for the long-escaped inmates.

Authoritie­s are investigat­ing any and all credible leads, said Don O’Keefe, US marshal for the Northern District of California. “Some may believe that we’re chasing shadows, but our efforts are meant not just to perform due diligence, but to be a warning to other fugitives, that US Marshals don’t give up because of the passing of time.”

 ?? Photos / AP ?? Left, a freshly 3D-printed decoy of a head used by prisoners to mount their infamous escape in 1962 is on display during at Alcatraz Island.
Photos / AP Left, a freshly 3D-printed decoy of a head used by prisoners to mount their infamous escape in 1962 is on display during at Alcatraz Island.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand