Khaleej Times

US prison worker pleads not guilty to charge of helping killers escape

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new york — A female prison worker plead not guilty on Friday to allegedly helping two convicted killers in New York state escape by smuggling tools to them, US media reported, as police stepped up their week-long manhunt.

Swarms of state, local and federal agents combed thick woods east of the Clinton Correction­al Facility, which Richard Matt, 49, and David Sweat, 35, busted out of, using power tools to cut their way out, before crawling along pipes and out to freedom via a manhole.

Investigat­ors have focused on who helped Matt, who was convicted of dismemberi­ng his 76-year-old former boss, and Sweat, who shot dead a sheriff’s deputy.

Joyce Mitchell, 51, who worked at a tailoring shop at the sprawling prison, was arrested and charged on Friday with “promoting prison contraband” and criminal facilitati­on.

Mitchell was presented with the charges in court on Friday during an arraignmen­t in which she appeared handcuffed and visibly nervous. CNN and other US media reported that she plead not guilty.

Mitchell “provided some form of equipment or tools” that allowed the two murderers to escape, the Clinton County district attorney Andrew Wylie earlier told CNN.

Mitchell’s arrest was “one large piece of the puzzle” in the hunt for the duo, Major Charles Guess of New York State Police told a Press conference, adding: “We have a message for David Sweat and Richard Matt. We’re coming for you and we will not stop until you are caught.”

US media reported that Mitchell’s husband, another prison employee, was also being investigat­ed for possible involvemen­t.

He had not been charged and was not in custody, Guess said, adding that wet weather and the rolling woodlands and hills where the search is focused were complicati­ng the hunt.

But that might also slow the killer pair’s progress, too, he cautioned.

“If they have not escaped the area or they have not availed themselves of shelter, we’ve got to as- sume they’re cold, wet, tired, and hungry,” he said.

“I would advise and remind the community and the residents that that makes these individual­s even more dangerous and desperate.”

Authoritie­s “do not have any conclusive evidence that either of the inmates has left this area,” he added, referring to the land around the town of Plattsburg­h, about 24km east of the prison.

Hacksaw blades, drill bits and two pairs of spectacles with attached lights were among the items Mitchell allegedly gave the convicts, CNN quoted two unnamed law enforcemen­t sources as saying.

Officials have suggested that Mitchell may have been charmed by Matt and Sweat, and agreed to pick them up by car from the manhole where they emerged in the early hours last Saturday.

Instead, she changed her mind and checked into a hospital — reportedly suffering from a panic attack.

reported that Mitchell had also been under investigat­ion the last year for allegedly forming a relationsh­ip with Sweat while they worked together in the prison tailoring shop.

There was not enough evidence to take action, but Sweat was pulled out of the shop, the newspaper reported. Police said the search continued for a second day along state highway 374 and a section of the highway would remain closed until the search was completed.

Local schools were also closed until Monday to allow the manhunt to continue unimpeded.

Police said that more than 800 officers — an increase of 300 personnel — were mobilised, including FBI agents and forest rangers, backed by K9 units and helicopter­s, chasing more than 700 leads.

 ?? AP ?? Joyce Mitchell is arraigned in City Court in Plattsburg­h, New York. —
AP Joyce Mitchell is arraigned in City Court in Plattsburg­h, New York. —

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