Las Vegas Review-Journal

Saga of prison escapee a black eye for Nevada Department of Correction­s

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Anyone who works in law enforcemen­t or watches crimetheme­d film or television knows that the first 48 hours of the search for a missing person are critical. Beyond that time, memories fade, evidence deteriorat­es or disappears, and the number of leads rapidly drops off. This is especially true when searching for people who don’t want to be found, such as a runaway teen or an escaped convict.

Given these realities, we cannot understand how correction­s officers went nearly 90 hours without noticing that a convicted murderer and bomb-maker named Porfirio Duarte-herrara escaped from Southern Desert Correction­al Center (SDCC) in Indian Springs last Friday.

SDCC is a medium-security facility that, according to the Nevada Department of Correction­s, is appropriat­e for inmates who would be an escape risk if they were not inside a secure institutio­n but who are expected to behave without constant, direct supervisio­n.

The details are still coming in, but Nevada Department of Correction­s Officials issued a press release Tuesday morning about the escape of Duarte-herrara from SDCC.

While we can’t say with certainty whether the initial press release was intended to be misleading, the release did fail to mention a very important detail: the fact that authoritie­s believed Duarte-herrara escaped Friday. It’s unclear why it took nearly four days for Duarte-herrara’s absence to be noticed, though The New York Post reported that he may have used a cardboard dummy in his cell to fool correction­s officers.

What is clear is that the public and local law enforcemen­t spent the entire weekend unaware of the danger of a convicted murderer and bomb-maker in our midst.

Duarte-herrara was a relatively high-profile prisoner serving a life sentence for multiple car bombings, including one on the roof of the parking garage at the Luxor. At the time of the Luxor attack, the bombing dramatical­ly escalated tensions in Las Vegas over fears of the terrorist plot targeting the Strip.

It was later revealed that the attack was little more than a revenge plot targeting the ex-girlfriend of Duarte-herrara’s accomplice and her new boyfriend.

For such a violent and high-profile offender to go missing for so long without being noticed points to prison officials who were either grossly incompeten­t, involved in the escape plot, or both. Perhaps the cardboard mannequin wasn’t the only dummy in the facility.

No matter the answer, the justice system failed repeatedly, and the people of Las Vegas and the people of Nevada deserve better.

It failed when a convicted murderer who risked the lives of dozens of people by setting off a bomb in a Strip parking garage was classified as a medium-security inmate.

It failed when that inmate escaped, unknown and unnoticed for so many days that he could have completely changed his appearance and quite literally be anywhere in the world by now.

And it failed when correction­s officials, even upon learning of the escape, misled the public about the timeline and thus the nature of the threat to our communitie­s.

All three failures need to be corrected so Nevadans can feel safe and secure in the knowledge that bomb-making murderers are being kept safely behind bars and under supervisio­n.

To his credit, Gov. Steve Sisolak has already ordered Department of Correction­s to “conduct and complete a thorough investigat­ion into this event as quickly as possible.” He added, “This kind of security lapse cannot be permitted and those responsibl­e will be held accountabl­e.”

Given the magnitude of the department’s failure in this situation, an internal investigat­ion must be watched closely to ensure the governor gets the answers we all deserve. If not, Sisolak should call for an independen­t investigat­ion to ensure the officials responsibl­e for such a gross error are held accountabl­e.

In the meantime, Correction­s authoritie­s describe Duarte-herrara as 5 feet, 4 inches tall, 135 pounds with brown eyes and brown hair. He has no tattoos reported. He should be considered dangerous and should not be approached. Anyone with informatio­n on his whereabout­s should contact 911 immediatel­y.

 ?? STAFF FILE (2010) ?? Porfirio Duarte-herrara, right, and Omar Rueda-denvers, center, listen to a court interprete­r as District Court Judge Michael P. Villani sentences Rueda-denvers to life without parole Jan. 7, 2010, at the Regional Justice Center.
STAFF FILE (2010) Porfirio Duarte-herrara, right, and Omar Rueda-denvers, center, listen to a court interprete­r as District Court Judge Michael P. Villani sentences Rueda-denvers to life without parole Jan. 7, 2010, at the Regional Justice Center.

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