Marin Independent Journal

Escaped inmate, jail official had `special relationsh­ip'

-

FLORENCE, ALA. >> An escaped Alabama inmate had a “special relationsh­ip” with the jail official authoritie­s believe assisted in his escape, a sheriff's office said Tuesday.

A manhunt was underway for Casey White, who was awaiting trial on a capital murder case, and Vicky White, a jail official, after the pair vanished after leaving the Lauderdale County Detention Center on Friday morning. The two are not related, authoritie­s said.

“Investigat­ors received informatio­n from inmates at the Lauderdale County Detention Center over the weekend that there was a special relationsh­ip between Director White and inmate Casey White. That relationsh­ip has now been confirmed through our investigat­ion by independen­t sources and means,” the Lauderdale County Sheriff's Office said in a statement to news outlets. The office did not elaborate on the nature of that relationsh­ip.

On Friday morning, Vicky White, 56, told coworkers the 38-year-old inmate needed to go to the courthouse for a mental health evaluation. She was escorting the inmate alone, which the sheriff said is a violation of department policy. That afternoon, when she was not answering the phone, authoritie­s discovered the two were missing, and no such evaluation had been scheduled. Her patrol car was found abandoned in the parking lot of a shopping center.

A warrant was issued Monday for Vicky White's arrest on charges of assisting in an escape.

Family members and colleagues said they are bewildered by the involvemen­t of Vicky White, who had worked for the sheriff's office for 16 years, with the inmate who was already serving a 75-year prison sentence for attempted murder and other crimes.

“I just can't picture Vicky running off with that man,” her former mother-in-law, Frances White, said in a telephone interview. She remained fond of her daughter-in-law decades after she divorced her son in 1991. He died earlier this year.

She said her former daughter-in-law was kind and always wanted to help others, but added that she was sometimes private. “Vicky was a person who kept all of her thoughts and troubles to herself,” she said.

Vicky White had no children, her former-mother-inlaw said, and had recently sold her house, a sprawling property of 4 acres (1.6 hectares) she had originally bought to be close to her parents. The property, which included a trailer and barn, was “really too big” for one person, Frances White said.

WAAY reported Vicky White sold her home for $95,500 just 12 days before disappeari­ng. The purchase price was below the market value for the area, the station reported.

Lauderdale County Sheriff Rick Singleton said Monday that Vicky White had announced plans to retire and the day she disappeare­d would have been her last day at work.

“This is not the Vicky White we know, by any stretch of the imaginatio­n,” Singleton said Monday.

 ?? U.S. MARSHALS SERVICE, LAUDERDALE COUNTY SHERIFF'S
OFFICE ?? Casey Cole White, left, and Assistant Director of Correction­s Vicky White.
U.S. MARSHALS SERVICE, LAUDERDALE COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Casey Cole White, left, and Assistant Director of Correction­s Vicky White.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States