The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Georgia fugitives reach road’s end: a driveway in Tennessee

- By Erik Schelzig and Kate Brumback

SHELBYVILL­E, TENN. » The end of the road for two inmates sought in the killings of their guards on a Georgia prison bus turned out to be a driveway in rural Tennessee where a homeowner held them at gunpoint until reinforcem­ents arrived.

The focus of the manhunt for Donnie Rowe and Ricky Dubose suddenly shifted north of the Georgia line Thursday evening after the fugitives invaded a home in Shelbyvill­e and held a couple hostage for several hours.

The man and woman “are lucky they’re alive,” Bedford County Sheriff Austin Swing said. “They told them that they would probably be dead in 24 hours and they didn’t have anything to lose.”

The fugitives tied them up, and when the man tried to break free, they tied him up tighter, putting socks on his hands so he couldn’t loosen his bonds, Swing said. They also ate a beef stew the woman had been preparing, took valuables and clothing, and ordered them to concoct a story that would conceal their identities.

“They threatened them that they would be back if they didn’t,” Swing said.

By about 5 p.m. they were on the run again, in the couple’s Jeep. Within 15 minutes, the couple managed to call for help.

“We’ve had an armed home invasion,” the man told a 911 dispatcher . “It’s the two people from Georgia, escapees. They’re in a black Jeep Cherokee Trailblaze­r. We need help out here quick ... hurry!”

His wife can be heard sobbing as he tries to reassure her, saying: “It’s all right. You’ve survived. You’ve survived. You did it. You did a good job. Come here and let me hold you.”

Deputies soon spotted the car and began a 20mile (32 kilometer) highspeed chase down Interstate 24 southeast of Nashville, Tennessee Highway Patrol spokesman Lt. Bill Miller said.

Rutherford County Sheriff Michael Fitzhugh said the suspects fired shots, striking several cruisers, but his deputies weren’t hit and didn’t return fire to avoid endangerin­g other motorists.

The chase ended with a crash near the community of Christiana, Tennessee. With deputies in hot pursuit, the suspects fled so quickly that they left their guns in the couple’s wrecked car, running through trees to a nearby home, where they tried to steal another car, authoritie­s said.

“At that point in time the homeowner stepped out and held the people there by gunpoint until another neighbor came to assist him,” Miller said. Deputies then arrived to arrest the fugitives.

“True bravery is what’s caused us to stand before you tonight to talk about a successful capture instead of a tragic incident,” TBI Director Mark Gwyn said at a news conference. “So I’m totally grateful to everyone involved.”

Rowe and Dubose were finally taken alive. Investigat­ors shared an image of them spread-eagled and shirtless, face-down and handcuffed on a concrete slab, before they were taken to the Rutherford County jail. Both later appeared in court, wearing orange jumpsuits and surrounded by officers, waiving their right to challenge their extraditio­ns to Georgia.

“They will be brought to justice swiftly for their heinous crime against our officers,” Georgia Department of Correction­s Commission­er Greg Dozier said in a news release. He also expressed gratitude to all of the law enforcemen­t officers who provided support and assistance in the search.

The two men had been on the run since early Tuesday, when authoritie­s said they somehow got through a door that should have been locked separating the guards from the inmates on the prison bus.

Sgt. Christophe­r Monica and Sgt. Curtis Billue were overpowere­d and dis-

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