Author Topic: Swampy area in upstate New York town focus of hunt for escaped killers  (Read 1630 times)

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Fascinating story.  They will be making a movie out of this one. 

Swampy area in upstate New York town focus of hunt for escaped killers
Published June 11, 2015
FoxNews.com

A small town in upstate New York became the focus Thursday of a massive manhunt for two convicted murderers who escaped almost a week ago from a maximum security prison five miles away.

Authorities, including the FBI and U.S. Marshals Service, descended on Cadyville, N.Y., after bloodhounds picked up a strong scent and police found evidence the two inmates, Richard Matt, 48, and David Sweat, 34, had bedded down near Kennedy and Bart Merrill roads, according to the Press-Republican newspaper. Numerous people in Cadyville received automated phone calls from Homeland Security overnight, urging them to lock their doors and turn on their outside house lights, the newspaper reported.

The area police are searching is described as extremely difficult terrain.

Late Wednesday, New York State Police closed a section of Route 374 — portions of which remained shut down east of Dannemora on Thursday as police hunted for the killers who used power tools to escape from Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora sometime after 10:30 p.m. Friday night.

"Best lead by far. We are close. This could be it," police sources told the Press-Republican Thursday morning.

Brian Thew, whose 119-acre property is being searched Thursday, told FoxNews.com authorities are focused on a thick swamp where Thew said he once, "sunk up to my waist in quicksand."

Thew and his family hunkered down in their home overnight, with all doors locked and their outside lights on.

"I stayed up until 2 a.m. with a little bit of nerves," he said, "But we are hunters. We have guns."

Authorities are pursuing hundreds of leads, including one some 400 miles away in Philadelphia, where a cab driver told police he may have driven the two inmates to an Amtrak station at 4:15 a.m. Thursday morning. Philadelphia police called the reported sighting unfounded.

The focus of the search shifted back to the area between West Plattsburgh and Dannemora on Wednesday.

Using power tools, Sweat and Matt cut through a steel wall, broke through bricks and crawled through a steam pipe before emerging through a manhole in the street outside the 3,000-inmate Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York, about 20 miles from the Canadian border.

The breakout was not discovered until early Saturday, giving Sweat and Matt a likely head-start of several hours. The two were last seen during a prison inspection at 10:30 p.m. the previous night.

On Wednesday afternoon, New York State Police Superintendent Joseph D'Amico said, "I have no information on where they are or what they're doing, to be honest with you" during a press briefing at the maximum-security prison.

Authorities speaking at the press conference, including the New York and Vermont governors, said they were expanding the search after investigators learned the inmates had talked before last weekend's breakout about going to neighboring Vermont.

"We have information that suggests they thought New York was going to be hot. Vermont would be cooler, in terms of law enforcement," said Vermont Gov. Peter Shumlin, who spoke along with New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. He and other officials would not say how authorities learned that information.

Vermont authorities also are patrolling Lake Champlain and areas alongside it, Shumlin said. Cuomo urged the people of Vermont to be on the alert and report anything suspicious, warning: "Trust me, these men are nothing to be trifled with."

D'Amico also said that a prison employee — identified in news reports as Joyce Mitchell, a training supervisor at the prison tailor shop — had befriended the killers and "may have had some role in assisting them."

He would not elaborate. No charges have been filed against the 51-year-old Mitchell, who was treated at a local hospital for an undisclosed illness in the days after the escape.

More than 450 federal and state law enforcement officers were taking part in the search, including customs agents, federal marshals and park rangers. The killers' mugshots have been put on more than 50 digital billboards in New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania, state police said, and a $100,000 reward has been posted.

Sweat was convicted in the 2002 killing of a Broome County sheriff's deputy and was doing life without parole. Matt was serving 25 years to life for the murder of his boss, businessman William L. Rickerson, in 1997.

Matt had twice tried to escape from prison, once successfully. Matt's 23-year-old son told the Buffalo News his father escaped in 1986 from New York's Erie County Correctional Facility, where he was serving a year for assault. He scaled a wall and gate topped with razor wire that slashed his forearms and eluded authorities for five days before he was captured at a family apartment in Tonawanda, N.Y., near Buffalo, his son, Nicholas Harris, told the newspaper.

Matt later served three years in the 1990s for attempted burglary and was released in 1997. That same year, Matt fled to Mexico to avoid arrest for the torture, murder and dismemberment of his 76-year-old boss in Tonawanda. After killing another man outside a bar in Mexico, he was thrown into a Mexican prison where he tried to escape, climbing to the roof of the prison before he was shot by guards, according to Harris.

"This guy has bullet holes on his body. He's been shot like nine times. It's like they can't kill him," Harris told the Buffalo News.

Matt spent several years in the Mexican prison in the beating death of an American man outside a bar. In 2007, he was extradited to the U.S. to stand trial for the murder of his boss, whose torso was found in the Niagara River. Matt was considered so dangerous that police snipers were assigned to the roof of the courthouse in case he tried to flee during his trial in Niagara County and Matt was required to wear an electric stun belt. He was sentenced to 25 years to life with no chance of parole before 2032 for the murder.

Sweat was sentenced to life in prison after he and another man killed Kevin Tarsia, a Broome County, New York Sheriff's Deputy, firing 15 rounds into him after Sweat broke into a Pennsylvania house and stole rifles and handguns.

Despite their dangerous pasts, Matt and Sweat were placed in the prison's "Honor Block," which allowed them to do factory work inside the prison, earning up to 65 cents an hour for sewing and stitching clothing. Mitchell, their alleged accomplice, reportedly worked as a seamstress at the facility.

In Dannemora, Barbara McCasland told the Associated Press officers had asked to search her home, but she told them no.

"I'm pretty battened down here," she said. "My windows are locked and everything."

As the manhunt dragged on, she said she was getting worried: "I wasn't in the beginning, but seeing that they've been out there so long, I am a little nervous."

Many in the prison town greeted the return of the searchers with a shrug. Many suspect Sweat and Matt are long gone and they are past any danger.

"I'm not worried about it," Jackie Trombley said.

Referring to the searchers swarming the area, she said: "We've got these guys down the road. They're everywhere, so it really doesn't bother me."

FoxNews.com's Cristina Corbin and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Click for more from the Press-Republican

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2015/06/11/searches-close-road-near-prison-where-convicted-killers-escaped/

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Prison escapee Richard Matt shot and killed by law enforcement officers, source confirms
Published June 26, 2015
FoxNews.com

Richard Matt, one of two New York prison escapees, was shot and killed by law enforcement officers Friday afternoon, a law enforcement source confirmed to Fox News.

He was killed in a remote area of Franklin County, N.Y. not far from two hunting cabins where he and fellow escapee David Sweat reportedly had taken refuge.

There was no immediate word on the whereabouts of Sweat. However, Fox News has confirmed police are pursuing him, reportedly on foot.

The Buffalo News, quoting a source, reported canine units had a "strong track" on Sweat, 35.

The location where Matt, 49, was shot is about 40 miles west of the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, where the pair staged a brazen breakout June 6.

Since then they had eluded a massive manhunt involving 1,100 law enforcement personnel.

Matt and Sweat used power tools to saw through a steel cell wall and several steel steam pipes, bashed a hole through a 2-foot-thick brick wall, and squirmed through pipes to escape.

Sweat was serving a sentence of life without parole in the killing of a sheriff's deputy in Broome County in 2002. Matt was serving 25 years to life for the killing and dismembering of his former boss.

A civilian worker at the prison has been charged with helping the killers flee by giving them hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools.

Prosecutors said Joyce Mitchell, a prison tailoring shop instructor who got close to the men while working with them, had agreed to be their getaway driver but backed out because she felt guilty for participating. Mitchell pleaded not guilty June 15 to charges including felony promoting prison contraband.

Authorities said the men had filled their beds in their adjacent cells with clothes to make it appear they were sleeping when guards made overnight rounds. On a cut steam pipe, the prisoners left a taunting note containing a crude caricature of an Asian face and the words "Have a nice day."

Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie said they apparently used tools stored by prison contractors, taking care to return them to their toolboxes after each night's work.

On June 24, authorities charged Clinton correction officer Gene Palmer with promoting prison contraband, tampering with physical evidence and official misconduct. Officials said he gave the two prisoners the frozen hamburger meat Joyce Mitchell had used to hide the tools she smuggled to Sweat and Matt. Palmer's attorney said he had no knowledge that the meat contained hacksaw blades, a bit and a screwdriver.

Dannemora, built in 1845, occupies just over 1 square mile within the northern reaches of the Adirondack Forest Preserve and is surrounded by forest and farmland. The stark white perimeter wall of the prison, topped with guard towers, borders a main street in the village's business district.

The escape was the first in history from Clinton Correctional's maximum-security portion. In July 2003, two convicted murderers used tools from a carpentry shop at Elmira Correctional Facility to dig a hole in the roof of their cell and a rope of bedsheets to go over the wall. They were captured within three days, and a subsequent state investigation cited lax inmate supervision, poor tool control and incomplete cell searches.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2015/06/26/prison-escapee-richard-matt-shot-and-killed-by-law-enforcement-officers-source/

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Well that sorta spoils the Hollywood ending.

David Sweat, Escaped New York Convict, Is Shot and Captured as Hunt Ends
By RICK ROJAS, J. DAVID GOODMAN and WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM
JUNE 28, 2015

CONSTABLE, N.Y. — David Sweat, the remaining prison escapee on the run in northern New York, was shot by a state trooper and taken into custody on Sunday after a 23-day manhunt that began with an improbable escape from two maximum-security cells and ended in the rain-drenched woods just south of the Canadian border.

Mr. Sweat, 35, a murderer who had been serving a sentence of life without parole, was in critical condition at Albany Medical Center late Sunday night, according to Dennis P. McKenna, the hospital’s medical director.

The shooting occurred here around 3:20 p.m. after a State Police sergeant spotted a man jogging down a road, stopped to question him and recognized him as Mr. Sweat, said Superintendent Joseph A. D’Amico of the New York State Police. The sergeant, Jay Cook, told Mr. Sweat to come over to him, but instead Mr. Sweat turned and fled across a field toward the tree line, Mr. D’Amico said. Sergeant Cook, a firearms instructor who was patrolling by himself, gave chase and finally opened fire, striking Mr. Sweat twice in the torso, because he realized the fugitive was going to make it to the woods and possibly disappear, Mr. D’Amico said.


David Sweat, who had escaped from the prison in Dannemora, on Sunday after being shot by a New York State Police sergeant. Credit WWNY TV

More than 1,300 officers in rain-slicked gear had helped to tighten a cordon around Mr. Sweat on Sunday as the search, which had at times appeared to lurch between small New York towns as officials chased shreds of reported sightings, focused in on 22 square miles of rugged terrain. The confrontation with Mr. Sweat took place two days after his partner in flight from the authorities, Richard W. Matt, was shot and killed by a federal agent in the woods of Malone, N.Y.

“The nightmare is finally over,” Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said, speaking with Mr. D’Amico on Sunday evening surrounded by law enforcement officers at a news conference in Malone, marked by cheers and applause. “These were really dangerous, dangerous men.”

Mr. Sweat, who was spotted and captured within a few miles of the Canadian border, was unarmed and wearing camouflage clothes. He was taken to Alice Hyde Medical Center, and then moved to Albany Medical Center for further treatment, Mr. D’Amico said.

Mr. McKenna, the medical director at Albany Medical Center, said it was “premature” to say whether Mr. Sweat would undergo surgery. He said Mr. Sweat would need to remain at the hospital “for at least a series of days.”

Word of the manhunt’s end brought relief across the state’s bucolic north, which had been in a near-constant state of alert as residents locked doors once left unsecured and cast a wary eye on every pair of men.

Denise Yando, who lives on a 30-acre property on Coveytown Road in Constable, said state troopers came to her home to say that Mr. Sweat had been shot in a nearby field. “I suspected they would come toward Canada,” Ms. Yando said. “Every time I walk the dog, I’m always looking down the tracks. But I didn’t think it would happen in the field.”

The final days of the search hewed closely to what had been, from the start, a Hollywood-style drama of ingenuity, flight and violence. The escape by Mr. Matt and Mr. Sweat from the Clinton Correctional Facility, discovered on June 6, involved long-term planning, subterfuge and trickery as the men cajoled favors and privileges from prison employees using flattery and, in Mr. Matt’s case, a talent for painting. Their flight lasted longer than some law enforcement observers had expected, but the two fugitives appeared to have never made it more than a few dozen miles from their starting point: a manhole on a street in Dannemora, N.Y., mere steps from the high prison walls meant to contain them.

After a civilian prison employee, Joyce E. Mitchell, failed to meet them in her car, the two men, who displayed cunning inside the prison walls, were forced to run on foot over tough terrain. They found shelter in empty hunting cabins, but left telltale clues of their presence that helped a vast array of agencies — from the State Police to the United States Marshals to the Federal Bureau of Investigation to state Forest Rangers — home in on them over the last week.

It was not clear whether the men remained together the whole time, but they appeared to have been together recently enough that a discarded pepper shaker bearing Mr. Sweat’s DNA was found by investigators over the weekend near the spot where Mr. Matt was killed on Friday.

Mr. D’Amico, of the State Police, said the men possibly used the pepper to throw off the scent of the search dogs, a ruse employed in the 1967 film “Cool Hand Luke.”

“We did have difficulty tracking, so it was fairly effective in that respect,” he said.

“If you were writing a movie plot, they would say that this was overdone,” Mr. Cuomo said, speaking at a ski resort in Malone that has doubled as a command center.

Earlier Sunday, the State Police said the search had been continuing “around the clock” and despite a pelting rain that prompted the National Weather Service to issue a flood watch for the area. The swell of law enforcement officers in the region, bolstered by the additional 100 officers announced on Sunday, allowed the authorities to have a regular rotation, swapping out fatigued searchers. That continued pressure may have helped wear down the two men. An autopsy of Mr. Matt showed blisters on his feet, according to a statement from the State Police, as well as “minor abrasions consistent with living in the woods for three weeks.”

With dense vegetation and rolling terrain, the woods here had been made even more difficult to navigate, as searchers had to make their way through fog, heavy downpours of rains and the boot-soaking slush left behind.

The two men were both convicted murderers, with Mr. Matt serving a sentence of 25 years to life after being convicted in 2008 of murdering and dismembering a former boss. (Before his trial, he served nine years in a Mexican prison for fatally stabbing an American engineer in a bar bathroom in Matamoros in 1998.)

The manhunt for two escaped killers ended on its 23rd day with the shooting and capture of the second fugitive two days after the first was killed.

Tarsia, after he came upon Mr. Sweat and two friends dividing up the spoils after robbing a fireworks and firearms store in Pennsylvania. Mr. Sweat shot him multiple times. While Mr. Tarsia was still alive, Mr. Sweat ran over him in his car.

His escape from Clinton Correctional Facility was not the first hint of Mr. Sweat’s penchant for steeping himself in plans requiring knowledge of architecture and engineering to help him commit a crime. In 1996, Mr. Sweat, then 16, and another teenager tried to steal a computer and cash from a group home in Binghamton where he was staying. Their plan depended in part on obtaining blueprints and a layout of the home.

After later being convicted of second-degree burglary in a separate incident, Mr. Sweat was found to be keeping a list of his future crimes in his prison cell.

The confrontation on Sunday with Mr. Sweat came two days after and roughly 15 miles north of the spot near Lake Titus where an agent from a tactical unit of the United States Border and Customs Protection agency shot Mr. Matt three times in the head, according to the autopsy. The agent, who was not named, opened fire after Mr. Matt, armed with a 20-gauge shotgun, did not put up his hands when ordered to do so.

On Sunday afternoon, Mike Doyle, 41, who lives on Coveytown Road, said he heard two shots and then saw “troopers running down the road with their weapons out.” Dozens of cars, lights flashing, raced by his home, then units from Customs and Border Protection and the United States Marshals Service.

He saw an ambulance drive onto a hayfield across the street from his home and then take off, apparently carrying Mr. Sweat. “It was very, very overwhelming when it all started,” he said. “And now it’s just a sigh of relief, just to know he was this close to the home and they got him.”

With the capture of Mr. Sweat alive, officials hoped to learn more about how exactly he and Mr. Matt managed their escape and their route once on the outside. In addition to Ms. Mitchell, the authorities also arrested a corrections officer, Gene Palmer, who is accused of giving the men pliers and a screwdriver in exchange for paintings by Mr. Matt.

When they fled the prison, the two inmates carried a black fabric guitar case, with Mr. Matt’s Fender Squier guitar left behind in his cell.

For residents of Dannemora and other towns of northern New York, the capture of Mr. Sweat brought a chance to finally relax after weeks of worrying about what lurked in the untrammeled woods. Stores offered free coffee to searchers and exclamations of joy at the capture.

“I haven’t opened my window in three weeks!” said Amber Hammond, 27, who has lived in Constable her entire life.

Leslie Lewis, 29, who encountered the two escapees in his backyard just after they escaped three weeks ago, said the first thing he was going to do now that they had been taken care of was go for a hike and build a fire in the woods, a favorite pastime. “We haven’t been able to do that in a while,” he said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/29/nyregion/second-new-york-prison-escapee-shot.html?_r=0

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typical democrats.  every dem I know has either killed someone or robbed a bank.  and most don't even respect the 'no feet on the couch' rule.

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I was reading about criticism of shooting him in the back because he was unarmed on TAG.

Gonna have to side with cops on this one.  Convicted murder, known to be really nasty, his partner managed to get hold of a gun and shoot at someone.

Far more dangerous to let him go.

Cop did good job.


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I was reading about criticism of shooting him in the back because he was unarmed on TAG.

Gonna have to side with cops on this one.  Convicted murder, known to be really nasty, his partner managed to get hold of a gun and shoot at someone.

Far more dangerous to let him go.

Cop did good job.



Not really.  I could have looked the other way if they took a can opener to his fingers.  But that's just me...   ;)

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I was reading about criticism of shooting him in the back because he was unarmed on TAG.

Gonna have to side with cops on this one.  Convicted murder, known to be really nasty, his partner managed to get hold of a gun and shoot at someone.

Far more dangerous to let him go.

Cop did good job.



No doubt. 

I think they would have probably gotten away had the woman showed up with the getaway car. 

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Did they at least yell freeze first?

This one is tricky... if police can shoot unarmed people showing no threat to anyone?

Don't they have a duty to chase him before shooting?  I dunno...seems like plenty of room for abuse once you tell cops "it's okay to shoot at an unarmed people if they're wanted". 

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Did they at least yell freeze first?

This one is tricky... if police can shoot unarmed people showing no threat to anyone?

Don't they have a duty to chase him before shooting?  I dunno...seems like plenty of room for abuse once you tell cops "it's okay to shoot at an unarmed people if they're wanted". 



I would disagree.  Known murderer, known burglar, known desperate to get away.  This guy was a threat to people.  This isn't a suspect or someone who was deprived of due process.  He was a bad, desperate man and if he had gotten away, it's likely he would have hurt someone should the need or opportunity arisen.


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I would disagree.  Known murderer, known burglar, known desperate to get away.  This guy was a threat to people.  This isn't a suspect or someone who was deprived of due process.  He was a bad, desperate man and if he had gotten away, it's likely he would have hurt someone should the need or opportunity arisen.



I'm not saying I wouldn't have wasted him.

I"m just hoping they said something like "freeze" or "police" first.  Otherwise, why not just send in a drone with a missile and caropet bomb the forest?  lol.   

If he's a bad guy, but he's unarmed... you at least say something before putting 15 bullets in his direction.  If hands are hidden, fine.  if he's driving and can ram you, cool.   But let's say the guy is butt nakked on the beach, sporting nothing but a boner when police stroll up - can/should they really just issue the headshot because of some shit he did 'earlier' or cause he was wanted?

I'm guessing the police on getbig can tell us if police can issue the headshot to a nude, unarmed man because of what he did previously. 

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I'm not saying I wouldn't have wasted him.

I"m just hoping they said something like "freeze" or "police" first.  Otherwise, why not just send in a drone with a missile and caropet bomb the forest?  lol.   

If he's a bad guy, but he's unarmed... you at least say something before putting 15 bullets in his direction.  If hands are hidden, fine.  if he's driving and can ram you, cool.   But let's say the guy is butt nakked on the beach, sporting nothing but a boner when police stroll up - can/should they really just issue the headshot because of some shit he did 'earlier' or cause he was wanted?

I'm guessing the police on getbig can tell us if police can issue the headshot to a nude, unarmed man because of what he did previously. 



I see.  So, you're going to resort to an exaggerated, nonsensical claim and try to pretend it has relevance here.

Well, to answer your question, if the cop pursuing him is also nude with a raging boner and jellyfish tentacles hanging from his ass crack, AND the sun is setting, it's an area not known for drugs and hookers, and there's a mild rain shower reflecting a rainbow, THEN lethal force would not be justified UNLESS the perp failed to offer the cop fellatio.


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I see.  So, you're going to resort to an exaggerated, nonsensical claim and try to pretend it has relevance here.

Well, to answer your question, if the cop pursuing him is also nude with a raging boner and jellyfish tentacles hanging from his ass crack, AND the sun is setting, it's an area not known for drugs and hookers, and there's a mild rain shower reflecting a rainbow, THEN lethal force would not be justified UNLESS the perp failed to offer the cop fellatio.

My point is this - Once you say it's 100% okay to execute someone who is 1) unarmed 2) without warning
because of their past crimes, I think we move from domestic bad guy into the "chasing down a bad guy in a warzone" kind of area.

I dont' like a society where a bunch of 21 year old rookie cops have a green light to shoot a person without warning.  Because like you said, there can be any number of scenarios.  He could have a brother or someone that just looks like him.  Or any other number of scenarios.

I'm guessing we are just arguing over nothing, and in no police handbook is there a scenario where police can knowingly execute an unarmed person without saying a word. 

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My point is this - Once you say it's 100% okay to execute someone who is 1) unarmed 2) without warning
because of their past crimes, I think we move from domestic bad guy into the "chasing down a bad guy in a warzone" kind of area.

I dont' like a society where a bunch of 21 year old rookie cops have a green light to shoot a person without warning.  Because like you said, there can be any number of scenarios.  He could have a brother or someone that just looks like him.  Or any other number of scenarios.

I'm guessing we are just arguing over nothing, and in no police handbook is there a scenario where police can knowingly execute an unarmed person without saying a word. 



No, he ordered him a couple of times to stop.  We are talking about this scenario only.  Nobody (except you) has tried to introduce a bunch of other variables.


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Re: Swampy area in upstate New York town focus of hunt for escaped killers
« Reply #13 on: September 30, 2015, 09:59:57 AM »
Prison worker Joyce Mitchell, who aided convicts' escape, gets up to 7 years in prison
Published September 28, 2015
FoxNews.com

The former prison worker who helped a pair of murderers escape a New York correctional facility sobbed as she was sentenced to 2 1/3 to seven years behind bars Monday during her sentencing hearing.

Joyce Mitchell, 51, wiped away tears and apologized as Judge Kevin Ryan upheld the terms of the plea deal she reached with prosecutors this summer.

“If I could take it all back I would,” Mitchell said Monday, with her husband seated in the audience, looking on. “I can’t begin to explain how sorry I am for all of this, to my community, to my coworkers, to my family, to all the officers that were involved in this and were taken away from their families in the search while these two men were on the loose.”

“At any time you could have stopped the escape from happening”

- Judge Kevin Ryan
Mitchell pleaded guilty to charges related to providing tools to Richard Matt and David Sweat, who broke out of the Clinton Correctional Facility June 6. The pair eluded more than 1,000 searchers in northern New York for weeks. Matt was killed by a border agent June 26. Sweat was wounded and captured by a trooper two days later.

Mitchell admitted becoming close with the pair, and she agreed to be their getaway driver before backing out.

“I am 51 years old and this is by far the worse mistake I’ve ever made,” Mitchell said. “I live with regret every day and will for the rest of my life. I’ve never been so disappointed in myself. I’ve not only let myself down, but my family.”

Mitchell, reading from prepared remarks and crying frequently, said she was “not a bad person,” but admitted that she “clearly made a horrible mistake.”

Ryan was unforgiving in his remarks to Mitchell, citing the estimated $23 million in overtime costs incurred from the manhunt and the “large portion of the local population” that was “terrorized.”

He also spoke of the many law enforcement officers who came from all over the country to help in the frantic search to locate the violent duo.

“They traversed very inhospitable territory, never knowing if the next step they took in deeply wooded areas would be their last,” Ryan said. “At any time you could have stopped the escape from happening.”

Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie said he didn't feel that justice was served.

"No, not at all," he said. "I say that because Joyce Mitchell was the primary reason, the primary avenue that David Sweat and Richard Matt used to escape from the Clinton Correctional Facility."

Wylie said he wished he had been able to file additional or enhanced charges, and believed Mitchell should have gone away for "certainly a lot more than seven years."

Mitchell suffered a panic attack the day of the escape and was taken to a hospital. She was arrested a week later and has been in jail since then.

Officials said the convicts used tools to cut their way out of their adjacent cells and get into the catwalk between the cell block walls. They crawled through an underground steam pipe and reached a street near the prison walls through a manhole.

Sweat, who is being housed in a solitary cell at a central New York prison, faces charges in the escape.

A prison guard, Gene Palmer, who authorities have said unwittingly abetted the escape plot, has pleaded not guilty to a charge of promoting prison contraband. Officials said he gave the two prisoners frozen hamburger meat Mitchell used to hide the hacksaw blades she smuggled to Sweat and Matt.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2015/09/28/joyce-mitchell-sentenced-to-up-to-seven-years-in-prison/