Slava Novorossiya

Slava Novorossiya

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

ESCAPEE & PRISON KILLERS OF THE WEEK [SUNDAY 23 SEPTEMBER 2012 TO SATURDAY 29 SEPTEMBER 2012]


As usual, abolitionists are too afraid to mention how dangerous it is for them to keep their violent criminals alive. Please read Thomas Sowell’s quote and read the three news to see how what dangerous activity violent people have done to harm society.
           

Convicted killer escapes from NC prison

The Associated Press

Published Sunday, Sep. 23, 2012


North Carolina authorities say 51-year-old man serving three consecutive life sentences for murder has escaped while working on a prison farm.

The state Department of Public Safety says James Ladd left his prison job Sunday outside Tillery Correctional Center in Halifax County. Ladd was operating a tractor on the prison farm. 

Officers found the tractor abandoned just before noon. Tillery is a minimum security prison.

Ladd is imprisoned for murder and armed robbery. He was convicted in 1981 for the shooting deaths of two men on a Yadkin County farm. 

Convicted killer escapes Mississippi prison with guns, truck
Reuters
9:46 AM CDT, September 24, 2012


Sept 24 (Reuters) - Authorities were searching on Monday for a convicted murderer who escaped from a Mississippi prison after breaking into a prison employee's house and stealing two guns and a truck, a corrections spokeswoman said.

Michael Dowda, 48, was discovered missing from the Mississippi State Penitentiary in Parchman on Saturday, corrections officials said. He had been on a maintenance work detail and was last seen wearing state-issued green and white striped pants and a white prison shirt.

Dowda, who is serving a life sentence for a 1998 murder conviction, is considered armed and dangerous. Before fleeing, he broke into a safe inside a house on the prison grounds and took two handguns, a department statement said.

Officials said he was believed to be driving a white truck that he also stole from the corrections employee's home.

Corrections spokeswoman Tara Booth said authorities were still investigating how Dowda engineered the breakout.

According to local media, Dowda was found guilty in the November 1996 shooting death of his girlfriend.

(Reporting by Colleen Jenkins; Editing by Doina Chiacu)
Copyright © 2012, Reuters

1 staffer killed, another wounded in disturbance at state prison in southeast Colorado

By Associated Press, Published: September 24

CROWLEY, Colo. — A female kitchen employee was killed and another was seriously injured Monday in an assault involving an inmate while breakfast was being prepared at a state prison in southeast Colorado, a spokeswoman said.

The inmate was subdued, and the Arkansas Valley Correctional Facility in Crowley was put on lockdown, said Alison Morgan, a spokeswoman for the Colorado Department of Corrections. The prison 45 miles east of Pueblo houses about 1,000 male prisoners.

The names of the victims and inmate weren’t immediately released. The wounded employee was listed in critical condition late Monday at a hospital in Pueblo, Morgan said.

The Colorado Office of Inspector General and the Colorado Bureau of Investigation were investigating, The Pueblo Chieftain reported. Morgan said interviews were ongoing, and it would be premature to provide details of the attack.

Gov. John Hickenlooper traveled to Crowley to visit with the prison staff Monday. He issued a statement saying state officials were “doing all we can to support the families and employees impacted by this incident.”

Many state prisons were locked down Monday so staff could support the Arkansas Valley facility. Food was being delivered from other state prisons.

In 1989, the Arkansas Valley facility gained international notoriety when a helicopter swooped into the yard and spirited two inmates to freedom. Prison officials said they could not fire on the aircraft because they couldn’t get a clear shot. The prisoners were recaptured after they switched to a rental van and got into a gun battle with authorities in Nebraska.

Over the past decade, there have several high-profile disturbances at Colorado prisons.

In 2004, at the privately owned Crowley County Correctional Facility nearby, about 300 inmates ransacked two cell houses and prison offices and set dozens of fires. Several inmates were injured, including two seriously.

In Limon, in northeast Colorado, a prisoner was arrested after prison worker Eric Autobee was beaten to death in 2002 by a convicted child killer wielding a ladle. State corrections officers blamed staffing cuts because of state spending limits that forced the state to send more inmates to private prisons.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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