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Prison worker who reportedly helped NY inmates escape arrested

Joyce Mitchell, the New York prison tailor who authorities said may have aided a pair of convicted murderers before their brazen escape, has been arrested, a source with knowledge of the investigation told CNN on Friday. The specific charge is unknown at this time but Clinton County Sheriff David Favro said Mitchell was to be arraigned Friday evening.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

PRISON WORKER GAVE BLADES, DRILL BITS TO ESCAPED INMATES, SOURCES SAY

Authorities strongly believe a pair of fugitives from an upstate New York maximum-security prison are still together, two law enforcement sources briefed on the matter said Friday. Authorities say the convicted murderers probably decided to continue their escape together. A search perimeter was established, one of the sources said, because an officer saw someone entering the woods at nightfall Wednesday.

An employee of an upstate New York maximum-security prison gave hacksaw blades, drill bits and lighted eyeglasses to a pair of convicted murderers before their brazen escape, sources said Friday.

Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie told CNN’s “New Day” that Joyce Mitchell “provided some form of equipment or tools” to fugitive felons Richard Matt and David Sweat.

Two law enforcement sources with knowledge of the investigation later elaborated about the hacksaw blades, with one of the sources mentioning the drill bits and the two pairs of special glasses given to to Matt. They were purchased over the last few months.

Matt and Sweat used power tools to cut through cell walls that included a steel plate and sever a 24-inch steam pipe — once to get in and once more to get out — and surfaced through a manhole. Despite all the time, effort and noise likely involved, authorities didn’t learn anything was awry until a bed check at 5:30 a.m. Saturday.

Mitchell — who knew the inmates from working with them tailoring clothes as an industrial training supervisor at Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora — has not been arrested. She hasn’t spoken publicly. And her relatives have denied she did anything wrong.

Authorities have a different take, however.

State Department of Corrections officials had received a complaint about the relationship between her and one of the two escapees, according to a state official. The department didn’t find enough evidence to support the complaint, though that does not mean the inmate and prison worker weren’t close.

“I don’t believe that the information was that there was absolutely no relationship,” said Wylie, the district attorney.

Mitchell told investigators Matt made her feel “special,” though she didn’t mention being in love with him, a source familiar with the investigation said.

Her cell phone was used to call people connected to Matt, according to another source, though it’s not known who made these calls. And New York State Police Superintendent Joseph D’Amico said authorities believe she planned to pick up the inmates after their escape only to change her mind at the last minute.

Mitchell will at some point face felony charges, tied to being an accessory to the escape and/or providing prison contraband. Yet the threat of prosecution hasn’t stopped her from regularly and voluntarily providing useful information to investigators, with the district attorney speculating she feels “some responsibility and guilt … and wants to help that situation or help herself.”

“She does not exercise her right to request an attorney, she voluntarily seeks us out,” Wylie said Thursday night. “(She) comes in and each day has been providing … additional information that’s assisted the investigators.”

The information may have helped authorities figure out how the killers escaped, but so far it hasn’t helped locate them.

Between 2002 and 2013, state data show, almost every prison escapee in New York state was captured within 24 hours and none were out for more than three days. Until Matt and Sweat, who now have been on the lam for six days.

Their escape sent jitters across neighboring Vermont, where authorities believe they may have gone, and Canada, whose border is about 20 miles from the maximum-security prison.

Still, the most intense law enforcement activity has been in northeast New York, where investigators continue to search for clues by painstakingly checking wooded areas and roads and popping open trunks at checkpoints.

The ordeal has turned life upside down for those who call this rural, idyllic, out-of-the-way place home. Many people have restricted their movement, while classes in the Saranac Central School District — which includes Dannemora — were called off for a second straight day Friday “to assist law enforcement and to keep our buses off the routes … where they are searching,” Superintendent Jonathan Parks said.

“I haven’t left home in two days, I had to call in to work today because you wouldn’t be able to return back home,” resident Brooke Lepage said. “There were constant helicopters.

“Last night they had floodlights. There was a recorded (telephone) message telling us to stay in the house and make sure outside lights were on.”

Amid the mayhem, the search may be narrowing down — the latest focus being a sandwich shop not far from where the convicts escaped.

Investigators are looking at surveillance video from a gas station about a mile away from the prison.

Tracking dogs picked up the scent of both prisoners at the station and followed it east toward the town of Cadyville, Wylie said. The gas station has a Subway sandwich shop, and the two might have been rummaging for food in the trash bin, authorities said.

Authorities are reviewing the limited security video from the store.

A perimeter is up around the site of the scent, and Wylie said “dogs were working it (Thursday night) and we’re going to continue to pursue that (Friday).”

“It could have been something that occurred earlier in the week,” the district attorney said Friday of when the scent was left. “But we’re hoping that it was two nights ago, and they’re closing in on the two men right now.”

Investigators found an imprint from a shoe or boot as well as food wrappers in the area, a source said. And possible bedding — an indent in the grass or leaves — has also been discovered, according to the district attorney.

Will any of these efforts lead to Matt and Sweat, though? Wylie said Thursday night that he hoped they’ll be found within 24 hours.

“The perimeter is continuing to be closed in,” the district attorney added Friday morning. “And we hope … that this will be effective in bringing these two men back into custody.”

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