Two convicted bank robbers who pulled off a daring overnight escape
from a high-rise Chicago jail had changed from their prison garb by the
time they hopped into a cab outside the lock-up, investigators said
Wednesday as they expanded their manhunt for the men.
Authorities
were raiding houses and combing through records looking for anybody
with ties to the inmates who climbed out a jail window and descended 20
stories using a makeshift rope.
The FBI said surveillance
footage from a camera near the Metropolitan Correction Center shows
Kenneth Conley and Joseph Banks getting into a cab at about 2:45 a.m.
Thursday — about two hours after guards were supposed to do a bed check
and four hours before workers spotted the rope dangling from the jail.
The pair had changed from their orange jail-issued jumpsuits into
light-colored pants and light-colored shirts, the FBI said.
"We don't know if they fashioned their own clothes, or what," said Special Agent Frank Bochte.
The
FBI was offering a $50,000 reward for information leading to the
apprehension of Conley and Banks, with the manhunt focused mainly on
Chicago and its suburbs.
Law enforcement officials said at
least three homes in the suburbs south of Chicago where one of the
inmates once lived were searched Tuesday, and a suburban strip club
where Conley worked confirmed that investigators had visited.
Investigators
believe the men had been at a home in Tinley Park, 25 miles southwest
of Chicago, just hours before police SWAT teams stormed it. A law
enforcement official said the home was that of Conley's mother and that
after the woman refused to let the escapees in, the men used a rock to
break a window.
The person, who was not authorized to discuss
the investigation so would speak only on condition of anonymity, said
authorities also searched the home of a former girlfriend of Conley in
nearby New Lenox, where the escapees had eaten breakfast.
In
Orland Park, which borders Tinley Park, police Chief Timothy McCarthy
said records revealed Conley had been arrested several years ago on a
robbery charge.
"We looked at our own files and came up with a former colleague, a past associate," he said.
Orland
Park officers helped search a house where the associate lives or once
lived, he said, but there was no evidence the escaped inmates had been
there, he said.
But the chain of events illustrates just the
kind of thing investigators are doing: looking through records, arrest
reports and even traffic tickets in the hopes of finding where the men
went.
Authorities have not said exactly how many people are
involved with the search. But the entire 35-member staff of the U.S.
Marshal's Service's Chicago office was involved, a show of force that
spokeswoman Belkis Cantor said "was rare."
Many questions
remained about how the two managed to pull off such an escape from the
federal prison in the heart of downtown Chicago. At the top of the list
is how they could have smashed a gaping hole into the wall at the
bottom of a 6-inch wide window being heard or seen by correctional
officers.
Another question is why, in the federal facility that
houses some 700 inmates, the correctional officers apparently did not
check on the two men between the 10 p.m. headcount and one at 5 a.m.
And what was done between the 5 a.High quality stone mosaic tiles.m. headcount and 7 a.m. when the rope was spotted?
Also,
authorities have not said how the two men managed to collect 200 feet
of bed sheet or how the broke through the wall.Best howo concrete mixer manufacturer in China.
The
escape bore a striking resemblance to one at the same jail in 1985. In
that case, convicted murderer Bernard Welch and an accomplice, Hugh
Colomb, smashed through a window with a bar from a weight set and used
bed sheets and an electrical cord attached to a floor buffer to descend
six stories to the ground.
William Rollins, a Washington,
D.C., police detective at the time who was brought in by the U.S.
Marshals Service to investigate, said the noise of breaking the wall
would have been deafening. But he thinks other inmates would have
gladly made a lot of noise to drown out the sound.
"They will lure a guard into the laundry room and have all the dryers going,We recently added Stained glass mosaic Tile to our inventory." said Rollins,Argo Mold limited specialize in Plastic injection mould
manufacture, now retired, whose investigation is included in a book
about Welch by Jack Burch and James B. King called "Ghost Burglar."
Not
only that, but he said his investigation revealed that inmates had
hidden hacksaw blades in ceiling tiles and drill bits in bed frames.
That’s
what a delegation of state and city officials did on a recent tour of
the deteriorating school where teachers tape up “caution” signs and
water streams down an interior wall every time it rains.
That’s what lawmakers,We mainly supply professional craftspeople with wholesale turquoise beads
from china, educators and parents would like Gov. Chris Christie to do
in order to truly understand the conditions students and teachers deal
with every day.
The state has promised money to address the
80-year-old school’s most urgent problems. As Times staffer Erin Duffy
reported last week, the funds have not materialized and the 18 most
pressing problems – including leaky roofs, corroded plumbing, warped
floors and asbestos — are worsening.
The crumbling school also
contends with security issues in an city plagued by gun violence. A
potential tragedy was averted early this month when a taxi driver
warned police an armed student, bent on revenge, was on his way to the
school.
It wasn’t the powerful slam of a storm that devastated
the building in one ferocious blast. It’s been depleted by the daily
toll of time as political machinations, charges of wasting money and
squandering opportunities, and controversy over whether to renovate or
rebuild in the days when such funding might have been available have
done nothing to alleviate the deterioration there.
It’s been a
superstorm of human error, erosion and neglect, so it doesn’t qualify
for FEMA relief. But the state’s mandate to provide a thorough and
efficient education continues to be compromised at Trenton Central High
School by the substandard conditions thwarting the best efforts of
teachers and keeping students at a disadvantage.
We call on the
governor, who showed such compassion to those affected by the
hurricane, to visit the school. Perhaps he could hold a town hall
meeting there to update the community on funding for repairs or
renovation or reconstruction or whatever can be done to improve
conditions at the school.
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