Across the state, there's also a manhunt underway for an inmate who escaped a Northeast Philadelphia correctional facility. Police said 34-year-old Gino Hagenkotter walked away from a supervised work program on Thursday. Hagenkotter climbed a fence and left the prison property after telling a security guard he had to use a bathroom, CBS Philadelphia reports.

There have been two other high-profile prison escapes in Pennsylvania this year. In July, homicide suspect Michael Burham used bedsheets to escape from the Warren County Jail in northern Pennsylvania, spurring a nine-day manhunt. With a $22,000 reward posted for his arrest, he was captured after a dog alerted a couple to his presence on their property.


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Danelo Cavalcante, who is serving a life sentence for the stabbing death of his ex-girlfriend in 2021, escaped from the Chester County Prison in August and was on the run for almost two weeks before he was recaptured about 20 miles from the prison. He's now housed at SCI Greene in Waynesburg.

Blanche Carney, the Commissioner of the Philadelphia Department of Prisons, said Hagenkotter escaped while he was working on a detail assignment in the orchard on prison property as part of a good behavior program.

Hagenkotter, who was being watched by a prison guard, asked the guard if he could use the bathroom. But, Carney said the guard realized Hagenkotter didn't return from the restroom in an appropriate amount of time.

Later, Carney said surveillance video showed Hagenkotter climbing over a prison fence away from the complex through the sanitation yard at 11:48 a.m. Police also saw the escaped inmate on video walking down Torresdale Avenue, Philadelphia Police Deputy Commissioner Frank Vanore said.

Vanore said police were applying for an escape felony warrant and detectives are currently combing through surveillance video in the area of the prison to track Hagenkotter down. The U.S. Marshals have agreed to help Philly police search for Hagenkotter, Vanore said.

IRA inmates, who were serving time for crimes ranging from murder to the possession of explosives, viewed the Maze as a prisoner of war camp. Believing it their duty to attempt an escape, IRA leaders held inside H-Block 7 spent four months during the summer of 1983 hatching an audacious jailbreak.

When a guard unexpectedly walked out of a nearby restroom and distracted the prisoners, Adams attempted to raise the alarm. According to Adams, Kelly then fired two shots, the second of which struck him above his left eye but proved not to be fatal. (Kelly has never admitted to pulling the trigger.)

The prisoners hijacked the food delivery truck when it arrived at 3:25 p.m., but their getaway was delayed as IRA intelligence officers spent valuable minutes rummaging through prison files in search of details about informers while also removing any photographs and documents that could aid in their own recapture. At 3:50 p.m., 37 prisoners piled into the back of the food truck, while Kelly laid in the passenger side footwell with a gun directed at the officer driving the van to ensure his compliance while driving to the main gate, the last obstacle to freedom.

At the gate, nine of the prisoners disguised as guards stormed the lodge where officers checked in and out and seized them at gunpoint. The delay in leaving the H-block, however, meant that guards were beginning to arrive for their next shifts. As their numbers grew, the officers fought back against the inmates.

Amid the melee, prison officer James Ferris bolted from the lodge and shouted to the guard at the pedestrian gate to sound the alarm. A prisoner, identified by guards as Dermot Finucane, gave chase and stabbed Ferris three times in the chest. The officer collapsed and later died from a heart attack. The prisoner, meanwhile, continued to the pedestrian gate, where he stabbed two officers arriving for their shifts as well as the officer on gate duty before he could sound the alarm.

While some escapees hijacked cars, others fled on foot into the countryside. A massive manhunt by police and the military resulted in the recapture of 19 prisoners in the first 24 hours after the jailbreak. Most of the fugitives returned to their original cells inside H-Block 7 after their brief flicker of freedom.

Those who remained on the lam hid inside barns and safe houses before the IRA facilitated their passage to the Republic of Ireland. Several continued on to the United States under new identities, while others resumed their paramilitary activities. Three of the fugitives subsequently died in IRA operations, while Kelly and McFarlane were arrested in Holland in 1986 and returned to the Maze along with several other escapees extradited from Ireland and the United States.

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Police said late Friday afternoon that 35-year-old Jose Flores-Huerta has been arrested at the Philadelphia Industrial Correction Center and charged with felony counts of criminal conspiracy and escape.

Flores-Huerta is alleged to have aided the May 7 escape of 18-year-old Ameen Hurst and 24-year-old Nasir Grant, who cut a hole in a fence surrounding a recreation yard. Hurst and Grant, who were in the same unit but in different cells, were gone for nearly 19 hours before officials knew they were missing.

Court documents indicate that Flores-Huerta is being represented by the Defender Association of Philadelphia in the escape case; messages seeking comment were sent Saturday to the association and to his attorney in the earlier case.

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There was a gap of roughly 50 minutes between the time he was last seen Saturday night, when a prison guard gave him his daily medicine, to the moment when he was no longer visible on the internal video camera system, according to the Mexican national security commission.

The photos show the tunnel extending into a home outside of the prison's property and there was a similarly small exit found in the floor of one of the building's rooms where the drug lord is believed to have left the tunnel and entered the free world.

As \"World News Tonight\" will report this evening, the half-built house in the Mexican cornfields from where Guzman is believed to have emerged was only under construction for the past five to six months, according to local gas delivery men who supply gas to all the homes in the neighborhood. The developers of the apparent escape house never requested any gas. But the building equipment never seemed unusual because the house was under construction.

Visitors to Andersonville National Historic Site frequently inquire about prisoner escapes. Escapes are a major part of our popular culture, as films like "The Great Escape," and even "Escape From Alcatraz" or "The Shawshank Redemption" have ingrained into collective memory the heroic adventures of a prison escape. This is especially true at Andersonville. Even before the movie, "Andersonville," which featured an escape from the prison stockade, tales of tunnels and runaway prisoners being tracked by hounds are nearly as old as the prison itself.

The Wirz Trial was filled with testimony about the techniques used to track down escaped prisoners and the punishments doled out those recaptured. Nearly every published prisoner memoir in the years after the war told of an escape attempt either by tunneling or by running away from work details, and many survivors regaled family friends with adventures of escape. All of this has created a vision of Andersonville in which escape plays a major role in not only the prison's story, but in the experience of each individual prisoner. Many descendants who visit the site today share family stories of how their ancestor escaped from Andersonville.But how widespread was escape? If the published memoirs and family stories are any indication, it seems that a significant majority of the prisoners escaped from Andersonville, and that the forests and farmland surrounding the stockade were a superhighway crowded Union soldiers on the run. However, this is not the case.

According to surviving Confederate records, only 351 prisoners escaped from Andersonville, which means that only around 0.7% of all prisoners ever managed to escape. However, those same records indicate that many of these men were recaptured and returned to Andersonville or sent to other prison facilities. But how many of these men actually made it back to Union lines in a successful escape?

The US Army recorded each soldier who returned to Union lines as an escaped prisoner. This document is available in the National Archives as part of Record Group 249, M1878 as part of the Records of the Sultana. This document allows us to go through and identify exactly who successfully escaped from not only Andersonville, but from a variety of Confederate prisons. According to these records, 32 Union soldiers are confirmed to have escaped from Andersonville between February of 1864 and May of 1865. This means that 0.07%, or only one out of every 1,400 prisoners held at Andersonville successfully escaped. What happened to the remainder of these unaccounted-for escapees is unknown. Perhaps they quietly returned home instead of reporting back to the army. It is likely that many of these men died while on the run.

Successful escape from Andersonville was virtually impossible, and it was much rarer than what has often been portrayed. Even most of those who managed to successfully escape from Andersonville did so between the Fall of 1864 through the Spring of 1865, when the prison and its security systems were breaking down as the war ended. For example, Nicholas Williams, of the 4th US Cavalry is documented as having escaped Andersonville on May 1, 1865 when fewer than fifty Union prisoners remained. Many of the prisoners who claimed to have escaped from Andersonville often either escaped from other camps or in transit between camps. Ultimately, escape from Andersonville was not an everyday occurrence, but rather was a symbol of hope. 17dc91bb1f

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