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New York prison break source: Wife warned husband of plot to kill him

Posted at 5:33 PM, Jun 17, 2015
and last updated 2015-06-17 17:33:05-04

Lyle Mitchell didn’t know about a sexual relationship between his wife and at least one convicted murderer she allegedly helped escape from a New York prison, a source close to the investigation told CNN.

But after Richard Matt and David Sweat broke out, prison tailor shop instructor Joyce Mitchell warned her husband that the men were free and had been plotting to kill him, a prosecutor said.

“She advised him after the escape of what happened, including the possible murder plot,” Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie told CNN’s “The Lead With Jake Tapper.”

Joyce Mitchell’s attorney says that doesn’t mean she was participating in the plot.

“I don’t believe she was involved in any attempt to kill her husband,” her attorney, Stephen Johnston, told CNN. “Just because she heard something doesn’t mean she was going to act on it. … She did not want to be a part of it and did not.”

A lawyer representing Lyle Mitchell said the husband, who also worked in the prison’s tailoring block, was kept in the dark.

“He didn’t know anything about the escape plan,” attorney Peter Dumas said.

As of now, investigators have no information that Lyle Mitchell had prior knowledge of the escape or actively assisted in it, Wylie said.

Authorities are trying to determine the exact nature of Joyce Mitchell’s relationship with Matt and Sweat, but they already know it was years in the making.

She’d been investigated in the past for an inappropriate relationship with Sweat that led corrections officials to move him out of the tailor shop in 2013 and keep them separated, Wylie has said.

That’s the year when she started having a sexual relationship with Matt, the source close to the investigation said.

The sexual relationship took place at the tailor shop in the Clinton Correctional Facility, the only known place the two were together, the source said.

Now Joyce Mitchell is accused of helping the two convicted murderers break out of a New York prison. No court date has been set for Mitchell, who has pleaded not guilty to the two charges brought against her and has been talking to authorities. If convicted, she could face up to eight years behind bars.

Hundreds of leads

Authorities looking for Matt and Sweat have searched 16 square miles — more than 10,000 acres, which is the equivalent of almost 8,000 football fields — New York State Police Maj. Charles Guess told reporters Wednesday.

Police have also developed more than 1,400 leads, the major said.

Guess reiterated what state police said Tuesday: that authorities are expanding the search to other areas surrounding Dannemora, New York.

There are now 600 local, state and federal law enforcement officers involved in the search, a drop from the 800 involved Tuesday. Guess said that since authorities are “no longer containing a hard perimeter,” they released about 200 officers, but there has been no reduction in the number of tactical, canine, aviation or ground search units.

“There’s no hard evidence that they’re outside the area. That being said, I can’t rule that out,” said Capt. Robert LaFountain, of the New York State Police Bureau of Criminal Investigation.

Asked if authorities miscalculated by spending so much time searching near the Clinton Correctional Facility, the state police captain added, “Absolutely not. We (had) to start from … point zero.”

The captain remains confident that Matt and Sweat will be found, he said.

“We are going to locate the individuals and they will be apprehended,” he said.

‘He’s very confused’

On Tuesday, Lyle Mitchell was face to face with his wife for the first time since her arrest last week. She’s accused of sneaking hacksaw blades, chisels, drill bits, a punch and other contraband into the convicts’ hands before they broke out.

The couple spent an hour together and were separated by glass, speaking over a phone in a private, unmonitored conversation, Clinton County Sheriff David Favro said.

Lyle Mitchell was supportive, and his wife seemed comforted by his visit — the first she’d had since her arrest, the sheriff said.

“He’s providing support,” said Dumas, Lyle Mitchell’s attorney. “He’s not planning to testify on her behalf.”

Johnston, Joyce Mitchell’s attorney, said he did not know what the two talked about. He described his client’s state of mind as “distraught, very weepy and very upset.”

She has been moved about 175 miles south to the Rensselaer County Jail, east of Albany, police said.

“She’s rather composed, given the gravity of what’s going on,” Favro said.

Dumas said Lyle Mitchell is also struggling to deal with what’s happened and the revelation that “possibly there was a plan to do some harm to him.”

“He’s very confused. It’s just a lot that’s been thrown on his plate right now,” Dumas said. “He’s kind of reeling.”

Wylie has not commented much on the husband, other than to say he’s under investigation.

Investigators are looking at other prison employees as well and haven’t ruled out that they may have played a role in the escape, the source with knowledge of the investigation said.

Officials are also investigating whether other inmates might have helped create some type of diversion before, during or after Matt and Sweat escaped, the source said.

Authorities are investigating whether the two inmates threatened Mitchell to force her to help, a New York state official briefed on the investigation told CNN. Investigators say they think Mitchell began getting cold feet about executing the plan but possibly had agreed to supply a getaway car because of threats to her and her husband, the official said.

Expanded search

With few clues pointing toward where Matt and Sweat went after they escaped, investigators are changing tack.

The search stretched into day 12 on Wednesday. The area that hundreds of law enforcement officers are combing is expanding, New York State Police said Tuesday evening.

Teams will be redeployed to new areas near the prison in Dannemora, New York, police said, saying the shifting search zone was based on information uncovered in the hunt for the fugitives.

Canine units are still searching for a scent that might lead police to Matt and Sweat, who escaped from the maximum-security facility known as “Little Siberia” in upstate New York on June 6.

“We’re putting our heart and soul into this,” Favro, the Clinton County sheriff, said of the search. “I’m confident that we’ll be able to get these two.”

But after earlier promising leads went cold, officials aren’t even sure they’re looking in the right place.

The fugitives could have made it across Lake Champlain to Vermont, and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has said he talked to his counterpart there to thrash out a “cooperative agreement” for the search.

Another possibility is Canada, whose border lies just 20 miles north of the prison.

But Jonathan Gilliam, a former FBI agent who has led manhunts, says the killers wouldn’t try to drive past border checkpoints — and going on foot through the thick woods is even harder.

“It’s kind of a harsh environment, cold at night,” he told CNN. “They’re instantly setting themselves up for a fall.”

Holed up in a cabin?

Searchers are scouring parts of the Adirondacks in upstate New York, a 6 million-acre wilderness at the doorstep of the prison. It’s filled with hundreds of cabins, many of them abandoned in the off-season.

Investigators think Matt and Sweat could be holed up in one of them. Or, they warn, the pair could invade a home and take hostages.

But Gilliam says that would be “a big chance to take.”

“If you do that, even if you leave, now you’ve set a footprint for the police to latch onto,” he said.

According to authorities, Joyce Mitchell says Matt and Sweat told her they planned to drive to an unspecified destination about seven hours away.

She backed out of the getaway plan, and it’s unclear what other options the killers had in mind. But driving for that length of time at an average speed of 60 mph would put big cities like Boston, New York and Philadelphia within reach.

Those environments might be easier ones in which to disappear.

“People are very aware of who’s around them” in small towns, said Gilliam. “They’re very aware of what other people are doing. Once you get into a larger city, people just stop paying attention.”

Killer’s ties to Mexico

Even farther afield is Mexico, a possibility that Cuomo mentioned over the weekend.

The country, about 2,000 miles away, features in Matt’s past.

In 1997, he murdered a man near Buffalo, New York, and then fled to Mexico, where he killed another man before being captured.

He had “Mexico Forever” tattooed on his back, police say.

Authorities are offering a $100,000 reward for information leading to the escaped inmates’ arrests.

It’s not clear how much money has been spent, but judging from the boots on the ground, it can’t be cheap.

And time may be increasingly on the killers’ side.

“You can’t sustain this type of a manhunt for very long,” Gilliam said. “It’s just too much of a vacuum of all other resources.”