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At approximately 4 p.m., as the intensive manhunt was underway,
the white prison pickup was found abandoned behind a Wal-Mart store
in Kenedy. The pickup was in the line of view or focal point
of a nearby automated teller machine located in the parking lot, and
one of the investigators suggested that they take a look at the
video footage it had recorded during the time frame in which they
were interested, primarily between 2 and 4 p.m. that day.
After contacting the necessary bank officials to obtain a copy of
the ATM videotape, investigators noted two vehicles that were
present in the tape when the prison truck arrived and left the scene
shortly afterward. The quality of the images on the videotape
was very poor, but one of the vehicles in question, a two-door
compact car, appeared to be either a Chevrolet Cavalier or a Pontiac
Sunbird, dark in color. Even though it was a very vague,
general description, and despite the fact that it might not have
even been the convicts’ getaway car or cars, the information was
circulated to police agencies throughout the state and was provided
to the news media. Because there were no recent reports of
stolen cars in the area, the investigators speculated that the
inmates might have had outside help, someone who had dropped off the
car or cars in the parking lot earlier that day. However,
their trail seemed to vanish at the Kenedy Wal-Mart.
As darkness fell over this shocked and frightened community,
authorities from around the state joined in the manhunt for the
seven heavily armed escaped convicts.
“Everybody that we can get a hold of, every lawman in the State
of Texas is looking for these guys,” said Larry Todd, a spokesman
for the TDCJ. “We certainly consider all of the inmates
armed and dangerous. We know that they can become
desperate…they may have split up, they may have gone in pairs.
We don’t know. What it tells us is that the escape appears
to be well-planned, from the inside of the unit to their arrival in
the community.” Todd stated that the investigators were
looking into every possibility regarding any help that the escapees
may have had, including possible help from friends and relatives.
“Right now we are combing the state for these people’s
relatives, their associates, their (former) places of employment,
any place they frequented in the free world,” said Glen Castlebury
of the TDCJ. “They took people hostage, tied them up and
left them locked in a room. Put your stopwatch on it. By
the time the front office declared, ‘By God, it was an escape,’
and sounded the alarm, they were gone. They were probably
outside the perimeter before the perimeter was set up…We’ve got
seven opportunities. Someone’s gonna make a mistake, and if
we get one of them we may be on the road to catch all of them, even
if they’ve broken up.”
In the meantime, Castlebury remained optimistic that the seven
escapees would be caught soon. He cited that out of 275
inmates who have escaped from Texas prisons over the past 16 years,
only one has not been caught—a man who fled to Mexico, where there
is no extradition treaty with the U.S.
“It may be a week, a month or three months, but they’re
always back,” Castlebury said.
Although the cops didn’t know it yet, the Texas 7 had spent
their first night of freedom in San Antonio, a little over sixty
miles up the road from Kenedy. They had likely taken the most
direct route, U.S. 181, to get there.
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