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Massive search for escaped killer enters 23rd day

By AP - Jun 28,2015 - Last updated at Jun 28,2015

FBI agents cunduct a search for convicted murderer David Sweat on Sunday near Duane, New York (AFP photo)

MALONE, New York — The army of officers searching for a surviving escaped killer continued their work under steady rainfall Sunday, keeping their focus on the dense and boggy woods of upstate New York where his fellow fugitive was fatally shot two days earlier.

On the 23rd day of the search, state troopers with guns drawn searched a cabin in Malone and other officers carrying rifles manned checkpoints and examined vehicles, opening trunks and peering into windows in their hunt for David Sweat.

Franklin County Sheriff Kevin Mulverhill said tips continued to pour in and he was optimistic Sweat would be captured soon.

"It's going to be one of those phone calls that turns this case around," he said late Saturday.

Richard Matt — who once vowed never to be taken alive — was fatally shot Friday during an encounter with border patrol agents about  48 kilometres west of the prison he escaped from with Sweat on June 6. About 1,200 searchers focused intensely on 57 square kilometres of thick forests and heavy brush around where Matt was killed.

Police hoped the solo escapee would finally succumb to the stress of little sleep, scant food and biting bugs.

"Anyone in the woods and on the run from the law so to speak is not getting a full eight hours sleep, they're not eating well and they have to keep moving," Mulverhill said. "He's fatigued, tired, and he's going to make a mistake."

Sweat could have an even tougher time now without someone to take turns resting with and to watch his back, Clinton County Sheriff David Favro said.

"Now it's a one-man show and it makes it more difficult for him," Favro said. "And I'm sure fatigue is setting in for him as well, knowing the guy he was with has already been shot."

The manhunt broke open Friday afternoon when a person towing a camper heard a loud noise and thought a tire had blown. Finding there was no flat, the driver drove 13 kilometres before looking again and finding a bullet hole in the trailer. A tactical team responding to the scene of the shot smelled gunpowder inside a cabin and saw evidence that someone had fled out the back door.

A noise — perhaps a cough — ultimately did Matt in. A border patrol team discovered Matt, who was shot after failing to heed a command to raise his hands.

Matt had a 20-gauge shotgun that was believed to have been taken from another cabin. The pair had apparently been relying on the remote region's many hunting camps and seasonal dwellings for supplies.

Matt, who turned 49 the day before he died, was serving 25 years to life at Clinton Correctional Facility for the killing and dismemberment of his former boss.

Sweat, 35, was serving a sentence of life without parole in the killing of a sheriff's deputy in Broome County in 2002. Mulverhill said investigators believe he may be armed.

 

Matt and Sweat used power tools to saw through a steel cell wall and several steel steam pipes, bashed a hole through a 60-centimetre-thick brick wall, squirmed through pipes and emerged from a manhole outside the prison. Two prison workers have been charged in connection with the inmates' escape.

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