![]() “I believe (the person inside the home) did not intend to leave here alive today.” The “structure was engulfed in flames and an individual inside of the structure started firing shots at law enforcement on the exterior,” the sheriff told a local news station. ![]() The cause of death of Arrington’s death is under investigation, Jones said.Īuthorities have also not specified whether others were in the home. He was identified later Wednesday as Arrington, one of the prison escapees, Jones said. One person was found dead inside the burned home, Jones said on Twitter. The deputy was the only officer injured in the incident, which lasted about two hours, and the deputy was taken to a hospital, where he was stabilized, the Leake County sheriff’s department said.Īround midday Wednesday, law enforcement agencies then responded to a fire at the home, where the man believed to have been involved in the shooting had barricaded himself, Sheriff Tyree Jones of nearby Hinds County said. “I really do love my husband and he's the reason.Authorities in Leake County, Mississippi, responded to an incident Wednesday morning after four men escaped from the Raymond Detention Center in the area. "I know I had agreed to help them escape and run away with them, but I panicked and couldn't follow through with the rest of the plan,” Mitchell told investigators. The convicts were left to flee on foot, and they were on the run for 22 days before Matt was shot and killed and Sweat was captured. Mitchell told her husband she was experiencing a panic attack, and she was rushed to the hospital. “After I picked them up, the plan was to drive to my home and inmate Matt was going to kill 'the glitch.' Inmate Matt referred to Lyle as 'the glitch.'"īut on the night Matt and Sweat made it out of prison, Mitchell had a change of heart and did not meet them at the rendezvous point. I was to drive my Jeep and bring my cellphone, GPS, clothes, a gun, tents, sleeping bags, hatchet, fishing poles and money from a package I never picked up…,” Mitchell told authorities. "The agreed upon meeting time was midnight. According to Sweat, Mitchell spoke with Matt about murdering her husband after meeting them at the pickup point. Mitchell said she helped them break out because she was "caught up in the fantasy" of having " a different life." To start her new life, however, Mitchell needed to abandon her husband, fellow prison employee Lyle Mitchell. Along with providing the prisoners escape tools such as hacksaw blades and chisels, Mitchell admitted she had promised to meet up and run away with Matt and Sweat once they escaped prison. New York Inspector General Catherine Leahy Scott spoke with Mitchell at length regarding the planning and execution of the jailbreak, and Mitchell revealed she had been romantically involved with both Matt and Sweat. The married 51-year-old told Scott she "enjoyed the attention, the feeling both of them gave me," but that she only had a physical relationship with Matt. As part of her plea deal, Mitchell was required to submit to several interviews with law enforcement and disclose intimate details about how Matt and Sweat escaped. While Mitchell initially denied her involvement in the breakout, she later pleaded guilty in exchange for a lighter sentence. After prison employee Joyce Mitchell became implicated in aiding the 2015 escape of Clinton Correctional Facility inmates Richard Matt and David Sweat, she was arrested and charged with a felony count of promoting prison contraband and a misdemeanor count of criminal facilitation, according to NBC News.
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