The plan to spring Timothy Rouse from jail must have seemed like a long shot. The 19-year-old had been assessed by the United States authorities as highly dangerous. The prison, in La Grange, Kentucky, was suitably secure.
It was therefore the optimist among Rouse’s associates who had the simple idea of faxing the prison authorities from a local grocery store with bogus instructions that “demanded” he be released. Only an optimist might have believed officials would free their friend on the basis of an absurdly fabricated decree from the state’s highest court: a document with no letterhead and one littered with spelling and grammatical mistakes.
Rouse, who was held on charges of burglary, robbery, theft and assault, walked from jail and was not recaptured for another fortnight; the time it took the authorities to realise their mistake. Hardly a criminal mastermind, he was staying at his mother’s house when eight police officers arrived.
As the authorities began an investigation to find out who faxed the letter, officials demanded to know how security was breached so easily. “It’s outrageous that it happened,” Fulton County attorney Rick Major said. “I’m just glad nobody got hurt because he’s dangerous.”
Prison officials concede that the faked letter did bear the fax mark of a grocery store but said no one would have noticed because security policies do not require the sources of faxes to be traced. Greg Taylor, the facility’s director, said: “It’s not part of a routine check, but certainly, in hindsight, that would perhaps have caused somebody to ask a question.”
He said the letter itself would not automatically arouse suspicion because misspelling was commonplace in court documents. Carlos Moran, who is representing Rouse, declined to comment.
Though aided by secure buildings and the latest technology, prison authorities around the world still find themselves vulnerable to schemes devised by ingenious prisoners. Australian officials were forced to launch a manhunt last year for Robert Cole, a maximum-security prisoner who by dint of abstinence and laxatives slimmed down from 70kg to 54kg and then squeezed through a crack he had chiselled through a wall using a butter knife.
Last year Bosnian robber Muradif Hasanbegovic (36) constructed a parcel and mailed himself out of Karlau jail in Austria. He has not been seen since. – Guardian Unlimited Â