Prison Worker Planned to Join Escaped Killers: Prosecutor

The prison worker charged with aiding in the escape of two convicted killers from a maximum-security facility planned to meet the pair at midnight on the day of the escape and join them as fugitives, the district attorney handling the case said.

"It's basically, show up down at the powerhouse at around midnight, and pick them up. As we all know now she failed to show up," Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie told NBC News Saturday. "Pick them up, leave the area."

"The three of them were going to move on together. That was the plan," Wylie said.

The massive manhunt for two escapees continued Saturday a day after Joyce Mitchell, a worker at an upstate New York maximum-security prison, was charged with smuggling in hacksaw blades, chisels, a punch and a screwdriver bit to help the men escape.

More than 800 law enforcement officers have joined the search, concentrating in a rural area in the Adirondacks near the Canadian border around the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora. Residents in the area reported seeing two men jumping a stone wall on Friday.

Mitchell, 51, was arraigned late Friday night on a felony charge of promoting prison contraband and a misdemeanor count of criminal facilitation. Her lawyer, Keith Bruno, entered a not guilty plea on her behalf.

Mitchell is accused of befriending inmates David Sweat and Richard Matt and giving them the contraband, according to criminal complaints. District Attorney Andrew Wylie said earlier the contraband didn't include the power tools the men used to cut holes in their cell walls and a steam pipe to escape through a manhole last weekend.

Wearing a green short-sleeved top and jeans, Mitchell entered the courtroom with her hands cuffed in front of her. She looked scared and did not speak. She was ordered held in jail on $100,000 cash bail or $200,000 bond and is due back in court Monday morning.

At a news conference after her arrest, state police Maj. Charles Guess said officers were getting closer with every step they take on the ground and in the investigation.

"We're coming for you, and we will not stop until you are caught," Guess said in addressing the escapees.

Although searchers were contending with bad weather, so were Sweat and Matt, the major said.

"They've got to be cold, wet, tired and hungry" if they haven't escaped the area or found shelter, he said.

Mitchell's family has said she wouldn't have helped the convicts break out.

An instructor in the tailor shop where the men worked, Mitchell is also suspected of agreeing to be a getaway driver but didn't show up, leaving the men on foot early Saturday morning.

Mitchell has a job with a yearly salary of $57,697, overseeing inmates who sew clothes and learn to repair sewing machines at the prison. Amid the criminal case, she was suspended without pay.

Within the past year, officials looked into whether Mitchell had improper ties to the 34-year-old Sweat, who was serving a life sentence for killing a sheriff's deputy, Wylie said. He gave no details on the nature of the suspected relationship.

The investigation didn't turn up anything solid enough to warrant disciplinary charges against her, the district attorney said.

Matt was serving 25 years to life for the 1997 kidnap, torture and hacksaw dismemberment of Matt's 76-year-old former boss, whose body was found in pieces in a river.

On Thursday, a person close to the investigation said Mitchell had befriended the two men and agreed to be the getaway driver but never showed up. The person was not authorized to discuss the case and spoke on condition of anonymity.

A former slipper-factory employee who won three terms as tax collector in her town near Dannemora, Mitchell has worked at the prison for at least five years, according to a neighbor, Sharon Currier. Mitchell's husband, Lyle, also works in industrial training there.

"She's a good, good person," Currier said. "She's not somebody who's off the wall."

The garment shop is intended to give prisoners job skills and work habits. In general, an inmate assigned to such a job might work several hours a day there, five days a week, meaning he would have significant contact with supervisors.

Mitchell's union, Civil Service Employees Association Local 1000, would not comment Friday on the investigation of Mitchell or the current allegations.

But her daughter-in-law, Paige Mitchell, said this week that her mother-in-law never mentioned Sweat, Matt or any other inmates she encountered. "She doesn't get too involved," Paige Mitchell told the Press-Republican of Plattsburgh.

And Mitchell's son Tobey told NBC that she would not have helped the inmates escape and that she checked herself into a hospital with chest pains on Saturday, the day the breakout was discovered.

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Klepper reported from Albany. Associated Press writers Jennifer Peltz in New York and Chris Carola and Michael Virtanen in Albany contributed to this report.

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