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New York escapees reportedly seen wandering in backyard of a home

A New York man said he spotted two men, believed to be escapees, wandering in the back yard of his home.
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(CNN) — They didn’t belong there, wandering around a backyard in the small upstate New York town of Dannemora after midnight.

“So I go look at him (and) I say, ‘What the hell are you doing in my yard? Get the hell out of here,'” a man told ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

The two men complied, one apologizing that he’d been on the wrong street. It wasn’t until the next day that this Dannemora resident — who asked not to be named — and his female friend realized who, if their hunch is correct, the two trespassers were: convicted murderers turned prison escapees Richard Matt and David Sweat.

Authorities didn’t know until 5:30 a.m. Saturday that this dangerous pair had busted out of the Clinton Correctional Facility. That’s about five hours after the pair in Dannemora saw the men in the backyard, one of them with a buzz cut, wearing a white T-shirt and carrying what appeared to be a guitar case over his shoulder.

“Lucky to be alive” is how the woman witness feels now that she has the full story, including Matt and Sweat’s violent pasts.

Still, folks around the area about 20 miles from the Canadian border are worried that their luck may run out. Matt and Sweat have killed before, and authorities fear they could kill again — knowing they have no reason not to go down fighting, given that they’ll face life behind bars if they’re caught.

Elizabeth Ahern, who lives in Plattsburgh, about 5 miles from the prison, isn’t taking any chances. The North Country, she says, is a place where people usually don’t bother locking their doors and have guns to hunt, not to guard themselves against criminals. But not anymore.

“It’s a scary situation,” Ahern told CNN’s “New Day” on Tuesday. “We are now closing our doors and locking them, and making sure we have knives and guns ready to go, just in case.”

Did they plan for what to do after escape?

There have been plenty of instances in which an inmate breaks out, then doesn’t know where to go for money, for food, for transportation. That kind of thing takes help or planning.

The thing is, there’s every indication a lot of planning — possibly weeks, months, if not years — went into this escape, so it seems likely the pair would have planned the getaway as well.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said they cut through a cell wall that included steel a quarter-inch thick, maneuvered across a catwalk, shimmied down six stories to a tunnel of pipes, followed that tunnel, broke through a double-brick wall, cut into a 24-inch steam pipe, shimmied their way through the steam pipe, cut another hole so they could get out of the pipe, and finally surfaced through a manhole.

“It was really unbelievable,” said Cuomo, who toured the inmates’ route out. “If it was a movie plot, you would say that it was overdone.”

Lenny DePaul, a former U.S. Marshals Service regional task force commander, believes the inmates may have been as meticulous in planning how to stay out of custody as they were in determining how to get out in the first place. He suspects they’re getting some help now, which makes authorities’ job even tougher.

“You would think there would be a Plan B and C that these guys have developed,” DePaul told CNN on Tuesday. “… These guys, I’m sure they’ve done their homework.”

So where are Matt and Sweat? Now more than three days since their bed checks turned up empty, no one is saying.

“They had such a head start, (I believe) they’ve had so much help,” said Tom Fuentes, a CNN analyst and former FBI assistant director. “They could be in Canada. They could be in Mexico by now. They could be anywhere in the United States.”

Expert: ‘They had to have help’

Finding the two fugitives is job No. 1 for authorities. Job No. 2 is figuring out how they got out — and who, if anyone, helped them become the first inmates ever to escape Clinton Correctional in its 170-year history.

Matthew Horace, a law enforcement veteran who spent years with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, said it is “impossible for them to have done this without any help from the inside (of the prison) and the outside.”

“They had to have help,” Horace told CNN, surmising that the escapees must have gotten their hands on the prison’s architectural plans. “… I wouldn’t be surprised if, when this all pans out, there’s more than one, two, three or five people that helped them on the inside.”

Cuomo said it’s possible the tools came from contractors performing maintenance work on the prison in Dannemora. The company that employs the maintenance workers has been cooperating with the investigation, New York State Police Maj. Charles Guess said.

One prison employee is being questioned as authorities try to determine if she gave a cell phone, money or tools to the escaped inmates, two sources briefed on the investigation told CNN on Tuesday. The woman has given a statement and is being “somewhat cooperative,” one source said.

While the woman has not been arrested or charged, criminologist Casey Jordan said the notion of a female employee helping male inmates is certainly possible.

“I don’t want to admit that it happens, but I know women who have met men in prisons working there, and fallen in love, and quit their jobs and married them when they got out,” Jordan said.

“We call this, very often, hybristophilia. It is the psychological phenomenon where women are attracted to a bad boy. And sometimes the worse he is, the more deep the attraction.”

Slain deputy’s brother: ‘I just hope he doesn’t come back’

Matt and Sweat are indeed some of the worst of the worst.

Matt was convicted on three counts of murder, three counts of kidnapping and two counts of robbery after he kidnapped a man and beat him to death in December 1997, state police said. He was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.

But he is also a veteran of prison breaks. In 1986, he escaped from an Erie County jail, the New York governor’s office said. Upon his capture, Matt was sent to a maximum security prison in Elmira, New York, on charges of escape and forgery. He was released from the Elmira Correctional Facility in May 1990.

Sweat was serving a life sentence without parole for killing sheriff’s Deputy Kevin Tarsia in 2002.

The slain deputy’s brother, Steven Tarsia, said knowing Sweat is on the loose is “like living the nightmare over again.”

“I just hope he doesn’t come back here,” he said.

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