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- After months of silent preparation, on the night of June 11, 1962, four prisoners placed realistic heads sculpted of toilet paper and paste in their bunks, pulled the grates from the walls of their cells, slipped into the service corridor behind them, climbed a ventilation shaft to the prison roof, climbed down a drainpipe to the ground, scaled two razor-wire fences, traveled to the prison’s searchlight blindspot where they inflated a homemade raft they’d built, and paddled out into San...
lifehacker.com/8-of-the-worlds-most-amazing-real-life-prison-escapes-18494273798 of the World's Most Amazing Real-Life Prison Escapes (and ...
Dec 1, 2021 · From the 1962 Alcatraz escape to Henri Charrière's daring breakout from Devil's Island, these are the world's most famous prison escapes. Some prisoners dug tunnels while others simply talked their way out, but they all managed to expose serious flaws in prison security that made them legends.
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It was the largest prison escape in history. In 1972, six political prisoners escaped from the prison at Rawson, Argentina, and fled to neighbouring Chile in a hijacked plane. Nineteen escapees who arrived late to the airport were recaptured and sixteen of them later executed.
Name#DatePrison Name41969, 17 AugustPrison de Percé41972, 21 August41973, 6 JunePalais de Justice Compiègne41978, 8 MayMar 18, 2013 · Prisoners have escaped fron institutions across Canada, including Kingston Penitentiary, where bank robber Ty Conn got over a 10-metre perimeter fence at night in 1999 by using a hand-made ladder...
- The Inmates Who Fled The Rock in A Raft Made from Raincoats
- The Union POWs Who Tunneled Out of A Confederate Prison
- Britain’s Biggest Prison Break
- The Notorious Drug Kingpin Who Escaped–Twice
- The Famous Gangster Who Got Out of Jail with A Fake Gun
- The Nobleman Who Fled The Tower of London in Drag
- The Serial Killer Who Went on The Lam in The Rockies
- The WWII Prison Escape That Almost Took Flight
From 1934 to 1963, the U.S. penitentiary on Alcatraz Island in the middle of San Francisco Bay housed some of America’s most notorious criminals, including Al Capone, George “Machine Gun” Kelly and James “Whitey” Bulger. During its 29 years as a federal prison, approximately 1,545 men did time at the maximum-security facility, nicknamed The Rock, a...
On February 9, 1864, 109 Union officers tunneled their way out of Libby Prison, a bleak, Confederate prisoner-of-war facility in Richmond, Virginia. After opening in March 1962, the prison, situated in a former tobacco warehouse, quickly became an overcrowded, disease-ridden place where prisoners were subjected to severe food shortages. Starting in...
The largest prison escape in British history took place on September 25, 1983, when 38 inmates, all of them members of the Irish Republican Army, broke out of Her Majesty’s Prison Maze near Belfast, Northern Ireland. Opened in 1971, the maximum-security facility housed a number of men convicted of crimes linked to the Troubles, the conflict between...
On February 22, 2014, one of the world’s most-wanted criminals, drug trafficker Joaquin “El Chapo” (“Shorty”) Guzman Loera, was arrested after outrunning law enforcement for more than a decade. Guzman, a third-grade dropout, was first arrested in 1993 and sentenced to 20 years behind bars for murder. While locked up in a high-security prison in the...
After spending most of his 20s in state prison for attempting to hold up a small-town Indiana grocer, John Dillinger was paroled in May 1933 and went on to pull off a string of bank robberies that turned him into one of America’s most-wanted gangsters. In September 1933, he was arrested in connection with a bank heist and jailed in Lima, Ohio. The ...
After joining the Jacobite rebellion of 1715, Catholic nobleman William Maxwell, 5th Earl of Nithsdale, was locked up in the Tower of London, found guilty of treason and sentenced to die. Shortly before she believed her husband was to be executed, Lady Nithsdale went to visit him in prison in 1716, accompanied by her maid and several female friends...
In 1976, law school dropout Ted Bundybegan serving time in a Utah prison for a kidnapping conviction. The following year, he was extradited to Aspen, Colorado, to stand trial for the 1975 murder of a nurse. During a recess at a courthouse hearing in June 1977, Bundy, who was acting as his own attorney, asked to use the court’s law library. Left alo...
During World War II, Colditz Castle, an ancient fortress in eastern Germany, was converted into a high-security POW camp. Many of the men incarcerated in the castle, officially known during the war as Oflag IV-C, had been sent there because they’d previously escaped, or attempted to escape, from other POW camps. A number of prisoners tried to break...
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A prison escape (referred as a bust out, breakout, jailbreak, jail escape, or prison break) is the act of an inmate leaving prison through unofficial or illegal ways. Normally, when this occurs, an effort is made on the part of authorities to recapture them and return them to their original detainers.
Aug 19, 2022 · Escape one: Shiratori served three years at Aomori prison, then escaped by picking the lock of his handcuffs with a wire he’d taken from a bucket. He was quickly captured and sent to Akita...
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Throughout American history, there have been numerous prison escapes that have captured the public’s attention and imagination. Some of these escapes have been successful, while others have ended in tragedy or recapture.