Where Knowledge Junkies Get Their Fix
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Escape Artistry
by Mary - October 9, 2006 - 8:46 AM

mcnairRichard_newest_cont.jpgThe current New Yorker has a great article about murderer Richard McNair, who is the only person to escape from a maximum-security federal prison in the last 13 years and, apparently, a bit of an evil genius. You can’t read the article online (the New Yorker only publishes a few of its articles on the web every week), but you can see a remarkable video in which he outsmarts a cop who’s on patrol looking for him. The mag describes the video, which was taken by a camera on the cop’s dashboard, thusly:

“Within two hours of receiving instructions to be on the lookout for a freshly escaped prisoner, the cop spotted a man jogging along a railroad track who turned out to be carrying no identification and who roughly matched a description of the fugitive. Yet, somehow, the men’s conversation ended the jogger saying, ‘You had a good day, now,’ and the cop replying, ‘Be careful, buddy,’ and sending him on his way. Only by wrestling the officer to the ground and seizing his weapon could McNair have demonstrated more literally what it means to be disarming.

Lights, camera, action:


The article notes that the blunder was actually very fortunate: McNair might well have killed the cop had he been cornered. No one knows where he is now, but if you live in Western Canada (where he was last spotted) and you see a guy who looks like this, don’t assume he’s your “buddy.”

Comments (5)
  1. This brought to mind the Sesame Street Classic “The Great Cookie Thief” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Euye9A21uq4

    Cheeto

  2. I see at least one inconsistency - he called himself Robert Jones at first, then Jimmy Jones later…apparently the cop didn’t pick up on that. But I guess the confidence and lack of hesitancy with which he answered the cop’s questions were enough.

  3. That is just plain scary.

  4. The Good Old Boy routine. Now if they had been looking for a black man…

  5. Very scary. I noticed he changed his name as well.

    It’s 113 degrees on the temperature gage — is that outdoors or in the car, I wonder?

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