
Arkansas mayor, murder victim's sister reacts to Grant Hardin's escape
Arkansas mayor, murder victim's sister reacts to Grant Hardin's escape
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Ex-Arkansas police chief imprisoned for murder escapes prison
Grant Hardin, a former Gateway, Arkansas, police chief serving time for murder and rape, escaped from the North Central Unit in Calico Rock on May 25.
unbranded - Newsworthy
The town where Arkansas prison escapee and convicted murderer Grant Hardin once served as police chief remains on edge, according to its mayor who is also the sister of Hardin's victim.
"Anxiety is still high," Cheryl Tillman, the mayor of Gateway, Arkansas, told USA TODAY in an interview May 28. "I think everybody's still on alert, being vigilant, doing every precaution that they can."
Hardin, 56, escaped from the North Central Unit in Calico Rock on May 25, wearing a "makeshift outfit designed to mimic law enforcement," according to the Arkansas Department of Corrections.
Hardin had been serving time for the 2017 murder of James Appleton, Tillman's brother, in Gateway and the 1997 rape of a school teacher in nearby Rogers. He was sentenced to 80 years on the combined convictions, according to court records.
Tillman described Hardin, who served as Gateway's police chief while Tillman was on the city council in 2016, as "very arrogant" and "angry."
"He's an evil person," Tillman said.
Hardin remains at large as of Wednesday night, with the FBI, Department of Corrections, Arkansas State Police and local police were working to find Hardin, officials said earlier in the day.
Sister remembers brother slain at hands of 'Devil in the Ozarks'
Hardin pleaded guilty to in 2017 to murder in the first degree for shooting and killing Appleton in February of the same year, according to court records.
Appleton's brother-in-law and Cheryl's husband, Andrew Tillman, told Benton County Sheriff's investigators that he was on the phone with Appleton when he was shot, according to a probable cause affidavit. Andrew was the Gateway's mayor at the time of the shooting.
Cheryl described Appleton as a "very good brother" with a strong civic sense who obtained a license to work for the Gateway Rural Water Authority when asked by his brother-in-law.
"Everybody in this town knew James. They knew that they could call James if they needed help on anything," Tillman said.
Tillman said that learning of Hardin's escape brought back memories of the murder.
"Everything was happening all over again. From the time he shot my brother and the time we had to go to court with him," Tillman said.
The 1997 rape was the focus of a 2023 documentary titled "Devil in the Ozarks," for which Tillman was interviewed. She said that the interview was "tough to do."
"We've since been in touch with the subjects of that film and law enforcement and are praying for Hardin's immediate capture in the name of justice and the victims and their families' peace of mind," Ari Mark, one of the executive producers of the documentary, told USA TODAY in a statement May 28.
Tillman emphasized the need for residents of Gateway, a place she described as "a very quiet town" where "everybody knows everybody," to remain vigilant while Hardin remained at-large.
"Lock their doors. If they need to, load their guns," Tillman said. "Whatever they need to do, just stay vigilant and watch your backs."
Contributing: N'dea Yancey-Bragg, Michael Loria, Jorge L. Ortiz, USA TODAY.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
29 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Longtime Grand Avenue fabric shop Treadle Yard Goods has closed amid owner's cancer battle
Treadle Yard Goods, a fabric shop with a nearly half-century-long history on Grand Avenue, has closed as its owner undergoes cancer treatment. Michele Hoaglund, who bought the store about a decade ago from its founding owners, was diagnosed with ovarian cancer around Christmas, she wrote on the store's social media page. The shop's final day was June 1. 'My focus must be on my health and getting well,' she wrote in the store's farewell message on its website. 'I have enjoyed getting to know so many of you over the years and loved seeing and hearing about your sewing projects.' Hoaglund could not be reached for comment this week. Hoaglund, a longtime employee who had initiated the store's class program, took over the store in 2015 from Mary Daley, who had founded it in 1976 with her late husband, Paul. The shop was known not just for its wide fabric selection but also for its employees' skill at supporting and advising customers' projects, and for its community outreach efforts. In 2020, the store provided free kits for sewists to make their own Covid-19 face masks. Then, in 2022, amid the Russian invasion in Ukraine, Hoaglund organized community sewing sessions to produce more than 200 handmade baby blankets for Ukrainian refugees in Poland. Derrick Thompson guilty of all charges in Minneapolis high-speed crash that killed 5 young women Minneapolis man sentenced for stabbing, hanging St. Paul woman's dog after argument Snelling and St. Clair intersection fully reopens after construction Ex-Metro Transit employee claims religious discrimination in lawsuit St. Paul police name detective, officer, employee of the year
Yahoo
29 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Emily Kiser Wasn't Present When Son Trigg Drowned: Report
A major update on influencer Emily Kiser has emerged in the wake of her son's drowning death. What exactly happened in the moments before Trigg Kiser died has not been detailed publicly, and Kiser is trying to keep it that way in court. However, People magazine has now revealed that Kiser was not home when her son drowned. That's a major new detail. On June 5, a source told People that "Kiser was not home at the time of Trigg's drowning." It's not clear who was watching the boy. The Maricopa County Medical Examiner's office confirmed Trigg's death, saying it occurred on May 18, 2025. Emilie Kiser has 3.4 million followers on TikTok. Her page is heavily focused on her family and two kids. The public information officer for Chandler, AZ, police told USA Today that Trigg Kiser died "after being pulled from a backyard pool days earlier." The police told USA Today they "responded to a drowning call at a home on Ashley Drive in Chandler, Arizona, around 7 p.m. local time for a child who had been pulled unconscious out of a backyard pool." That incident occurred on May 12. According to People, Kiser has filed a lawsuit seeking to keep records and videos sealed in the case, and she filed a declaration that outlined her "grief and trauma." Her lawyer wrote in a filing that Kiser and her family "desperately want to grieve in private, but sadly, the public will not let them." The source told People that Kiser wants a court to keep the records sealed so she does not have to "relive the aftermath through viral" videos. A source told Us Weekly that Kiser's quest for privacy is because she wants to keep the 'most traumatic moment of her life' from public view. She has won at least a temporary reprieve. A judge granted her "temporary confidentiality on her request for privacy," Us Weekly reported, 'until a determination is made that balances the public's need for information vs privacy interests.'Emily Kiser Wasn't Present When Son Trigg Drowned: Report first appeared on Men's Journal on Jun 6, 2025


USA Today
30 minutes ago
- USA Today
Teen driving 132 mph told officers he was going to a job interview, police say
A Connecticut man who was caught by police driving at 132 miles per hour told officials his speeding was not due to a joyride, but instead, because he was running late to a job interview, police said. In a press release from the Connecticut State Police, officials said 19-year-old Azmir Djurkovic was caught speeding while state troopers were conducting 'motor vehicle enforcement' in the town of Cromwell. During their shift, police saw a Mercedes E300 traveling "faster than the flow of traffic," the release said. A speed radar detected the car going at 132 miles per hour, more than two times the Connecticut default speed limit on interstates, which is 65 miles per hour. But the driver was not caught immediately. Police said when a trooper tried to execute a traffic stop with lights and sirens, the driver sped off and made 'unsafe lane changes.' Instead of chasing after Djurkovic, state police contacted the registered owner of the vehicle, who said Djurkovic was driving at the time. "Troopers obtained a phone number for Djurkovic, who admitted to driving and stated he did not stop because he was late for a job interview," state police said. Djurkovic turned himself in to officials, where he was arrested and now faces multiple charges, including reckless driving, engaging police in a pursuit and reckless endangerment. According to the press release, Djurkovic was released on a $2,500 bond and set to make his next court appearance on June 17. USA TODAY was not able to immediately find an attorney representing Djurkovic at this time. Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach him at and follow him on X @fern_cerv_.