
Staff fired after ‘Devil in the Ozarks' prison escape
The pair, who were employees at the Calico Rock prison in Arkansas, USA, were fired due policy violations which allowed the prisoner, real name Grant Hardin, to escape.
It comes as corrections officials faced questions from lawmakers on Thursday, who said the escape pointed to deeper problems within the system.
The head of the Arkansas Board of Corrections told state lawmakers the violations allowed Grant Hardin to escape from the Calico Rock prison wearing a makeshift law enforcement uniform on May 25. But officials have said there was no evidence employees knowingly assisted Hardin's escape.
One of the fired employees had allowed Hardin onto an outside kitchen dock unsupervised and the other employee worked in a tower and had opened the gate Hardin walked through without confirming his identity, Chairman Benny Magness said.
'If either one of them would have been following policy, it wouldn't have happened,' Magness told members of the Legislative Council's charitable, penal, and correctional institutions subcommittee.
Hardin was captured 1.5 miles (2.4 kilometers) northwest of the Calico Rock prison on June 6. Authorities said he escaped by donning an outfit designed to look like a law enforcement uniform. Magness said the outfit was crafted from an inmate uniform and kitchen apron dyed black using a marker while a soup can lid and a Bible cover were fashioned to look like a badge.
Lawmakers said the escape pointed to systemic problems beyond the two employees — including how Hardin was able to fashion the fake uniform without guards noticing.
'I think we've got major issues here that need to be dealt with,' said Republican Sen. Matt McKee, who co-chairs the subcommittee.
Hardin, a former police chief in the small town of Gateway, near the Arkansas-Missouri border, is serving lengthy sentences for murder and rape. He was the subject of the TV documentary 'Devil in the Ozarks.'
After his capture, Hardin was transferred to a maximum security prison in Varner, a small community about 65 miles (125 kilometers) southeast of Little Rock.
Hardin has pleaded not guilty to an escape charge and is set to go on trial in November.
Hardin held a job in the kitchen in the prison and had not had any disciplinary problems during his time there.
In addition to the uniform, Hardin fashioned a ladder out of wooden pallets that were on the dock and also took peanut butter sandwiches from the prison to survive on after his escape, corrections officials told lawmakers Thursday.
Hardin planned to use the ladder to scale the fence and escape if the gate wasn't opened for him, said Dexter Payne, director of the division of correction.
'There are a lot of things he did unnoticed and unaware,' Republican Sen. Ben Gilmore said during the hearing. 'I don't think you can blame just two people for that.'
Members of the panel also said Hardin's escape points to the need to scrutinize a classification system that placed a convicted murderer in what's primarily a medium-security facility.
Payne said a critical incident review of the escape planned later this month may determine if other employees will face firings, demotions or disciplinary actions. It also will determine what other policy changes may be needed, he said.
State Police is also investigating the escape to determine whether any laws, policies or procedures were violated in the escape. Col. Mike Hagar, the head of state police and secretary of public safety, said the final report on the investigation may be completed within 30 days.
Thomas Hurst, warden of the prison —formally called the North Central Unit — said State Police was not notified immediately of the escape though local police were, blaming it on a miscommunication.
'There's nobody that's more embarrassed about (the escape) than me,' Hurst said. 'It's not good. We failed, and I understand it.'
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
23 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Cincinnati brawl suspect now hit with FEDERAL charge
One of the alleged aggressors in the viral Cincinnati brawl has been hit with a federal charge, according to authorities. Montianez Merriweather, 34, was accused of being the 'catalyst' in the July 26 beating in downtown Cincinnati that left six people injured and caused widespread outrage on social media. The suspect was indicted by a grand jury with illegally possessing a firearm as a previously convicted felon, according to the United States Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Ohio. Prosecutors say Merriweather was illegally carrying a 9mm pistol on July 2. He faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted. 'There is no place for violence in our communities,' said US Attorney Dominick S. Gerace II. 'Those who commit violent acts can expect to be scrutinized and they will be held accountable for violations of federal criminal law.' Both sides of Holly's face were extremely bruised following the assault, with her right eye a dark shade of purple and almost closed over due to the swelling Merriweather was initially charged with aggravated assault over the brawl. A total of seven people have been charged in connection with the filmed melee. The brawl sparked massive outrage after horror images emerged of a female victim with black eyes and a swollen, bruised face. In shocking footage of the fight, a man in a white t-shirt was shoved to the ground and beaten by two men as other members of the crowd jeered and joined in. The gang beat the man for nearly a minute as he lay in the middle of the street, seemingly stepping on his head multiple times. When the barrage of attacks temporarily stopped, he was seen attempting to stand - but immediately fell over in apparent disorientation. A woman in a black dress rushed to his aid, but was attacked by the crowd, suffering two blows to the face. The impact caused her to fall, with her head slamming onto the pavement. Blood spewed from her mouth. The woman, identified only as Holly, said that police 'acted nonchalant' when they arrived at the scene and did not call for backup or an ambulance. She defended her actions that night, noting that she was the only person who decided to jump in to help the man because it was 'the right thing to do.' After his arrest, two relatives of Merriweather told WLWT that the race of the victims had catapulted the case to national attention. 'If it was an African American woman who got knocked out... We wouldn't have been going through all this,' one of the women said. Another woman, believed to be Merriweather's mother Clarissa, said her son is an honor roll student with 'a biracial child' as she denied he was racist. 'He's not a racist,' she said. 'It wasn't like they're thugs... these Russians was walking down the street and on the video he said "you wanna mess with these Russians?"' 'He smacked the first guy... my child is in school, he has five kids, he's on the B honor roll in school.' Police have described Merriweather as the 'catalyst' for the alleged 'coordinated attack.'


The Guardian
24 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Ice deported three US citizen children, including a boy with cancer, to Honduras, suit alleges
A lawsuit filed in Louisiana on behalf of two mothers and their four minor children, including one with cancer, claims the two families were unlawfully denied due process and deported by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) to Honduras in April 2025. The lawsuit, which names attorney general Pam Bondi, Department of Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem and various Ice officials as defendants, alleges Ice violated its own policies, and multiple federal laws, when officers secretly detained the families, denied access to counsel and swiftly deported them to Honduras, ignoring legal filings. The claim, JLV v Acuna, filed by the National Immigration Project, says that three of the children – a four-year-old boy with stage 4 kidney cancer, his seven-year-old sister and a two-year-old girl – were included in the deportation sweep despite being American citizens. The parents 'were never given a choice as to whether their children should be deported with them and were prohibited from contacting their counsel or having meaningful contact with their families to arrange for the care of their children', the lawsuit claims. The mothers, pseudonymously named as Rosario and Julia, allege they wanted their children to remain in the US but the families were 'illegally deported without even a semblance of due process'. One of the children, named as five-year-old Romeo, was diagnosed with a 'rare and aggressive form of kidney cancer' at age two and had been receiving treatment in the US. 'The failure to allow his mother to arrange for his care, in violation of Ice's own directive, and his unlawful deportation to Honduras interfered with his needed medical treatment,' the suit, filed in the US district court for the middle district of Louisiana on 31 July, states. Sirine Shebaya, executive director of the National Immigration Project, said in a statement that 'Ice's actions in this case are not only unlawful, they are cruel and show a complete disregard for family values and the wellbeing of children'. 'No government agency should have the power to disappear families, ignore medical needs, and disregard its own policies and constitutional rights simply in order to achieve a goal of unfettered enforcement,' Shebaya added. Department of Homeland Security assistant secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement to NBC News that US children were not being 'deported' and denied that the parents were not given a choice regarding the care of their children before being sent to Honduras. 'Rather than separate their families, ICE asked the mothers if they wanted to be removed with their children or if they wanted ICE to place the children with someone safe the parent designates. The parents in this instance made the determination to take their children with them back to Honduras,' McLaughlin said. McLaughlin added that when there is a health issue, 'ICE makes sure that treatment is available in the country to which the illegal alien is being removed. The implication that ICE would deny a child the medical care they need is flatly FALSE, and it is an insult to the men and women of federal law enforcement.' The lawsuit comes amid claims and counterclaims about the number of people being swept up in the administration's immigration enforcement efforts, and the legality of those efforts under the Alien Enemies Act of 1798. There have been more than 1,000 deportation flights to 62 countries since Donald Trump was sworn into office in January, according to the immigrant advocacy group Witness at the Border. But that number of flights is becoming more difficult to track, the group warns, after air charter companies began requesting that their tail numbers be removed from public flight-tracking websites. Sign up to This Week in Trumpland A deep dive into the policies, controversies and oddities surrounding the Trump administration after newsletter promotion Rosario, one of the mothers named in the lawsuit, told the legal group that the deportation experience had been 'scary and overwhelming'. 'After so many years in the United States, it has been devastating to be sent to Honduras,' she said. 'Life in Honduras is incredibly hard. I don't have the resources to care for my children the way they need.' The other, Julia, said: 'This whole situation has been incredibly stressful.' She had arrived in the US in 2019 after fleeing Honduras and applied for asylum, but was forced to wait in Mexico under Trump's first-term 'remain in Mexico' policy. She returned to the US in 2021. The lawsuit states that she was told to check in with Ice, bringing both of her daughters to her regular Ice check-ins in February 2021. But in April she went to an appointment and was soon told she would be deported along with her children. 'I was lied to,' she said. 'I never imagined they would send me and my children to Honduras. Returning to Honduras has meant leaving my husband behind, and that's been very hard. My daughters have also suffered a lot. We were deprived of the opportunity to be and make decisions as a family.' Her attorney claims that an Ice officer told her to write on a piece of paper that her daughter would be going with her to Honduras. When she objected, an Ice officer allegedly told her that if she refused, her daughter would be sent to a foster home. The Department of Homeland Security said in its statement to NBC News that it 'takes its responsibility to protect children seriously and will continue to work with federal law enforcement to ensure that children are safe and protected'. In a statement, Erin Hebert of Ware Immigration said Ice officials had 'betrayed their most basic duty: to safeguard the wellbeing of US citizens. These children and their families deserve justice and accountability for the flagrant and unapologetic violations of their rights.'


Daily Mail
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Moment skateboarder, 46, is picked up like a TODDLER and plonked in his seat during mid-air racist meltdown
A heroic former high school football player restrained a drunken Breeze Airways passenger during a racist mid-air meltdown by picking him up like a toddler and plonking him in his seat. David Leroy Carter, 46, allegedly yelled racial slurs and swung a skateboard and belt at flight attendants and fellow passengers during Los Angeles bound Flight MX704. Witnesses say Carter dropped 'F-bombs and N-bombs' as he waved his board and acted violently towards others on-board. He also allegedly threw trash on the aircraft floor. Footage captured from inside the cabin shows how Carter, with a smile plastered on his face, ignored orders from a flight attendant desperately begging him to sit down. 'You need to sit down,' the flight attendant said, as the unruly passenger pushed past her down the aisle. 'You need to sit down.' The flight attendant, holding a restraint in her hands, turned to the other passengers and asked if there was anyone who could help her put the device on Carter. That's when 6'6' Ray - who had been a tight end and defensive end for his high school football team - stood up, grabbed Carter under his armpits and tossed him in a seat. 'Sit your a** down,' Ray told Carter as the flight attendant cheered: 'There we go.' His decisive use of strength saw him hailed as the 'linebacker in 17C' by other passengers. A Breeze Airways flight diverted to an airport in Colorado after an unruly passenger got into an altercation, according to the airline and local authorities. The flight diverted after the passenger was waving a skateboard and got into an altercation with flight attendants and… — ABC7 News (@abc7newsbayarea) August 14, 2025 The pilot was forced to divert to Grand Junction Regional Airport in Colorado due to Carter's violent outburst. The suspect was taken into police custody upon landing. The diversion meant the usually six-hour journey took a total 13 hours, with the plane forced to wait on the tarmac in Colorado for law enforcement officials. In the air, Carter was restrained twice as the staff urgently arranged for the emergency landing and notified local police of the situation. But he managed to break free - using a 'waist belt' to whack anyone trying to stop his reign of terror. Other passengers reportedly had to hold him down until the plane landed. Ray, who attended Jordan High School in LA's Watts neighborhood, said his jumping in to help was an impulse. 'Instinct just took over,' he told KNBC. 'I didn't know it was going to get all like this. It was just instinct.' Speaking to ABC, he added: 'My son was on there and there were other kids on there, and so I just had to sit him down.' Comedian PK Mackey, who was sat a row away from the unruly passenger, praised the student for his 'amazing' response to the horrific incident. 'He literally picked this man up underneath his armpits and put him down like it was in a car seat,' Mackey told the news outlet. 'It was amazing.' Another passenger, Jeff Hankerson, told ABC: 'He just got up and sat him down in the seat like a little kid.' Audio from Air Traffic Controllers obtained by 13 News Now indicates the belt carter used to attack his fellow passengers was one of the restraints he broke out of. 'Approach said that the passenger is free and he's using what they are trying to restrain him with as a weapon,' they noted. The operator responding on the ground responded: 'Hitting people with his own waist belt, right?' 'Belt, yes sir,' the flight employee responded. It is not immediately clear if this belt was one of his restraints or if it was one he was wearing. The Daily Mail has reached out to the airline of comment and clarification. When the plane finally landed, Grand Junction Police swarmed the plane and took Carter into custody. Footage captured by a terrified passenger shows the aggravated perpetrator being escorted down the aisle by police officers as he was handcuffed. The incident is being investigated by the FBI, which says charges will soon be filed by the US Attorney's Office for Colorado. It is unclear what those charges will be. The police department said that there were no reported injuries. But an airline spokesperson did confirm a flight attendant and a guest were evaluated for minor injuries. 'Our focus now is on taking care of our Crew and remaining Guests who have been unfairly inconvenienced by this unfortunate event and getting them safely to their final destination as quickly as possible.' The chaos erupted in the middle of Flight MX704's journey from Norfolk, Virginia to the southern California hotspot on Wednesday. The flight took off from Norfolk just after 9am, but was forced to land in Colorado around 11.30am local time - four and a half hours after takeoff, flight tracking data revealed. The flight from Grand Junction to Los Angeles was rescheduled for just after 6:15pm local time, FlightAware data showed. The journey to LA took about an hour and a half. There have been 1,007 unruly passenger reports since the start of the year, according to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). 'Incidents where airline passengers have disrupted flights with threatening or violent behavior are an ongoing problem and airlines have seen rapid growth in occurrences since 2021,' the agency wrote. In 2021, the FAA saw a record-high number of outrageous incidents and received a staggering 5,973 reports that year.