logo
David Sweat reflects on 'Escape at Dannemora' 10 years later

David Sweat reflects on 'Escape at Dannemora' 10 years later

New York Post07-06-2025
A decade after he broke out of Clinton state prison in the infamous 'Escape at Dannemora' and led cops on a 23-day manhunt that riveted the nation, convicted killer David Sweat, in an exclusive jailhouse interview with The Post, confessed to his one regret.
He should have picked a better partner in crime.
'If I hadn't done it with him, I'd probably still be out,' Sweat, 44, said of fellow escapee Richard Matt.
Advertisement
8 David Sweat shared his one big regret with The Post during a visit at Mid-State Correctional Facility — nearly 10 years to the day after his infamous escape from Dannemora.
AP
With his wrists cuffed and a thick chain wrapped around his waist, the clean-shaven, bespectacled Sweat spoke publicly for the first time in eight years during a tearful, hour-long interview at the Mid-State Correctional Facility in upstate Marcy.
The Post reporter, there for the 10th anniversary of the infamous June 6, 2015 escape, was his first visitor in three years, Sweat claimed.
Advertisement
'If I'd known everything about him before, I probably would've done it alone,' Sweat said of the 49-year-old Matt.
Sweat said he now believes Matt was as a confidential informant for the police back in the 1990s. Matt's 25-year to life sentence began in July 2008 after he was convicted of kidnapping, torturing and murdering 76-year-old William Rickerson, his former employer, in Niagara County in December 1997.
8 Sweat was recaptured on June 28, 2015, when he was shot twice in the back by a state trooper just south of the Canadian border.
AP
'You can't trust someone like that . . . and that's worse than the drinking,' Sweat said.
Advertisement
He was referring to Matt's heavy boozing after the duo found bottles of liquor at an uninhabited cabin following their escape.
'I try not to live with regrets and look back, because it is what it is at this point,' Sweat continued in a soft voice.
'On the one hand, I'm glad that it helped some guys get better treatment and changed things in [Clinton Correctional Facility], because there was some bad crap going on.
'On the other hand, you know, I'm in here for the rest of my life.'
Advertisement
He added, 'I just wanted to be free.'
Sweat now spends his days in an 18-by-5-foot cell.
8 Sweat and Richard Matt escaped from Clinton Correctional Facility on June 6, 2015 with the help of the prison's seamstress, Joyce Mitchell (pictured).
LP Media
He claims he has been in solitary confinement for 10 years, shuttled between nine different prisons.
Sweat and Matt became close while serving time in adjoining cells at Clinton, where Sweat was serving a life sentence without parole for the 2002 killing of a Broome County sheriff's deputy.
They hatched their elaborate bid for freedom with the aid of a prison seamstress — the 'Shawskank,' Joyce Mitchell — who was accused of having sexual relationships with both fugitives. Mitchell has repeatedly claimed she and Sweat were never intimate — though she admitted to investigators she had oral sex with Matt and gave nude photos of herself to Matt to give to Sweat.
Using tools smuggled in by a correction officer that Mitchell concealed in frozen hamburger meat, they cut through their cell's steel walls over the span of months. The night of the escape, they crawled nearly 500 feet through a pipe before coming to the surface at a manhole cover outside the prison walls.
But Mitchell never met them with a getaway car as planned.
Advertisement
8 Sweat slammed Ben Stiller's hit 2018 Netflix series 'Escape at Dannemora' — in which he is played by actor Paul Dano (left) and Matt is portrayed by Benicio del Toro (right) — as a 'Hollywood production.'
/SHOWTIME
The fugitives made a desperate dash toward to the Candian borden, hiking through dense woods and swamps, and squatting in abandoned cabins, as 1,500 cops hunted them.
They eventually split up because Sweat could no longer tolerate Matt's drinking and slow pace.
Matt was killed in a standoff with cops on the 20th day of the manhunt. Sweat was captured two days later, after he was shot twice by a state trooper just south of the border.
Advertisement
Ben Stiller's hit 2018 series 'Escape at Dannemora,' in which Sweat is played by actor Paul Dano and Matt is portrayed by Benicio del Toro, reignited the public's fascination in the caper.
Although he hasn't seen it, Sweat is not impressed.
'I don't like it because a lot of things . . . were untrue. Like, the stuff between me and Mitchell. We weren't involved like that at all,' he insisted.
8 Using tools smuggled in by Mitchell, the convicted killers cut and climbed into an 18-inch steam pipe in the facility's underbelly, then crawled nearly 500 feet before coming to the surface through a manhole cover.
Getty Images
Advertisement
He also refuted a scene in which corrections officer Gene Palmer — played by actor David Morse — slams his head into a toilet.
'That never happened,' Sweat said. 'I never really interacted with Palmer. That was Matt's guy.'
Sweat does not believe he can escape again.
'They'll never let me go to general population,' he said. 'They think I'd try to do it again or I'd help someone else.'
Advertisement
Any future escape attempts would be impossible in his cell at Mid State, he insisted.
8 'If I hadn't done it with him, I'd probably still be out somewhere,' Sweat said of his partner-in-crime, Richard Matt (pictured).
AP
'If you cut through the walls, you'd just be in another cell. And if you cut through the basement — I mean, they use the basement in this prison.'
Asked if he was lonely, tears began to well in Sweat's eyes before he replied, 'Yes.'
Despite recent reports that he has a girlfriend, Sweat told The Post the relationship failed because she could not keep up with the constant transfers to the furthest corners of the state.
Sweat passes the days by reading books — currently, the 'Wheel of Time' series — and listening to his radio. Between the prison's routine 6 a.m. wakeup call and his 9 p.m. bedtime, he works out by putting his books into a bag, and lifting it 'like a dumbbell.'
8 More than 1,500 law enforcement agents hunted Matt and Sweat during the 23-day manhunt, which cost the state a whopping $23 million.
Getty Images
His favorite activity is interacting with wildlife through the two windows in a tiny room attached to his cell, which he referred to as a 'pen.'
'There are birds and squirrels and stuff that come in here. I had a rabbit all winter. I tried to feed it carrots — it didn't really like them, I guess because they were steamed — but it ate them anyways, because it was free food.
'I have a groundhog that should be coming back around as the weather warms up,' Sweat said, smiling.
8 Sweat, who now spends his days in an 18-by-5-foot cell, had not had a visitor in the three years before The Post came calling on May 31, he said.
He laughed upon learning that Joyce Mitchell, 61, remains married to her husband, Lyle. Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie alleged in 2015 that she had plotted with Sweat and Matt to murder Lyle.
'Wow. She was ready to knock him off, and I guess he refused to believe it — but that's a known fact. That's crazy,' Sweat said, shaking his head.
Still, he has nothing but sympathy for Joyce Mitchell, who got out of prison in 2020.
'She lost her job and this affected her and her family,' he said. 'Five years is a long time. It probably did a number on her.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Demonstrators seeking release of Gaza hostages to march in London as Middle East tensions grip UK
Demonstrators seeking release of Gaza hostages to march in London as Middle East tensions grip UK

San Francisco Chronicle​

time5 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Demonstrators seeking release of Gaza hostages to march in London as Middle East tensions grip UK

LONDON (AP) — Police in London braced for another day of demonstrations on Sunday as the war in Gaza continues to inflame tensions across the United Kingdom. Demonstrators demanding the immediate release of all the remaining hostages in Gaza plan to march through central London to the prime minister's residence at No. 10 Downing Street on Sunday afternoon. The march comes a day after police arrested 474 people at a protest in support of a banned pro-Palestinian organization. Among those expected to attend the rally is Noga Guttman, a cousin of 24-year-old hostage Evyatar David, who was featured in a video that enraged Israelis when it was released by Hamas militants last week. The video showed an emaciated David saying he is digging his own grave inside a tunnel in Gaza. Hamas-led militants kidnapped 251 people when they attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. Some 50 of the hostages still haven't been released, of whom 20 are thought to be alive. Israel last week announced its intention to occupy Gaza City as part of a plan to end the war and bring the captives home. Family members and many international leaders have condemned the plan, saying it would lead to more bloodshed and endanger the hostages. 'We are united in one clear and urgent demand: the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages,' Stop the Hate, a coalition of groups organizing the march, said in a statement. 'Regardless of our diverse political views, this is not a political issue — it is a human one.' On Saturday, police arrested hundreds of people in central London as demonstrators sought to pressure the government to overturn its decision to ban the group Palestine Action as a terrorist organization. Legislation passed last month makes it a crime to publicly support the group. The Metropolitan Police Service said it arrested 466 people for supporting Palestine Action. A further eight were arrested on other charges, including assaults on police officers. The government banned Palestine Action after activists broke into a Royal Air Force base and damaged two tanker planes to protest British support for the war in Gaza. Palestine Action had previously targeted Israeli defense contractors and other sites in Britain that they believe have links with the Israeli military.

The One Trump Flaw Most Americans Can't Tolerate
The One Trump Flaw Most Americans Can't Tolerate

Atlantic

time5 hours ago

  • Atlantic

The One Trump Flaw Most Americans Can't Tolerate

Tens of millions of Americans voted for President Donald Trump in the belief that he would be competent. They might not have been thrilled that Trump is a convicted felon, or pleased with his role in the violent attack on the Capitol on January 6, 2021. Many worried that he posed a threat to democracy. But enough were willing to overlook all that, because they convinced themselves that Trump would be an effective chief executive, that under his stewardship their lives would get better and the country would prosper. A survey from the Democratic pollsters Douglas Schoen and Carly Cooperman, conducted shortly after the election, helps illustrate the point. By an 11-point margin, independents said they would be less confident that the Trump administration would share accurate information compared with the Biden administration. Yet, by a 10-point margin, those same voters said that they thought the Trump administration would be more effective at getting things done. 'Ultimately, our postelection poll makes clear that voters prioritized perceived effectiveness rather than upholding democracy this election,' Schoen and Cooperman wrote, 'and while they are deeply skeptical towards our institutions generally, they are cautiously optimistic that the incoming administration will be effective at providing real-world solutions.' A little more than half a year into Trump's second term, however, the public's confidence in his skill as a chief executive is shattering. In a recent AP/NORC poll, only about one-quarter of U.S. adults said that Trump's policies have helped them. Roughly half report that Trump's policies have 'done more to hurt' them, and about two in 10 say his policies have 'not made a difference' in their lives. Remarkably, Trump failed to earn majority approval on any of the issues in the poll, including the economy, immigration, and cutting government spending. As a result, a politically toxic impression is hardening. Trump's approval rating in the most recent Gallup poll is 37 percent, the lowest of this term and only slightly higher than his all-time low of 34 percent, at the end of his first term. (Among independents, Trump's approval rating is down to 29 percent.) Americans already understood Trump to be corrupt, and proved themselves willing to tolerate that. But now they are coming to believe that he is inept. In American politics, that is an unforgivable sin. On the economic front, Trump's tariff increases—announced and then altered, often without rhyme or reason—are only now beginning to percolate through the economy, and the steepest hikes haven't yet kicked in. The economy appears to be slowing down. Consumer prices are up 2.6 percen t from a year earlier, which is keeping the Federal Reserve from cutting interest rates despite intense pressure from Trump. The jobs report for July showed a gain of only 73,000, a sign that the labor market is weakening. Perhaps more significant, the Bureau of Labor Statistics revised the jobs totals from May and June downward by more than a quarter of a million. Unemployment ticked up to 4.2 percent. Consumer spending is well below what it was last year. More than half of all Americans say the cost of groceries is a 'major' source of stress in their life right now. Many industries are postponing hiring, and the national hiring rate is near its lowest level in a decade. Customers appear to be holding off on large, long-term purchases. The Budget Lab at Yale University calculates that the American consumer is dealing with an average effective tariff rate of 18.3 percent, the highest since 1934, and it estimates that price increases will cost each household $2,400 on average this year. General Motors reported last month that Trump's tariffs have cost the company more than $1 billion. And the president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, said in a statement that Trump's latest tariffs 'would disrupt essential transatlantic supply chains, to the detriment of businesses, consumers and patients on both sides of the Atlantic.' The Trump administration is betting that the president's tariffs will not be inflationary, will generate massive revenue flows that significantly reduce the deficit, and will lead to a renaissance in American manufacturing and investment. If it's right, Trump will reap the political benefits. But we believe the administration to be dead wrong, and that this will become painfully obvious to ordinary Americans in the months and years ahead. The economy isn't the only place where Trump's policies will hurt rather than help. Estimates predict that the number of Americans without health insurance will increase by more than 10 million in less than a decade, with particularly devastating impacts for vulnerable rural populations. Eliminating a quarter of the IRS workforce may well undermine tax collection and increase the wait time for Americans to receive refunds. Slashing the Social Security Administration, which is serving more people than ever before, with the fewest workers in half a century, will increase wait times for those needing help. It will lead to field-office closures that will hit seniors in rural communities the hardest and may well delay the processing of retirement, disability, and survivor benefits. A 70-year-old retiree in Indiana told The Guardian, 'For the first time in my life, my wife and I are stressed out and worried if I will get my payment and if it will be on time.' The Trump administration has devastated the National Institutes of Health, one of the world's foremost medical-research centers and the biggest sponsor of biomedical research in the world. Nearly 2,500 grants have been ended or delayed, disrupting vital medical research, reducing the pool of available researchers, and compromising public health and disease prevention. 'The country is going to be mourning the loss of this enterprise for decades,' Harold Varmus, a Nobel Prize–winning cancer biologist who served as the director of the NIH from 1993 to 1999, told The New York Times. (There are signs that some Republicans in Congress are finally stirring from their slumber and might be ready to push back against what the Trump administration is trying to do, though the administration may attempt to thwart their will by ignoring appropriations or setting up a fight over impoundment or trying more rescission.) Massive cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, resulting in the loss of some of the weather service's most experienced leaders and impeding the collection of data that are essential for accurate and timely weather forecasting, will place Americans at greater risk of experiencing extreme-weather events. As The Atlantic 's David A. Graham has written, the Federal Emergency Management Agency is in disarray, headed by a person who is clearly out of his depth. Trump wants FEMA eliminated by the end of the year. It has already lost about a third of its permanent workforce, and its program dedicated to helping communities prepare for natural disasters such as floods and fires has been canceled. FEMA is hardly a model federal program; a slew of changes could make it better. The problem is that the Trump administration has no plan to pick up the slack in a post-FEMA world, and states and municipalities will be hard-pressed to do so. David A. Graham: FEMA is not prepared In the immediate aftermath of the recent Texas floods, FEMA's earlier decision to lay off hundreds of call-center contractors resulted in thousands of unanswered calls for recovery assistance. (The administration dismissed reports about this as ' fake news.') FEMA didn't deploy to St. Louis for several weeks after a tornado destroyed parts of the city, leaving people unable to apply for even basic payments for fresh food and medicine, let alone get help addressing uninsured losses from the natural disaster. The Trump administration is also decimating anti-corruption efforts within the federal government. It announced earlier this year that the landmark 1977 Foreign Corrupt Practices Act would no longer be enforced. It also announced the termination of two Justice Department programs designed to seize and return foreign assets from kleptocrats and oligarchs close to Russian President Vladimir Putin. And it has fired or demoted 20 inspectors general and acting inspectors general, who are ferreting out waste, fraud, and abuse within the government. As lifelong conservatives, we are completely on board when it comes to insisting on accountability in government programs; increasing their efficiency; and, in some instances, reorganizing them, downsizing them, and even eliminating them. The problem is the thoughtless and reckless way in which the Trump administration is going about this—all while passing a 'big, beautiful bill' that will add a staggering $3 trillion to the national debt. Trump has surrounded himself with nihilists, people waving around a chain saw onstage like a madman and boasting that career civil servants should be viewed 'as the villains.' Trump's director of the Office of Management and Budget, Russell Vought, said in 2023: 'We want to put them in trauma.' So Democrats have a lot to work with. On an almost-daily basis, Trump is discrediting his own leadership; that gives Democrats the opportunity to highlight, with laser-like focus, his failure to deliver on his own promises. In doing so, Democrats need to present themselves not as the party of government but rather as the party of reform, as disrupters of the status quo on behalf of the common good. We believe they must tell voters that in all sorts of ways—the economy, health and health care, disaster relief—Trump is making their lives worse, not better. He and his administration are amateurs, inept and in over their head. They are entertainers and grifters, shock jocks and freaks. Whatever talents they may possess, mastery of governing is not one of them. Perhaps most important, the incompetence argument needs to be humanized. Democrats need compelling, empathy-evoking narratives pointing to the harm being done to ordinary people by the enormous ineptitude of Trump and his enablers. For example, Democrats could tell the story, as former NIH Director Francis Collins has done, of the woman in her early 40s, afflicted with Stage 4 colorectal cancer, who was on the path to an immunotherapy clinical trial that might have saved her life, until cuts to the NIH caused a devastating delay; or of the children afflicted with rare diseases whose lives may be affected because advances in gene editing have been stopped in their tracks; or of the families who are seeing their hopes for breakthroughs in Alzheimer's disease potentially dashed. They could talk about the role that Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has spread anti-vaccine conspiracy theories, is playing in the worst outbreak of measles in decades. Or about his decision to cancel nearly $500 million in grants and contracts for developing mRNA vaccines, which have been responsible for saving millions of lives from COVID and were considered the most exciting new opportunity in cancer immunotherapy. They could also explain why the Trump administration isn't prepared for a bird-flu pandemic, should one happen. Democrats could tell the story of how farmers in places such as western Iowa are struggling as tariffs increase their costs at home—for machinery, fertilizer, herbicides, and feed—while limiting their access to international markets. Democrats could show how workforce raids by ICE agents with battering rams are in the process of destroying Glenn Valley Foods in Omaha, which had been one of the fastest-growing meatpacking companies in the Midwest. According to The New York Times, 'In a matter of weeks, production had plummeted by almost 70 percent. Most of the work force was gone. Half of the maintenance crew was in the process of being deported, the director of human resources had stopped coming to work, and more than 50 employees were being held at a detention facility in rural Nebraska.' Thanks to the reporting of Nick Kristof at The New York Times, Democrats could talk about the babies such as Gbessey, who lived in a village in Liberia and died of malaria because the Trump administration shut down USAID, which meant health workers had no malaria medicine to offer the child; and how Gbessey's younger sibling, Osman, also became seriously ill with malaria. They could tell of children orphaned by AIDS dying in South Sudan because the community-health workers who had brought them medicine have been laid off. (A recent study in The Lancet projected that the defunding of USAID could lead to 14 million deaths by the end of the decade.) These examples are but the beginning; Trump, after all, has more than 1,200 days left in office. There is no evidence that he's going to get more competent or more compassionate, and plenty of evidence to the contrary. The challenge for Democrats will be to keep up with the cascading horror stories and to tell them in compelling and sensitive ways, conveying the devasting effects of the Trump administration's across-the-board mistakes. IN THE GREAT GATSBY, F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote about Tom and Daisy Buchanan, the aristocratic couple who exemplify the moral corruption of the wealthy. 'They were careless people, Tom and Daisy,' Fitzgerald wrote. 'They smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made.' From the March 2023 issue: A new way to read 'Gatsby' Trump is smashing up things on a scale that is almost unimaginable, and he seems completely untroubled by the daily hardships and widespread suffering he is leaving behind. And the president is hardly done. The pain and the body count will rise, and rise, and rise. It will be left to others to clean up the mess he has made. Some of the damage may be repaired with time; some will be irreparable. Democrats should say so. It's their best path to defeating his movement, which is the only way for the healing to begin.

$7K worth of Labubu dolls stolen from Los Angeles store, authorities say
$7K worth of Labubu dolls stolen from Los Angeles store, authorities say

The Hill

time17 hours ago

  • The Hill

$7K worth of Labubu dolls stolen from Los Angeles store, authorities say

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A group of masked thieves stole about $7,000 worth of Labubu dolls from a Los Angeles-area store this week, authorities said. The incident took place early Wednesday morning at a store in La Puente, a city about 18 miles (29 kilometers) east of Los Angeles, the LA County Sheriff's Department said. The department said the suspects used a stolen Toyota Tacoma in the incident, which was recovered shortly afterward. The agency said it was investigating the case and did not have additional information. Labubu dolls, created by Hong Kong-born artist Kasing Lung, have become a popular collectible item a decade after the toothy monsters were first introduced. Toy vendor One Stop Shop said in an Instagram post that the thieves took all of the store's inventory and trashed the establishment. The store posted surveillance footage showing a group of people wearing hoodies and face coverings breaking in. The suspects are seen shuffling through items and carrying boxes out of the shop. 'We are still in shock,' the store said in its post, urging people to help find the thieves.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store