
Ex-police chief convicted of rape and murder captured after escaping Arkansas prison
Grant Hardin, a former Arkansas police chief convicted of rape and murder, was captured Friday after he escaped from prison on May 25.
Hardin, 56, was taken into custody roughly 1.5 miles west of prison grounds, the Izard County Sheriff's Office said in a statement.
His identity was confirmed by fingerprint analysis, the statement said.
Additional details about his apprehension were not immediately available.
Hardin walked out of the North Central Unit just before 3 p.m. May 25 after he disguised himself in a "makeshift" law enforcement uniform. An affidavit stated that he "impersonated a corrections officer in dress and manner, causing a corrections officer operating a secure gate to open the gate."
Authorities released a photo showing him dressed in all black and pushing a wheeled cart with what appeared to be wooden pallets on it.
Multiple agencies, including state police, assisted in the search. The FBI, Department of Corrections, Arkansas State Police, and Department of Justice said there was a reward of up to $10,000 for information that led to his arrest.
Hardin, who has a background in law enforcement, was in prison for killing Gateway city water employee James Appleton in 2017 and raping teacher Amy Harrison in 1997. He was sentenced to 30 years for Appleton's murder and 50 years for the sexual assault.
Both cases were featured in the 2023 Max documentary "Devil in the Ozarks."
Rand Champion, a Corrections Department spokesperson, had said that Hardin's background in law enforcement made the search more difficult.
Hardin was the police chief of Gateway, Arkansas, for about four months in early 2016. From August 1990 to May 1991, he worked for the Fayetteville Police Department. A department spokesperson said he was let go while still going through the training program.
NBC affiliate KNWA of Fayetteville reported that he also worked as a police officer, county constable, and corrections officer.

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A tense, two-week manhunt ended in the dense Arkansas woods on Friday afternoon as authorities captured Grant Hardin, a convicted murderer and rapist whose notoriety led to a TV documentary, 'Devil in the Ozarks.' Hardin's escape from the North Central Unit in Calico Rock had terrified communities and sparked a massive multi-agency dragnet. The Arkansas Department of Corrections confirmed Hardin's capture roughly a mile from where his brazen breakout began on May 25. Officials say Hardin, a former police chief turned violent felon, managed to evade authorities for 13 days before being tracked down and apprehended near the rugged terrain he likely thought would be his shield. Hardin briefly attempted to run from officers when he saw them approach, but he was quickly tackled to the ground, said Rand Champion, a spokesperson for the Arkansas prison system. 'He'd been on the run for a week and a half and probably didn´t have any energy left in him,' he added. 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The Arkansas Department of Corrections has not yet released details on how Hardin managed to escape in the first place but an investigation that is sure to follow in the days ahead. Hardin had been housed in a maximum-security wing of the primarily medium security prison, formally known as the North Central Unit. Officials are investigating whether a job Hardin held in the kitchen helped in his escape, including whether it gave him access to materials he could have used to fashion his makeshift uniform. In order to escape, he had impersonated a corrections officer 'in dress and manner,' according to a court document. A prison officer in one of the guard towers opened a secure gate, allowing him to simply walk out of the facility. Rand Champion said that someone should have checked Hardin's identity before he was allowed to leave, describing the lack of verification as a 'lapse' that's being investigated. Hardin has now been returned to the custody of the Arkansas Department of Corrections, where he faces not just his previous sentences but new charges stemming from his escape. Hardin pleaded guilty in 2017 to first-degree murder for the killing of James Appleton, 59. Appleton worked for the Gateway water department when he was shot in the head February 23, 2017, near Garfield. Police found Appleton's body inside a car. Hardin was sentenced to 30 years in prison. Hardin´s DNA was also matched to the 1997 rape of a teacher at an elementary school in Rogers, north of Fayetteville. He was sentenced to 50 years for that crime. Cheryl Tillman, Appleton's sister said that Hardin's capture was a 'big sigh of relief' for her whole family. 'We don't have to walk around, turning around all the time, thinking somebody´s on our back,' Tillman said, emphasizing her appreciation for the officers who helped capture Hardin.


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