Before he broke out of a maximum security prison in upstate New York, Richard Matt at one point made a painting for the worker who’s accused of helping him and another inmate escape.
Using a photograph, Matt painted a picture of prison tailor shop instructor Joyce Mitchell’s children, Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie told CNN.
And in April, Wylie said, Mitchell gave the painting to her husband as a wedding anniversary present. In exchange, Mitchell gave Matt a pair of speed bag gloves, similar to boxing gloves.
Now Matt, who authorities have also said had a sexual relationship with Mitchell, is on the run with fellow convicted murderer David Sweat. The huge manhunt for the two fugitives has stretched into its 13th day
Joyce Mitchell, 51, is behind bars, accused of helping them break free and sneaking hacksaw blades, chisels, drill bits, a punch and other contraband into the convicts’ hands before they broke out.
And as investigators widen their search for the fugitives, more details are emerging about relationships between Mitchell and the escapees that were years in the making.
Cell phone records subpoenaed
Mitchell had been investigated in the past for an inappropriate relationship with Sweat that led corrections officials to move him out of the tailor shop in 2013 and keep them separated, Wylie said.
That’s the year when she started having a sexual relationship with Matt, a source close to the investigation told CNN. The sexual relationship took place at the tailor shop in the Clinton Correctional Facility, the only known place the two were together, the source said.
No court date has been set for Mitchell, who has pleaded not guilty to the two charges brought against her and has been talking to authorities. If convicted, Mitchell could face up to eight years behind bars.
The recordings of her conversations with investigators could total as much as 20 hours, her attorney said.
Investigators have also subpoenaed her cell phone records and found that she spoke with Matt’s daughter at least once, Wylie said.
Prosecutor: Husband didn’t know
Mitchell’s husband, Lyle, also worked in the prison’s tailoring block.
But the prosecutor said Wednesday that Lyle Mitchell didn’t know about the prisoners’ escape plan before it happened and wasn’t aware of his wife’s relationships with the inmates.
After Matt and Sweat broke out, Wylie said, Joyce Mitchell warned her husband that the men were free and had been plotting to kill him.
“She advised him after the escape of what happened, including the possible murder plot,” Wylie said.
Joyce Mitchell’s attorney says that doesn’t mean she was participating in the plot.
“I don’t believe she was involved in any attempt to kill her husband,” her attorney, Stephen Johnston, told CNN. “Just because she heard something doesn’t mean she was going to act on it. … She did not want to be a part of it and did not.”
Escape prompts closure of prison’s ‘honor block’
Investigators are looking into whether any other prison employees or inmates played a role in the escape.
The “honor block” at the prison, a special section that had housed Matt, Sweat and other inmates who’d gone years without significant disciplinary action, has been shut down after their escape and will now be turned into a regular cell block, a source with detailed knowledge of the Clinton Correctional facility told CNN.
Being in the honor block gave inmates privileges such as going outside every day, having hot plates and refrigerators in their cells, and congregating for hours in a central gallery area each evening with fellow inmates, said Rich Plumadore, who worked at the facility for 35 years.
Wanted posters handed out at borders
The tentacles of the manhunt for Matt, 49, and Sweat, 35, reach as far as the borders with Canada and Mexico, where wanted posters of the escaped killers are being handed out.
But the most intensive part of the search is still in the vicinity of the Clinton Correctional Facility, the prison in Dannemora, New York, where the two convicts broke out.
The search area has expanded and shifted as hundreds of law enforcement officials scour the region of small towns and densely wooded countryside for clues.
“We are going to pursue every lead and we are going to locate these individuals,” said Capt. Robert LaFountain of the New York State Police Bureau of Criminal Investigation.
He and his colleagues have had plenty of leads to pursue. At the last count, police said they had developed more than 1,400.
And they have searched 16 square miles — more than 10,000 acres, which is the equivalent of almost 8,000 football fields.
Time-progression photos of killers
So far, officials say, there’s no evidence Matt and Sweat have made it out of the search area in New York. But they can’t rule out the possibility.
“We have no signs of the two inmates being anywhere else but here,” Wylie said. “We haven’t had any burglaries, we haven’t had any stolen vehicles that we could tie into both Sweat and Matt.”
Authorities issued time-progression photos on Wednesday of the two fugitives that show what officials think the men would look like after more than 10 days on the run.
One theory is the two killers could be holed up in one of the hundreds of cabins scattered across the Adirondacks, the sprawling wilderness area at the doorstep of the prison.
Authorities are using canine teams and aircraft in the efforts to try to track them down.