Dannemora, NY – New York Town Stands By Its Prison After Brazen Escape

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    A guard stands on the wall at Clinton Correctional Facility on Monday, June 8, 2015, in Dannemora, N.Y. Two murderers who escaped from the prison by cutting through steel walls and pipes remain on the loose Monday as authorities investigate how the inmates obtained the power tools used in the breakout. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)Dannemora, NY – The 40-foot-high wall of the maximum-security state prison in Dannemora runs right along the main street, a hulking symbol of the institution’s dominance over practically every aspect of life.

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    Nearly everyone in this mountain village of about 5,000 near the Canadian border works at the prison or is related to someone who does, a link that in some cases goes back generations. That’s why the audacious prison break over the weekend by two convicts using power tools cuts deep into the collective pride.

    “It’s a black eye for the guys work in the jail. We were proud that we had no escapes,” said Jerry Varin, who stressed that the corrections officers, or COs, perform a difficult job. “Under the conditions, I think my friends and my relatives do the best job they can.”

    Dannemora looks more like a prison with a village attached than a village with a prison. The 3,000-inmate Clinton Correctional Facility sits smack in the middle of everything (some residents jokingly call it their “town hall”), leaving no doubt what the company is in this company town.

    “I have been here long enough I don’t even recognize the wall. To me, it’s an economic engine. That’s what it is,” said Dave Coulon, behind the counter of DC Auto Parts, just down the road from the prison where his father and grandfather once worked.

    Dannemora remained in a sort of lockdown Monday with troopers and corrections officers manning roadblocks. Days after convicted killers David Sweat and Richard Matt broke out, drivers were still being questioned, trunks were being inspected and teams with bloodhounds continued to search the woods nearby.

    But as Gov. Andrew Cuomo and other state officials issued dire warnings about the escaped inmates, many around Dannemora appeared unworried. They figured the killers were long gone, and the heavy police presence only added to their sense of security.
    New York State Troopers search a truck at a check point near Dannemora, New York June 8, 2015. Two convicted murderers who used power tools to break out of the maximum security New York prison may have had help, and they left a taunting note for their jailors to "Have a nice day," authorities said on Sunday.  REUTERS/Chris Wattie
    “We always joke about it. We’re so close to the prison — that’s the last place that anyone who escaped would want to be,” said Jessica Lashway, who waited for the bus with her school-age children a few doors down from the prison.

    When the prison was built in 1845, it was designed to serve two functions: as a remote lockup for convicts some 300 miles from New York City, and as a pool of cheap labor for upstate New York’s then-burgeoning iron-mining industry. (Dannnemora took its name from an iron-mining region in Sweden.)

    Now, the lifeblood of the shops, restaurants and other businesses along the shopworn main drag are the inmates, those who watch over them, and the prison visitors who arrive by bus and car every day.

    “Clinton Correctional Facility is the reason why we’re here. Without them, we would not be here,” said Mark Maggy, co-owner of Maggy Marketplace and Pharmacy.

    The deep intertwining of the prison and the people seems to feed a collective compassion for the guards, even as the investigation looks into whether someone on the inside helped the convicts escape.

    Michael Torres, a local retired CO who worked at Attica and Sing Sing but not at Clinton, said someone apparently “dropped the ball” in not hearing the power tools. But he said it’s understandable that the clothes that the inmates stuffed in their beds fooled an officer shining a flashlight through the bars.

    “You have to be perfect to catch the guy in his cell,” he said.

    Former Clinton maintenance worker Craig Bowman was more emphatic.

    “It’s been 150 years and no one ever escaped. Stuff happens,” Bowman said. “The COs around here are doing a good job.”

    Some suggested the escape was a once-in-a-lifetime event.

    “I think Clinton will get stronger over this,” Maggy said. “It won’t happen again.”
    New York State Correctional Services officers stand near a manhole at the corners of Bouck and Barker streets where two convicted murderers are believed to have emerged after escaping from the nearby Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, New York June 8, 2015. REUTERS


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    4 Comments
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    Sociologist
    Sociologist
    8 years ago

    Wishing them hatzlacha

    8 years ago

    The inmates ‘count’ as residents of the town for all purposes of NYS funding, voter representation, and political power,, even though the inmates: 1) aren’t allowed to vote; 2) are NYC residents; 3) obviously don’t benefit.

    That hurts NYC residents two votes for every prisoner, for all legislation and political ‘pork’ coming out of Albany.

    8 years ago

    It serves the staff right; for years, they abused and beat prisoners at that facility. Now, heads will roll, as staff will be fired, for their negligence. Incidentally, the NY State troopers are the biggest hypocrites. In 1971, at the Attica prison in upstate New York, the state troopers stormed Attica prison, using deadly gunfire, and killed fifteen prison employee hostages, as well as over two dozen prisoners. To this date, not one state trooper was ever indicted for using deadly force during the prison ending siege. Also, after the prison was retaken, the troopers and guards retaliated on the prisoners (including those who didn’t take place in the siege), and beat and tortured prisoners with impunity.