Manhunt resumes after prison worker faces judge

Prison worker pleads not guilty to helping killers escape

PLATTSBURGH, N.Y. -- The massive manhunt for two convicted killers resumed Saturday on the morning after a worker at an upstate New York maximum-security prison was charged with smuggling in hacksaw blades, chisels, a punch and a screwdriver bit to help the men escape.

More than 800 law enforcement officers have joined the search, concentrating in a rural area in the Adirondacks near the Canadian border around the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora.

On Friday, officers searched an area just three and a half miles southeast of the prison, CBS News correspondent Anna Werner reports.

"I have 50 acres," landowner Tom Maggy told Werner. "They told me that they think they have them cornered up there and wanted to know if I'd unlock the gate. Absolutely, no problem."

With the escapees still on the run eight days after cutting themselves out of prison with power tools, residents were vigilant.

Woman arrested for helping plot prison break

Kevin Farrington stood close watch over his 2-year-old son Dylan as the toddler jumped at the chance to go outside for the first time since the prison break. A contingent of about 40 armed officers scanning the field across the highway set the family at ease for the first time all week in an area where nobody is accustomed to locking their doors, day or night.

"Obviously, you know the prison is there, but there's never been an incident so you feel secure," said Farrington, a city engineer in nearby Plattsburgh who moved to the banks of the Saranac River 13 years ago.

Prison worker charged with aiding inmates' escape

"When something like this happens, you think about a couple of guys who are pretty bad actors capable of anything," Farrington said. "You know they're desperate and probably not going to want to be taken alive. They'll probably go to any lengths."

Farrington said he keeps a loaded gun inside his home, just in case.

Searchers had clear skies as they resumed their search Saturday, after a stormy night that saw the prison worker accused of helping the men escape appear before a judge in handcuffs.

Joyce Mitchell New York State Police

Prison tailor shop instructor Joyce Mitchell, 51, was arraigned late Friday on a felony charge of promoting prison contraband and a misdemeanor count of criminal facilitation. Her lawyer, Keith Bruno, entered a not guilty plea on her behalf.

Mitchell is accused of befriending inmates David Sweat and Richard Matt and giving them the contraband, according to criminal complaints. District Attorney Andrew Wylie said earlier the contraband didn't include the power tools the men used to cut holes in their cell walls and a steam pipe to escape through a manhole last weekend.

Mitchell was ordered held in jail on $100,000 cash bail or $200,000 bond. She was moved to a jail in another county Saturday morning at the request of the Clinton County sheriff and is due back in court Monday morning.

Mitchell has a job with a yearly salary of $57,697, overseeing inmates who sew clothes and learn to repair sewing machines at the prison. She has been suspended without pay.

Within the past year, officials looked into whether Mitchell had improper ties to the 34-year-old Sweat, who was serving a life sentence for killing a sheriff's deputy, Wylie said. He gave no details on the nature of the suspected relationship.

The investigation didn't turn up anything solid enough to warrant disciplinary charges against her, the district attorney said.

Matt was serving 25 years to life for the 1997 kidnap, torture and hacksaw dismemberment of Matt's 76-year-old former boss, whose body was found in pieces in a river.

On Thursday, a law enforcement source told CBS News that Mitchell had agreed to be the getaway driver but never showed up, CBS News senior investigative producer Pat Milton reports.

A former slipper-factory employee who won three terms as tax collector in her town near Dannemora, Mitchell has worked at the prison for at least five years, according to a neighbor, Sharon Currier. Mitchell's husband, Lyle, also works in industrial training there.

"She's a good, good person," Currier said. "She's not somebody who's off the wall."

Mitchell's daughter-in-law, Paige Mitchell, said this week that her mother-in-law never mentioned Sweat, Matt or any other inmates she encountered. "She doesn't get too involved," Paige Mitchell told the Press-Republican of Plattsburgh.

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