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Cops: Fugitive, suspected killer, was released due to lack of bed space

BAKERSFIELD, Calif. -- Authorities say the target of a two-week manhunt in the high desert of Kern County, California,was released from jail last year due to a lack of bed space.

Sheriff Donny Youngblood tells KBAK-TV that Benjamin Peter Ashley was released Oct. 20 because of federal orders that set a limit on inmates at the local jail.

Officials are offering a $10,000 reward in the search for Ashley, who they believe killed a retiree, took three people hostage and wounded deputies in recent weeks.

Two SWAT team members were shot and wounded by a shotgun-wielding man on Aug. 1 as they searched a mobile home in Kelso Valley. One deputy was shot in both arms, and the other was grazed.

The attacker is believed to be the same man who took three men hostage in a Twin Oaks-area cabin on July 28 before they managed to escape.

Two days later, David Markiewitz, a 64-year-old retired dentist, was found dead in another cabin in Jawbone Canyon, about 10 miles away.

Officials had released a sketch of a suspect but Tuesday named the fugitive as Ashley, a homeless man with a long criminal history. He is believed to be in rugged, mountainous high desert 30 miles east of Bakersfield. Dozens of deputies and officers from various agencies have been searching the 5-square-mile area, which is dotted with unoccupied homes and trailers, outbuildings, abandoned mines and caves and other hiding places.

"We believe he's homeless," Youngblood said at a Tuesday press conference. "We believe he's traveled throughout Southern California and Merced and Yosemite. ... We're confident this guy is very mobile, and he's a survivor."

Investigators have found fingerprints and DNA evidence that may link Ashley to the crimes, Youngblood said.

Authorities also have urged residents to keep their doors locked out of concern that Ashley might try to break into cabins to steal.

"We're two weeks into this investigation. Clearly he's had food and water," Youngblood said. "We have to prevent him from doing any other harm to anyone else."

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