A New York prison seamstress helped two inmates escape by smuggling tools into prison inside of raw ground beef, a local prosecutor told NBC News Tuesday.
Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie, whose office is prosecuting the escape plot of Richard Matt and David Sweat, said the prison tailor shop instructor embedded hack saw blades, drill bits and a hole punch in the meat before bringing it into Clinton Correctional Facility.
The convicted killers burrowed out of the maximum security prison in Dannemora, New York, on June 6.
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Joyce Mitchell, who has been charged with providing escape tools to the fugitives, outlined the scheme in interviews with investigators, Wylie said.
After smuggling the meat and metal mixture into the prison, Mitchell put it in a refrigerator in the tailor shop where she worked with Matt and Sweat, Wylie said.
Wylie said it isn’t uncommon for prisoners to have hot plates or other cooking equipment in their cells to grill raw meat and other provisions.
A corrections officer named Gene Palmer then allegedly took the meat to Matt, the prosecutor said.
Palmer was placed on administrative leave in response to the revelations. He has not been charged.
He denied to investigators that he knew he was delivering tools to Matt and Sweat, Wylie said. He took a polygraph and passed.
Mitchell told investigators she didn’t think Palmer knew what was hidden in the ground beef, Wylie said.
Authorities have said Mitchell had planned to drive Matt and Sweat to freedom, so they could “move on together,” until she got cold feet.
Mitchell has also told investigators about a murder-for-hire plot — in which Sweat and Matt would kill her husband, Lyle.
She has pleaded not guilty.
Meanwhile, there was a brief flurry of police activity Tuesday afternoon in a small Adirondack Mountains town about 30 miles west of Dannemora, raising hopes that authorities had finally caught up to Matt and Sweat.








