Sometimes a prison sentence isn’t the end of the criminal justice process. According to CBS News, as of 2023, there were over 1,100 documented escapes from law enforcement in 26 states over a five-year period, which amounts to roughly 220 escape attempts per year. Most of these are short-lived; prison escape expert Bryce Peterson told Scripps News that “well above 90%, pretty close to 100%” of incarcerated people who escape are recaptured. But that doesn’t stop people from trying.
Prison escapes have been the stuff of legend for centuries. The history of escapes goes as far back as 1244, when Welsh prince Gruffudd ap Llywelyn fell to his death trying to get out of the Tower of London. Some of the most famous films of all time center around fictional prison escapes. But Hollywood stories pale in comparison to these creative—and sometimes confusing—real-life escapes.
The Alcatraz Escape
In 1962, brothers John and Clarence Anglin, along with Allen West and Frank Morris, became infamous when they mounted an escape attempt from the iconic Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary. They labored for six months on a creative plan. It involved constructing models of their own heads to fool guards into thinking they were asleep and using random materials, such as more than 50 raincoats, to build an improvised raft and life preservers.
West was left behind when he realized he could no longer escape through the ventilation duct in his cell, but the other three made their bid for freedom on June 11. They were able to get to the northeast corner of the island and launch their raft, but their liberation appears to have been short-lived. Various pieces of evidence surfaced in the water during the subsequent investigation, including a paddle and a wallet with photos of the Anglins’ relatives. FBI agents surmised that the men had drowned in their makeshift raft, and the agency officially closed its case in 1979. The U.S. Marshals Service took over the case, telling NPR in 2009 that there was still an active arrest warrant and they were still receiving potential leads. But over 60 years and countless theories later, there are no definitive answers about this prison escape.