Authorities in Florida say they are looking at several suspects in the investigation of two prisoners who escaped with phony documents, but so far they have made no arrests.
Florida Department of Law Enforcement Commissioner Gerald Bailey said Tuesday that the convicted killers who escaped are not cooperating. Bailey would not talk specifically about the suspects authorities are looking at.
He says the documents that led to the mistaken release of Joseph Jenkins and Charles Walker were mailed in to the court clerk's office in Orlando. Investigators are still trying to figure out who made the documents.
Bailey says they found an iPad and cell phone at a Panama City motel where Jenkins and Walker were captured Saturday and they are reviewing them for evidence.
Earlier story:
At least seven inmates in Florida have used forged documents in attempts to escape from prison, including two killers who were mistakenly freed because of the paperwork, authorities said Tuesday.
The Florida Department of Law Enforcement planned a news conference Tuesday to provide details about the phony paperwork. Agency spokeswoman Gretel Plessinger said so far they have discovered seven prisoners tried to escape with forged documents.
Joseph Jenkins and Charles Walker were let out of a Panhandle prison because of the fake paperwork, which reduced their life sentences to 15 years, authorities said. They were captured Saturday at a Panama City motel.
Their release led the Corrections Department to change its policy for early prisoner releases. It also caused the chief judge in the judicial circuit that covers Orange and Osceola counties in metro Orlando to change how orders are filed in the clerks of courts offices. The forged paperwork that led to the release of Jenkins and Walker was filed in the Orange County Clerk of Courts office.
Chief Circuit Judge Belvin Perry signed an order Monday that prohibits judicial orders from being accepted at drop-off boxes. His order also requires judicial assistants to keep a log of all orders to change an inmate's prison sentence.
When the clerk's office gets an order to change a sentence, the clerk must verify with the judge or judicial assistant that the order was issued, according to the new measures.
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