Arrested maintenance worker says he was forced to assist New Orleans jail break

Ali Abbas Ahmadi
BBC News
CCTV shows inmates escaping New Orleans jail

Police have arrested a maintenance worker at a New Orleans jail for helping ten inmates break out of the US facility on Friday, Louisiana's attorney general has announced.

The worker, identified as 33-year-old Sterling Williams, was arrested on Monday night, according to the BBC's US partner CBS News.

Mr Williams is accused of turning off the water to the cell that was used for the escape, which involved removing a toilet from the wall. He said an inmate threatened to attack him with a "shank" - meaning makeshift knife - if he did not help, according to court documents.

Three of the inmates who escaped the Orleans Parish Jail were captured later that day, and a fourth was apprehended on Monday.

Police earlier said several of the detainees were facing charges of murder and other violent offences.

Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill said in her statement that Mr Williams "admitted to agents that one of the escapees advised him to turn the water off in the cell where the inmates escaped from".

"Instead of reporting the inmate, Williams turned the water off as directed allowing the inmates to carry out their scheme to successfully escape," she added.

He said he was forced to help the inmates escape, telling authorities that Antoine Massey - one of the six inmates still at large - "threatened to shank him if he did not turn the water off", according to court documents.

Mr Williams is facing 10 counts of a charge known as principal to simple escape, and another of malfeasance in office.

Liz Murrill said the investigation was ongoing, and that authorities would "uncover all the facts eventually and anyone who aided and abetted will be prosecuted to the full extent the law allows".

"I encourage anyone who knows anything and even those who may have provided assistance to come forward now to obtain the best possible outcome in their particular case," she said.

Orleans Parish Sheriff's Office A hole in a prison cell, behind a metal toilet, which authorities say was used by inmates to escape the facilityOrleans Parish Sheriff's Office
The sheriff's office said the inmates escaped by removing a toilet, as well as some metal bars behind it

Sheriff Susan Hutson earlier said that the inmates yanked the sliding door from their jail cell off its tracks at 00:23 in the early hours of Friday morning (05:23 GMT).

Separately, they later ripped the toilet off the wall and broke metal bars around a hole used for piping that was exposed by the missing toilet.

The group then made their escape by climbing down a wall and running across a highway, the sheriff said.

The sheriff's office released images of the hole in the wall, which shows what the piping fixture looked like before the toilet was ripped out. The photos note that "there are clean cuts" on the metal bars.

The images also show messages and drawings on the wall apparently left behind by the inmates, including the words "To (sic) Easy LoL" with an arrow pointing to the hole, and a smiley face with its tongue out. Another message, partially smudged, appears to tell officers to catch the inmates when they can.

The prison is located near the centre of New Orleans, around 3km (2 miles) from its famous French Quarter.