though particular concerns are valid. how often do audits happen from the new york state department of corrections. how much oversight is there within these prisons? oh my goodness. they are daily that they re doing audits on reports that are submitted by each facility. atica, sing-sing, down the line data reports on staffing. number of posts closed. overtime hours. unusual incidents. misbehavior reports. accidents. all that stuff is being submitted. it is supposed to be looked at by central office personnel of the rank of assistant commissioner. keith, what do you make of the security protocols. cells getting weekly inspections, tunnels getting inspected monthly. are those thing that should have been done a long time ago? i feel they should have been done a long time ago. i just want to quantify one thing. i place no blame on any single person. this has been a systematic
and then walk done to the next cell. that s just a problem. that s not the way it should be done. again. we are still learning so much about. not only what happened to the two guys but inside the prison. appreciate all of you, jeff dumas, keith provost, pat dunlevy. matt s escape as well as sick, vicious life ended down the road from the trailer where he spent his final days and left clues to what the days are like. gary tuchman takes you inside. we want to warn you one of the images you will see is graphic. reporter: it is one of busier roads in franklin county new york. a road that had regular police patrols during portions of the 3-week-long manhunt. richard matt and david sweat spent a lot of time in the wilderness. we know on the last day of matt s life heave wasn t in the wilderness. he was very close off to hundred of motorists here on state highway 30. this is where he spent the last day before he was killed, this trailer, which is only about 100 feet from this road. but it
correction officer, firm fair consistent. as owe opposed to hard nosed cynic or sucker. keith, these guys were able to do a practice run we learned the night before the actual escape. left clothes in their bed made it look like they were sleeping. you worked the overnight shift as a correction officer there, can you describe the process of night counts and are officers allowed, can they go into individual cells if they think something is suspicious? no not on night shift. we would have to call the sergeant lieutenant down. what happens on night shift, we come in. we start our shift for the 12:00 count. the bell would ring. lights are on. we would take a live count. most of the time the inmates would be sitting at the end of their bed. then the one, two, three, four 5:00 counts are less secure. there was always a push back because if we if we ended up waking the inmates up a lot, there would be some grievances filed. and then there is always push