sounds, there was a person walking around in an area where security is at its highest, and he is not paid attention to for in excess of seven hours. at 10:00 p.m., after waiting at baggage claim for several hours by herself, robert s mother leaves, told by airport officials, she says, that there s no record of her son arriving. and she said, no, he s not here. you can go home. we will phone you. at 12:15 a.m., nine hours after arriving at the airport, robert finally makes it through immigration and is free to leave. he exits the international reception lounge, a secure area blocked off with plexiglas, but then returns through the one-way automatic doors. and i think when he got out into that public area and he realized that there was no one there, he got confused as to whether he was in the right place.
2006. a convicted murderer escapes from a federal penitentiary, and a massive manhunt is on to capture him. the fugitive, richard lee mcnair, is a dangerous criminal, a highly intelligent martial arts expert who s escaped from two other prisons in the past before being recaptured. this time, he hides in a mail truck. he s the first prisoner to escape from a federal maximum security facility in nearly 15 years. hours after mcnair s discovered missing, an officer with the ball police department sees a man running on the railroad tracks and gets out to question him. what it is, we ve got an escapee. oh. where from? a prison. is it the man he s looking for? when i crossed the tracks down there, i saw you running. and i said, well, how lucky can i be?
all right, thanks. but the officer never checks, and instead, seems to take a casual attitude. you know the bad thing about it? you re matching up to him. that sucks, doesn t it? yeah. the officer notices the man s legs are scraped. did you go through a brier patch or something? yeah, roofing. i always roof in shorts. got my scratches up on the roof. that s why your knees are all cut up? yeah. do you all wear pads? it s too hot. the pads rub the back of your legs. it seems mcnair has an answer for everything. but when the officer asks him his name a second time, mcnair gives a different response. what s your name again? jimmy jones. he says his name is jimmy jones. but the first time, he said it was robert jones. what s your name? robert jones. but the police officer doesn t pick up on it and almost apologizes for detaining the man. put yourself in my position. well, yeah.
sounds, there was a person walking around in an area where security is at its highest, and he is not paid attention to for in excess of seven hours. at 10:00 p.m., after waiting at baggage claim for several hours by herself, robert s mother leaves, told by airport officials, she says, that there s no record of her son arriving. and she said, no, he s not here. you can go home. we will phone you. at 12:15 a.m., nine hours after arriving at the airport, robert finally makes it through immigration and is free to leave. he exits the international reception lounge, a secure area blocked off with plexiglas, but then returns through the one-way automatic doors. and i think when he got out into that public area and he realized that there was no one there, he got confused as to whether he was in the right place. and he tried to get back in, and
surround him, and the grave scene unfolds. when robert stops moving, paramedics are called. he s pronounced dead at the scene. they say, i have very bad news for you. your son died. then i went in shock. i was crying. i was asking why. an initial autopsy finds no trace of alcohol, drugs, or disease, but fails to find a specific cause of death. he was not a sickly person. wasn t a diabetic, for example, or a person that required any kind of regular medication. the video is voluntarily handed over to police.