Three escaped Alcatraz inmates could have survived, be alive today
To recap, three Alcatraz inmates-Frank Morris along with brothers John and Clarence Anglin-escaped by chiseling a hole into a prison wall and jumping into the cold San Francisco Bay, with homemade paddles and a raft made from raincoats.
Alcatraz officials maintain the men drowned during the escape, which gives the prison claim to zero successful escapes during its 29 years of operation. In truth, new concrete facts that they will stayed has appeared a History Channel wonderful and encouraged a taken out of circulation United States position to bring life to the research, the New York Post results.
The Anglin family case was strengthened after DNA of a third brother, who died trying to escape prison in Alabama, was checked against skeletal remains found north of San Francisco in 1963 which prison authorities said may have belonged to one of the three escapes.
Alcatraz officials have long believed the three, who were serving time for bank robberies, drowned in the water after they disappeared.
In it they claim the family withheld information because they were being spied on and harassed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The nephews have also produced a photograph which they claim proves the Anglins may have been alive in the 1970s.
Two of one’s Anglin’s nephews are actually helping by using legislators along with…
They have Christmas cards signed in the names of John and Clarence Anglin, and Roderick matched the handwriting.
“When you work these types of cases there’s a feeling you get when stuff starts to fall into place”, he says.
The Angling brothers had set sail from the shore of Alcatraz and were never seen again.