NEW ORLEANS — A New Orleans jail maintenance worker has been arrested on accusations that he turned water off to a toilet covering a hole in a cell wall, allowing 10 men to squeeze through the gap and escape the facility.
The inmates, six of whom remain on the lam, pulled off the daring escape from the Orleans Justice Center early Friday by yanking open a faulty cell door, moving the toilet and slithering through a hole. Graffiti on the wall included the message ''To Easy LoL,'' with an arrow pointing to the gap.
Officials have pointed to multiple security lapses in the escape, including ineffective cell locks and that they escaped when the lone guard monitoring them went to get food. During a tense New Orleans City Council meeting on Tuesday, Orleans Parish Sheriff Susan Hutson, who oversees the jail, said she ''takes full accountability" for the escape.
The absence of the inmates, many charged with or convicted of violent offenses such as murder, was not reported to law enforcement for hours. Four have since been apprehended and six remain at large.
''There were procedural failures and missed notifications, but there were also intentional wrongdoings —- this was a coordinated effort aided by individuals inside our own agency who made the choice to break the law,'' Hutson said. ''We are continuing to pursue everyone involved.''
Arrested staffer says inmate threatened to stab him
Authorities believe sheriff's employees may have helped the fugitives to escape, and three have been suspended. On Tuesday, authorities made their first staff arrest.
Maintenance worker, Sterling Williams, 33, admitted to law enforcement that one of the escapees ''advised him to turn the water off in the cell'' before the men slipped away through the hole in the wall, the Louisiana Attorney General's office said in a statement.