NEW ORLEANS — Ten men who broke out of a New Orleans jail last week clogged a toilet to get the water shut off so that they could escape through a hole behind it, a lawyer for a maintenance worker who is charged with helping them said Wednesday.
The worker, Sterling Williams, did not know about the men's plan and did not allow the inmates to cut a pipe behind the toilet to create an opening for their escape, attorney Michael Kennedy told The Associated Press.
The defense attorney laid out a very different narrative than that presented by authorities a day earlier, when Williams, 33, was arrested.
Authorities have said an inmate instructed Williams to turn off the water to a toilet, leading to one of the largest jailbreaks in recent U.S. history. Five of the men remained at large Wednesday.
Williams just a ‘tool,' lawyer says
Kennedy told the AP that after a deputy called Williams to fix a toilet, he found it overflowing.
''This was clearly all part of an orchestrated plan,'' Kennedy said. Williams ''was nothing more than the tool they used to turn off the water, which they knew would have to happen after clogging the toilet.''
According to an arrest affidavit that made no mention of a clogged toilet, Williams was ''initially very evasive and untruthful'' during an interview but ultimately told investigators that an inmate had threatened to ''shank'' him if he did not turn off the water. Williams could have reported the threat and the escape plan, authorities have said. They asserted that because Williams turned the water off, the inmates were ''able to successfully make good'' on their escape, the affidavit said.