Fingerprint ruse IDs Florida man as longtime Ohio fugitive
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ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — A man
convicted of manslaughter walked away from an Ohio prison farm in 1959,
then was allowed to slip away from law enforcement in 1975 and
disappeared until a ruse to get his fingerprints led to his arrest in
Florida this week, investigators said Tuesday.
Former Akron,
Ohio, resident Frank Freshwaters, now 79, admitted his true identity
when authorities confronted him Monday, according to the U.S. Marshals
Service and deputies in Brevard County, Florida.
Marshals
in Ohio had sought help from deputies there, and they created a ruse to
get him to sign papers so they could check his fingerprints, which
matched the decades-old arrest, said Major Tod Goodyear. The sheriff's
office declined to give further details of the ruse.
"We couldn't go with a picture and see if it's that guy," Goodyear said. "You look different than you do 50 years ago."
An
old picture of Freshwaters came into play, when, after a week of
surveillance, they confronted him with a question as he left his trailer
in a rural area near Melbourne: Have you seen this man?
"They
showed him the pic, and he said he hadn't seen that guy in a long
time," Goodyear said. "Then he admitted it and basically said, 'You got
me.'"
The young man sent to the Ohio
State Reformatory in 1959 had short, dark hair in his black-and-white
mugshot, but here he was with a white beard, a ponytail and glasses,
living in a weathered trailer in a remote area surrounded by palmettos
and very few neighbors.
"It's a nice place to kind of hang out by yourself if you don't want people to know you're there," Goodyear said.
He had retired from a job as a truck driver and was living off Social Security benefits, Goodyear said.
He'd
left clues about his identity over the past 56 years, and investigators
traced those to his Florida doorstep, said U.S. Marshal Pete Elliott in
Cleveland.
"We have a saying in the Marshals Service, 'Let no guilty man escape,' and that is so true in this case," Elliott said.
Freshwaters pleaded guilty to a
manslaughter charge for fatally striking a 24-year-old pedestrian while
speeding in a vehicle in July 1957, and his initial sentence of one to
20 years in prison was suspended. He violated his probation by driving
and getting a driver's license, and the then-22-year-old was imprisoned
in February 1959 at the Ohio State Reformatory, according to the
marshals and old court documents they provided.
He
was soon moved to an honor camp near Sandusky, where he was reported
missing on Sept. 30, 1959, according to the Ohio Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction.
His
time on the lam was interrupted in 1975, when he was arrested on the
Ohio warrant by authorities in Charleston, West Virginia.
| Photo Credit: Yahoo News |
Media
reports at the time said his ex-wife alleged he threatened her, and
police serving the resulting peace warrant found him hiding under a sink
at his home in St. Albans. Investigators told reporters that
Freshwaters admitted he'd fled to Florida, obtained identification and a
Social Security number under the alias William Harold Cox and
eventually moved to West Virginia, where he drove a mobile library for
state government and worked for trucking firms.
When the governor in West Virginia refused to send him back to Ohio, he was freed and disappeared again, the marshals said.
An
investigation by a deputy marshal assigned this year to target cold
cases led authorities to Florida, where Freshwaters was living under the
Cox name, the statement said.
The
Brevard County Sheriff's Office said he was jailed as Harold F.
Freshwater and was ordered held without bond because of his status as an
out-of-state fugitive. Court records listed no attorney for him.
He
declined to talk to reporters and remained jailed Tuesday night, said
Cpl. Dave Jacobs of the Brevard County sheriff's office.
Such
cases of long-sought fugitives are not unheard of. A man who escaped
from a central Ohio prison in 1992 was arrested late last year at 71 in
Indiana, where he lived under an assumed name. And in 2002, a convicted
murderer who fled a Tennessee prison in 1970 was arrested in central
Ohio after living under an alias there for three decades.
A list of wanted felons on Ohio's prisons website includes 15 people whose escapes date even farther back than Freshwaters'.
___
Franko
reported from Columbus, Ohio. Associated Press writer Jennifer Smola in
Columbus and Jennifer Farrar in AP's News Research Center in New York
contributed to this report.
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