Alabama Inmate Is Sentenced to Life in Officer-Aided Escape
An Alabama inmate who escaped from jail and avoided capture for nearly two weeks last spring was sentenced on Thursday to spend the rest of his life in prison, the maximum sentence for first-degree escape.
The inmate, Casey White, escaped from Lauderdale County Jail in Florence, Ala., in May 2022. He was aided by a corrections officer, Vicky White, who was of no relation to him. After leaving the jail for a courthouse appointment that was later revealed to be a ruse, the pair were on the run for 11 days, setting off a nationwide manhunt that ended with his arrest and her death after a police chase in Indiana.
At a courthouse in Lauderdale County on Thursday, the local CBS affiliate station reported, Mr. White, 39, said he felt like “the most hated man in the world” and that he had loved Ms. White, whose family members attended the sentencing hearing and to whom he apologized.
“Vicky took me out because she said, ‘Right was right. Wrong is wrong.’ First person to show me affection. First person to give me a hug in six years,” he said. Ms. White, 56, died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound after the police pursuit ended in a car crash. Mr. White surrendered.
At the time, Sheriff Rick Singleton of Lauderdale County said that he believed the two had been in a “romantic relationship” for at least two years. Lawyers for Mr. White confirmed their relationship.
“It’s our view that he’s just a master manipulator,” Chris Connolly, the Lauderdale County district attorney, said of Mr. White.
Mr. Connolly added that Ms. White’s mother had intended to speak in court on Thursday but was ultimately too emotional to do so.
Under Alabama law, a person may be charged with felony murder if they cause someone’s death while committing a felony such as arson, burglary or escape. But last month, in a move that surprised both the prosecution and his own defense team, Mr. White pleaded guilty to a first-degree escape charge in exchange for the state dropping a felony murder charge in the death of Ms. White.
Mark McDaniel, an attorney for Mr. White, said in a phone interview that he had “never had a case that was like this” in his 46 years of practicing law and called it “very unusual.” He said Mr. White had not wanted anything derogatory to be said in court about Ms. White.
“I did want to remind everybody,” Mr. McDaniel said, “she did have the keys.” He added: “Everybody was talking about bad Casey is. Well, he was in the cage, and she had the keys.”
At the time of his escape, Mr. White was awaiting trial in the fatal stabbing of a woman in 2015, according to the U.S. Marshals Service; he is set to be tried in August. He had already been serving a 75-year sentence at William E. Donaldson Correctional Facility in Jefferson County, Ala., for previous convictions, including two carjackings, multiple shootings and kidnapping.
The life sentence for first-degree escape will be served concurrently with Mr. White’s 75-year sentence, Mr. McDaniel explained, “so he would be conceivably sometime in his life be eligible for parole.”
Mr. Connolly noted that Mr. White will not be eligible for parole until 2081 and that the judge ordered that Mr. White or any person acting on his behalf would have to disclose “any money that they may receive based on his commission of this crime,” in the event that any books or films stem from the national attention the case received.
“We would file a civil condemnation lawsuit and ask the court to seize that money,” he said.
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