UPDATED Chardon school shooter T.J. Lane captured after escape
Associated Press
LIMA, Ohio
Authorities have rounded up all three inmates who escaped from an Ohio prison on Thursday, including the convicted killer of three Ohio students at a high school cafeteria. News partner 21 WFMJ-TV reports 19-year-old T.J. Lane was taken into custody.
Lane is serving three life sentences for killing three students in a cafeteria at Chardon High School, east of Cleveland. He was 17 at the time.
Three inmates escaped from the Allen County Correctional Institution shortly before 8:00 p.m. Thursday.
Lane, then 18, pleaded guilty last year to shooting three students in February 2012 at Chardon High School, east of Cleveland. He said he didn’t know why he did. He was given three life sentences.
Prosecutors say Lane took a .22-caliber pistol and a knife to the school and fired 10 shots at a group of students in the cafeteria. Daniel Parmertor and Demetrius Hewlin, both 16, and Russell King Jr., 17, were killed.
Lane was at Chardon waiting for a bus to the alternative school he attended, for students who haven’t done well in traditional settings.
Before Lane’s case went to adult court in 2012, a juvenile court judge ruled that Lane was mentally competent to stand trial despite evidence he suffers from hallucinations, psychosis and fantasies. At his sentencing, Lane was defiant, smiling and smirking throughout, including while four relatives of the victims spoke.
Reached Thursday at her home in Chardon, Dina Parmertor, mother of Daniel Parmertor, said of Lane’s escape: “I’m disgusted that it happened. I’m extremely scared and panic stricken. I can’t believe it.”
Ohio public safety and correction officials said they began an “extensive search,” along with the local authorities and the Ohio State Highway Patrol after the inmates escaped at 7:40 p.m. Thursday from the Allen Oakwood Correctional Institution.
“All available troopers from the Ohio State Highway Patrol have been joined by Allen County sheriff’s deputies and local area law enforcement in establishing a perimeter and searching the area,” Ohio Department of Public Safety Director John Born said. “A patrol helicopter with advanced infrared detection equipment has been deployed and is engaged in the search as well.
Born encouraged the public to call 911 of any suspicious persons or possible sightings.
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