Skip navigation

Through cunning, killer escaped time and again


< Prev | 1 | 2

‘He's caused a lot of shame and heartache’
McNair's mother and father divorced, and they and his three brothers disowned the eldest son and had little communication after the killing in Minot, Phil McNair said.

"Of course he needs to pay his time," Phil McNair said. "He's caused a lot of shame and heartache to our family that seems like it never ends."

In February 1988, months after Richard McNair was convicted, he used lip balm to grease his hand and slip out of handcuffs at the Minot police station. He was captured after he jumped from the third floor of a building.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Erck said McNair nearly escaped from the Ward County Jail while awaiting trial for the grain elevator shootings.

"He chipped out two cinderblocks in his cell," Erck said. Behind the cinderblocks, authorities found a deputy's flashlight and sheets and towels tied to make a rope, which he intended to use to rappel to freedom.

Rubbing it in
His second successful escape was from the North Dakota State Penitentiary. Officials said McNair slipped out with two other prisoners through a ventilation duct on Oct. 9, 1992; he was on the lam until the following July 5, when he was captured in Grand Island, Neb.

North Dakota Warden Tim Schuetzle, recalling that McNair was the editor of the prison newspaper, The Inside Times, said what others did: "I think he's a smart guy."

After escaping from the penitentiary, McNair wrote Schuetzle a Christmas card, as well as other notes to prison administrators. Schuetzle was not amused by the correspondence, and doesn't like talking about it.

After his later escape from the Louisiana prison, McNair used Schuetzle's name on an application to purchase a cell phone.

"I really don't know what his issues are," Schuetzle said. "I think he's a psychopath who likes to think he's smarter than police and corrections people — maybe that's why he used my name."

Memories linger
McNair pulled off the escape in Pollock, La., by smuggling himself out of the federal prison there in a pile of mailbags that were shrink-wrapped on a pallet on April 5, 2006.

A police officer later that day questioned him but let him go, saying he did not fit the description given by prison officials. McNair had claimed he was just out jogging.

Federal marshals listed him among the nation's 15 most wanted criminals. A $25,000 reward was offered for his capture.

And McNair was finally captured last month by Canadian officials in New Brunswick.

Kitzman has tried to block out the shooting two decades ago, which occurred when he was called into work late and surprised McNair burglarizing the grain elevator.

McNair fired a single shot from behind him. The bullet passed through a window and grazed Kitzman's right temple. "I never noticed him," said Kitzman, lifting a pant leg to show where a bullet pierced his calf before blowing through his thigh. Another shot shattered his wrist, and an egg-size scar remains.

Kitzman was relieved to hear the news of McNair's capture, almost exactly two decades after he was wounded and his good friend murdered.

"It's good to have him back in jail where he belongs so he can't hurt anybody else," Kitzman said.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


< Prev | 1 | 2

Sponsored LinksGet listed here
Online College Courses
Boost your career with an online Degree. Pick from Leading Colleges!
www.EarnMyDegree.com

Sponsored links

Resource guide