Tag Archives: jailbreak

A 21-year-old woman helped set up the Philly jailbreak and has been charged, police say – The Philadelphia Inquirer

  1. A 21-year-old woman helped set up the Philly jailbreak and has been charged, police say The Philadelphia Inquirer
  2. Philadelphia prison break: Woman charged with aiding in escape of 2 prisoners FOX 29 Philadelphia
  3. Woman Arrested for Allegedly Helping Prisoners Escape, Police Say NBC 10 Philadelphia
  4. Woman charged in connection with escape of 2 Philadelphia prisoners identified as Xianni Stalling WPVI-TV
  5. Philadelphia prison break: Manhunt underway for Ameen Hurst, Nasir Grant who escaped Philadelphia Industrial Correctional Center WPVI-TV
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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The Analogue Pocket Just Got Its Long-Awaited Jailbreak

Image: Analogue / Kotaku / Se_vector (Shutterstock)

Analogue Co.’s Pocket has always turned heads: first for being the most authentic-seeming Game Boy replacement ever announced, then for taking an extraordinary length of time to finally come out. But come out it did, and it was pretty good. For some, its biggest drawback was that it required old, increasingly expensive physical cartridges to play games, as (for the most part) it couldn’t just load convenient ROM files. The Pocket really needed something the kids call a “jailbreak,” at least if it was going to fulfill the fantasy of being the ultimate Game Boy device. Today, that jailbreak just slipped in the side door.

A little place-setting: When the Pocket finally shipped last December, it had only the most barebones operating system, and lacked many of the system’s long-promised features, like save states that backed up your game progress. (Analogue also didn’t release the originally announced Atari Lynx, Neo Geo Pocket, or TurboGrafx-16 cart adapters.) Early adopters, glad as they were to have their uber Game Boys with beautiful retina-quality screens, realized it’d be quite some time before the device in their hands was actually finished.

The same was true for would-be developers eager to make the new machine do fun new stuff. The Pocket contains two field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs), which programmers can reconfigure to closely approximate the hardware of another device. They are wonderful for simulating classic video game systems, and hobbyist developers could surely put them to great use, perhaps by developing new FPGA cores—meaning software that tells the FPGAs how to configure themselves—to simulate even more consoles. But that feature was delayed too.

Fast forward to today. At 8:01 a.m. PT Analogue finally released a new version of the Pocket’s Analogue OS. Today’s Analogue OS v1.1 beta adds the long-promised “Library” and “Memories” features; the first displays information about games you insert, the second is basically save states. v1.1 also finally opens the system up to developers, under the moniker “openFPGA.” As an example of what hobbyists can accomplish with the newly unlocked FPGAs, Analogue released an openFPGA core that simulates Spacewar!, one of the first video games. Neat.

And that was it. A nice and necessary update, but it wasn’t the jailbreak many folks’d been hoping for, either. See you in another six months! (Actually, Analogue being Analogue, more likely eight.)

But then.

Some three hours later at 11:23 a.m., a Github account called Spiritualized1997, created less than 24 hours before, uploaded a repository called openFPGA-GBA; one minute later, it uploaded another called openFPGA-GB-GBC. Each repository contained a single downloadable file. “To play Game Boy Advance on your Pocket follow these instructions,” said the instructions accompanying the GBA repository, outlining five steps to install a v1.0.0 Spiritualized1997 GBA core on the Pocket and get it running ROM files. The second repository offered similar instructions, but for a core that ran Game Boy and Game Boy Color ROMs.

So to recap: Today Analogue Pocket got the ability to run third-party FPGA cores. Three hours and 22 minutes later the Pocket’s two most popular supported handhelds mysteriously received new, third-party FPGA cores that could Do The Thing that everyone’s wanted the Pocket to do since it came out: load games from ROM files stored on a microSD card. Is this…is this finally the jailbreak?

Yes, yes it is. Or rather, the jailbreak’s finally started, because today’s two v1.0.0 Nintendo cores are just the first wave of what is clearly going to be a longer, more sustained rollout.

So what is happening here? Who is Spiritualized1997, and how the hell did they develop and release GBA and GB/GBC cores for the Analogue Pocket just three or so hours after today’s Analogue OS v1.1 beta release made running such things possible? Why is the account so new?

Most observers’ theory—which, to be clear, Kotaku cannot confirm—is that Spiritualized1997 is Kevin “Kevtris” Horton, a legend in the emulation scene and the FPGA emulation guru behind all of Analogue’s FPGA-based game machines. He’s worked on the Analogue NT mini (which played 8-bit NES games), the Super NT (SNES games), the Mega Sg (Sega Genesis games), and of course the Pocket.

Kevtris checks in on the popular Classic Gaming Discord today about 40 minutes after the two unexpected FPGA cores were uploaded.
Screenshot: Kotaku

Horton has a history (you’re now thinking of a Dr. Seuss book) of releasing unofficial “jailbreak” firmware for the Analogue Co. consoles he’s helped develop, starting back in 2017 when he uploaded the first jailbreak firmware for the NT mini. “The Core Store is officially open for business!” he wrote on the AtariAge forum, referring to the potential to make the NT mini run games from a variety of systems, when until then it had only played 8-bit Nintendo games loaded off of physical cartridges.

In case that left any doubt, he added, “Yes, this means that it runs ROMs now!”

And that’s how it’s gone for all the Analogue consoles since. Horton got a little more discreet after the NT mini jailbreak, instead releasing his jailbreak firmwares through intermediaries like emulation scene mover-and-shaker Smokemonster. But folks in the scene, with a wink and a nod, understand where these popular, hardware-enhancing bits of software really come from. (Prior Analogue consoles have been closed platforms, so who else could have made them?)

That’s why many people considered it a given that the Analogue Pocket’s wonderful hardware would itself get liberated to play games from ROM files. It’s been a long eight months, but today’s surprise Spiritualized1997 FPGA cores are pretty much exactly what Pocket owners wanted, just in a slightly different form than usual—discrete FPGA cores loadable through the Pocket’s new openFPGA feature. That’s made this “jailbreak” seem a little more subtle than usual. It’s not a firmware replacement, but just alternate cores you run off the microSD card. The end result is exactly the same, though.

But again, this is just the start of a longer jailbreak process that will play out over the coming months. After all, Game Boy, Game Boy Color, and Game Boy Advance are just three of the handhelds people want to play on Pocket, not to mention folks clamoring for it to support TV-based consoles like Genesis and SNES. The Spiritualized1997 FPGA cores, both at just v1.0.0, are also missing a few features enjoyed by the Pocket’s official built-in cores, most notably screen filters. These and further enhancements are coming; the missing filters are apparently just because the openFPGA API is still immature.

Spiritualized1997, who only joined Github yesterday, is a very helpful person.
Screenshot: Kotaku

Spiritualized1997, whoever they may be, is also being quite active on Reddit. One user bemoaned the lack of a Sega Game Gear core, to which Spiritualized1997 replied, “coming soon.” This seemingly supernaturally helpful individual also released an 80MB archive containing 6,959 title screen images of Game Boy, Game Boy Advance, and Game Gear games that are in, wouldn’t you know it, exactly the special file format that the Pocket’s new “Library” feature expects. So now you know how to make your Library look pretty.

“This is fantastic! Finally the Pocket awakens from its deep slumber,” said a Reddit user in response to news of the two new FPGA cores. “I haven’t powered on mine [in] months!”

“Today has been a roller coaster.” said another. “Sincerely, thanks!”

So while the heavens didn’t part and there was no neon sign flashing “the jailbreak is here!”, make no mistake, on July 29, 2022 the Analogue Pocket finally got the key feature owners have desired since December. But this jailbreak isn’t once and done; this is slow and steady, and now that the pump is primed, more ROM-friendly cores will come with time. Game Gear first, seemingly.

Kotaku reached out to Analogue Co. for comment.

At the end of today’s Analogue OS v1.1 announcement, the company tweeted, “Analogue does not support or endorse the unauthorized use or distribution of material protected by copyright or other intellectual property rights.”

 



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PS5 jailbreak a reality after hacking group uncovers root keys

A PS5 jailbreak might be on the way as a group of hackers claim to have decrypted the PS5, allowing for significant future changes to the console.

FailOverflow, a hacking group that also found its way into the PS3 several years ago, recently tweeted what they claim are PS5 ‘Root Keys’ – tools hackers can use to decrypt files. With the root keys available, users could attempt to reverse-engineer the console’s software, making exploits accessible and allowing unsigned (and unauthorized) code to run on the system.

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A second incident over the weekend saw another Sony hacker, Andy Nguyen, suggest that he had managed to access the debug settings – normally only available to developers – on a retail PS5. Nguyen said he had “no plans” to distribute his method, however.

FailOverflow hasn’t explained its working either, but the group does say that it won’t be easy for Sony to close the potential vulnerability – in a response to a query on Twitter asking whether the root keys could be ‘rotated’ easily, the group simply replied ‘No’.

These steps are significant, but they don’t mean that the PS5 has been entirely broken open. It’s possible that Sony will take some action to fix the leaks. If that’s not the case, however, these hacks could eventually result in the console being fully ‘jailbroken’, which could have significant consequences down the line. When the PS3 was jailbroken, users were able to copy games from their discs to the console’s hard drive, downgrade their system software, and run emulated software, although the practice is unauthorized. 

Your hardware probably won’t change any time soon, so here are some upcoming PS5 games to check out instead.



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Israeli forces nab last 2 Palestinian fugitives in Jenin, ending jailbreak saga

Israeli security forces overnight Saturday-Sunday arrested the two remaining Palestinian security inmates who escaped from Gilboa prison in northern Israel nearly two weeks ago, the army said.

The arrests of the two dangerous fugitives — a week after the four other escaped prisoners were recaptured in northern Israel — brings to a close a massive manhunt following one of the worst jailbreaks in Israel’s history.

Iham Kamamji and Munadil Nafiyat, both members of the Islamic Jihad terror group, were apprehended in the West Bank city of Jenin, the Israel Defense Forces said early Sunday.

“The two terrorists were caught alive and were handed over for interrogation by the security forces,” the military said. They were captured following a joint operation by the IDF, Shin Bet security service, and the Yamam counter-terrorism police unit.

Palestinian media reports said there were exchanges of gunfire during the predawn arrest raid by Israeli special forces. There were no reports of Israeli or Palestinian casualties.

The two Palestinian fugitives did not resist arrest, surrendering after Israeli troops encircled the building where they were hiding.

Fouad Kamamji, Iham’s father, told The Associated Press that his son had called him when the Israeli troops surrounded the house and said he will surrender “in order not to endanger the house owners.”

Two alleged accomplices, reportedly Jenin residents, were also arrested in the raid. The Shin Bet security service said it was questioning both the fugitives and the accomplices.

Kamamji was serving a life sentence at the time of the escape, for killing an 18-year-old Israeli in 2006, a murder he reportedly expressed pride in. Nafayat has not been charged with a crime other than being a member of the Islamic Jihad, and was being held under Israel’s practice of administrative detention, which allows it to imprison suspects without filing charges. Security officials had feared they could attempt to carry out a terror attack while on the run.

“As time passed, we knew they were in Jenin,” Police Commissioner Kobi Shabtai said early Sunday. “We prepared for several days for a complex mission and tonight, after receiving the information we had been waiting for, the signal was given to start the operation, with Yamam forces at the forefront.”

The six Palestinian prisoners escaped from Gilboa Prison in the pre-dawn hours of September 6, making their way out through their cell’s drainage system and an empty space underneath the prison. They had reportedly begun digging in November, using plates and pan handles.

In this photo provided by Israel Police, Zakaria Zubeidi, left, and Mohammed al-Arida, two of six Palestinian security Prisoners who broke out of Gilboa Prison, are blindfolded and handcuffed after being recaptured in the Arab town of Umm al-Ghanam, northern Israel, Saturday, Sept. 11, 2021. (Israeli Police via AP)

The escape exposed a series of failures at the prison. Among the apparent lapses were failure to learn lessons from previous escape attempts and several operational blunders, including unmanned watchtowers and sleeping guards.

Four of the six escapees, including notorious terror commander Zakaria Zubeidi, were caught by security forces last weekend. Yaqoub Qadiri and Mahmoud al-Arida, the latter reported to be the mastermind of the jailbreak, were arrested in the northern town of Nazareth.

In this Monday, Sept. 6, 2021 file photo, police officers and prison guards inspect the scene of a prison escape by six Palestinian prisoners, outside the Gilboa prison in Northern Israel. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner, File)

Al-Arida, considered a senior Islamic Jihad member, was jailed for life for terrorist activity, including attacks in which soldiers were killed. Qadiri, also an Islamic Jihad member, was also serving life terms for acts of terrorism including the murder of an Israeli in 2004.  Both men were reportedly involved in a 2014 attempt to break out of Gilboa.

Zubeidi, a notorious commander in Fatah’s Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade terror group, was in prison while on trial for two dozen crimes, including attempted murder. The younger al-Arida, also an Islamic Jihad member was arrested in 2002 on terror offenses and sentenced to life in prison.

Israeli security forces arrest the remaining two Palestinian fugitives in Jenin, West Bank, on September 19, 2021 (screen capture: Twitter)

Among the Palestinians, the fugitives have been widely regarded as “heroes” who succeeded in freeing themselves from multiple life sentences. The jailbreak was followed by heightened tensions in the West Bank, a stabbing attack in Jerusalem, several other attack attempts, and sporadic rocket fire from the Gaza Strip at southern Israel.

AP contributed to this report.

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Jailbreak mastermind claims nobody aided escape from Gilboa Prison

The reported mastermind behind last week’s jailbreak from Gilboa Prison said he and the other five escapees planned their operation nine months ago, and received no help from other prisoners.

Mahmoud al-Arida spoke on Tuesday night with his lawyer, Raslan Mahajna, for the first time since his arrest on Friday, and revealed new information regarding the escape.

“I am responsible for all planning for the escape and the excavation,” al-Arida boasted, according to Hebrew-language media reports Wednesday. He said they received no assistance from inside or outside the prison.

But according to a Tuesday report, investigators probing last Monday’s escape believe that at least 11 prisoners were involved in the digging of the tunnel, which began as early as November 2020.

Al-Arida, considered a senior Islamic Jihad member, was jailed for life for terrorist activities, including attacks in which soldiers were killed.

His attorney said al-Arida claimed he and the other escapees listened to media reports on the jailbreak using small radios they had taken with them from the prison.

In this photo provided by Israel’s Prisons Service, a hole in a floor is seen after six Palestinian prisoners escaped from the Gilboa prison in northern Israel, on September 6, 2021. (Israeli Prisons Service via AP)

Al-Arida also confirmed the six men headed on foot for the nearby Arab town of Na’ura, some seven kilometers (4.3 miles) from the jail, where they showered and changed clothes before heading out of the town.

Citing details leaked from the Shin Bet interrogation of the four escapees who have been recaptured, particularly from notorious terror commander Zakaria Zubeidi, reports said they begged several residents to drive them to the city of Jenin in the West Bank, but were refused.

The recaptured fugitives told the Shin Bet that they and their comrades decided to split up into three pairs and go into hiding in northern Israel until the West Bank border area had calmed down.

Israeli Border Police in the village of Nau’ra search for six Palestinian fugitives who escaped from a high security prison in northern Israel, on September 7, 2021. (Flash90)

“We wanted to get to the West Bank, but we knew a lot of forces were waiting for us at the borders,” al-Arida said on Tuesday.

Police captured two of the fugitives — including al-Arida — in Nazareth on Friday night. Hours later, two others were apprehended in the nearby town of Shibli–Umm al-Ghanam. In both cases, Arab Israelis who encountered the fugitives reported the suspicious sightings to authorities, aiding their capture.

But according to al-Arida, no one in Nazareth reported him and the other escapees to the authorities, and they were arrested by chance when a police patrol spotted them.

Defense forces say they are narrowing in on the location of the last two — Iham Kamamji and Munadil Nafiyat — both of whom are members of the Islamic Jihad terror group

According to Haaretz, officials believe Nafiyat succeeded in making his way to Jenin, after he was identified in security footage crossing the border fence last week. While forces are still searching for Kamamji in Israel, he is also thought to have crossed into the West Bank and was headed to Jenin, the report said.

Israeli soldiers take positions along the border between the northern West Bank near Jenin and Israel as they search for two Palestinians who broke out of a maximum-security prison last week, on a road leading to the West Bank town of Jenin, near Gan Ner Israel, September 12, 2021. (AP/Ariel Schalit)

There is mounting concern that the effort to capture the last two fugitives would become much more complicated if they succeeded in reaching the crowded Jenin refugee camp, largely a no-go area for Israeli and Palestinian Authority forces.

That would necessitate an IDF raid, which would not only increase the chances of Israeli casualties but also make it much more difficult to capture the fugitives alive. Israel is wary of making martyrs of them, given how they have already been idolized by much of the Palestinian public for their daring escape.

The six escaped from Gilboa Prison in the predawn hours of last Monday morning, making their way out through their cell’s drainage system and an empty space underneath the prison.

FILE – In this Monday, Sept. 6, 2021 file photo, police officers and prison guards inspect the scene of a prison escape by six Palestinian prisoners, outside the Gilboa prison in Northern Israel. Pressure is building around Israel’s prison system after fires broke out at several facilities and the government hunted for six Palestinian escapees who have been on the run since they tunneled out two days earlier. Fires were reported at several prisons Wednesday amid efforts to try to move inmates as a precautionary measure. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner, File)

While officials had warned the escapees were possibly planning a terror attack, al-Arida said he was just “looking for freedom, to hug my mother.”

The prisoners are said to have carried out the digging using plates and sharpened pan handles and to have dumped the excavated dirt in the sewer system, in garbage cans, and in hollow shafts they found in their wing.

The escape is considered one of the worst jailbreaks in Israel’s history and the prisons service has faced significant criticism in the wake of the incident, with a reported series of blunders having enabled the six to escape.

Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.

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All Hell Breaks Loose in Israel’s Prisons After Mass Jailbreak

JERUSALEM—Israel’s prisons are confronting a rebellion as inmates associated with the Palestinian Islamic Jihad rioted and set fire to cells following the spectacular escape, on Monday, of six fellow prisoners held in one of Israel’s most secured jails.

A dozen cells in two penitentiaries were set on fire, and prisoners threatened further harm to wardens after attacking one Gilboa prison jailer with boiling water, according to briefings by prison authorities. The prisoners were reportedly protesting a decision to have them moved from their wings, one of the measures taken by Israeli authorities in the aftermath of the staggering jailbreak of half a dozen men accused of crimes of terror, who bolted from the high-security Gilboa prison in Galilee with cartoonish ease.

Morale is high among the prisoners since the Gilboa jailbreak.

Despite more than 90 checkpoints set up by the police, which impacted holiday traffic over the Jewish New Year, and support from 14 army infantry companies and special units, there has barely been sighting of the fugitives, Zakaria Zubeidi, Iham Kamamji, Monadal Infiat, Yakub Kadari and the brothers Mahmoud and Mohammed Aradeh.

A shop owner in a northern Israeli village reported that Zubeidi, the best known fugitive, entered his store and asked for bread, and a ride, in the early dawn hours on Monday. He was turned down and left.

Hours after the jailbreak, Prison Service Commissioner Katy Perry ordered inmates displaced so as to ensure that only one Islamic Jihad prisoner was placed in any given prison cell at a time.

The six fugitives, five of whom are members of the Islamic Jihad, shared a single cell. Following Perry’s announcement, some 400 Islamic Jihad-affiliated prisoners were dispersed among Israel’s maximum-security prisons.

Widespread rioting ensued in several top security wards, with close to a dozen cells set on fire.

For now, it looks like the jailers are backing down.

The Israel Prison Service (IPS) decided against continuing to move Palestinian Islamic Jihad prisoners in several Israeli and West Bank jails after prisoners threatened mass riots, including further acts of arson if they were separated and transferred to other wards or prisons.

“Morale is high among the prisoners since the Gilboa jailbreak,” a senior prisons service official told Israeli outlet Walla News. “And we’re stretched to the ends of our abilities.”

The Israeli army arrayed for possible mass protests in the occupied West Bank, and for an uptick in violence along the Gaza border, where there have been ongoing clashes for several weeks.

On Wednesday night, Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett warned that the breakout “has the potential to affect several arenas,” adding that Israel “is prepared for every scenario.”

The Palestine Prisoners’ Society issued a press release announcing that “all Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails would respond to “the IPS’s punitive measures” with an “open confrontation” against prison authorities. Hamas, the Islamist militia that rules the Gaza Strip, warned Israel in a statement “against the continuation of these repressive and retaliatory measures against the prisoners,” adding that Israel alone would be responsible for the ensuing consequences.

The worst that has taken place here in decades.

In a Tuesday press conference, and in a social media campaign underway Wednesday, the Islamic Jihad called on Palestinians to confront the Israeli army “at every site.”

The military wing of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, another extremist group, declared that “our fighters are on standby, ready, and all options are available to respond and defend our brave prisoners,” should harm come to them.

In the Palestinian administrative capital of Ramallah, in the West Bank, a few dozen people gathered in sympathy with the fugitive prisoners on Wednesday night, and both Israeli and Palestinian authorities fear an escalation of violence similar to the eruption that occurred last May, leading to the ten-day Israel-Gaza war.

Following the calls to action, Palestinian Jerusalemites clashed with police at the Old City’s Damascus Gate on Wednesday, in scenes harking back to the disturbances that led to the battle. The radical factions hope to ignite the region in a sustained uprising similar to the first intifada that erupted after a notorious Palestinian prison break in 1987.

Concerned that the inmates may have received help from inside the jail, Israeli police are questioning prison guards about The Great Galilee Escape. At least 14 IPS employees were questioned on Wednesday.

Retired prison service deputy commissioner Makleb Tapash said in an interview with the tabloid Yediot Ahronot that the jailbreak is “a disgraceful incident, the worst that has taken place here in decades.”



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Latest unc0ver release can jailbreak the iPhone 12 series and iOS 14.3

Compared to Android users, where rooting is a straightforward process and unlocks a plethora of features for your device (and a very respectable degree of customization and functionality can be added to your phone even if you’re not rooted), iOS users really don’t have it that easy. The iOS ecosystem is very locked down, and Apple puts overtime effort into ensuring it stays that way. But there’s a way out of this walled garden, and it’s called jailbreaking. Unfortunately, though, jailbreaking is way more difficult than rooting on Android, but last year, we got to know about unc0ver, a new iOS jailbreak that became a huge deal because it used a zero-day exploit to jailbreak phones running then-just-released iOS 13.5.

Now, there’s a new version of this jailbreak in town, and it works from iOS 11.0 all the way up to iOS 14.3, meaning that you can easily jailbreak the newly released iPhone 12 series, including the iPhone 12 mini, the iPhone 12, the iPhone 12 Pro, and the iPhone 12 Pro Max. In fact, as of the time of writing, users have reported that they have managed to easily jailbreak the new devices. The new version of unc0ver is just as straightforward to install as the previous versions: just download AltStore, sideload it to your iOS device, and use it to install unc0ver, which will then effortlessly jailbreak your smartphone.

Jailbreaking opens the floodgates for iOS customizability and it also allows you to add extra functionality to your iOS smartphone. Check out our initial coverage on the unc0ver project to know more about its developers, some nifty mods you can try out, and what exactly you can do when you remove the walls on iOS to unlock its full potential. Plenty of awesome and exciting mods arose thanks to jailbreaking last year, and we’re excited to see what will arise this time around. You can check out the unc0ver website to download it and learn how to install it.

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Prison director and gang leader among 25 killed in Haitian jailbreak | Haiti

More than 400 inmates have escaped and 25 people have died in a prison breakout in Haiti, authorities say, making it the country’s largest and deadliest one in a decade. A prison director and a powerful gang leader were among those killed.

The breakout at Croix-des-Bouquets prison on the outskirts of the capital Port-au-Prince on Thursday was believed to be an attempt to free gang leader Arnel Joseph, who had been Haiti’s most wanted fugitive until his 2019 arrest on charges including rape, kidnapping and murder.

Joseph, who was reportedly still wearing prison chains on his ankles, was being ridden on a motorcycle through the Artibonite area in the town of L’Estere on Friday a day after his escape when he was spotted at a checkpoint, police spokesman Gary Desrosiers told Associated Press. He said Joseph pulled out a gun and died in an exchange of gunfire with police.

Joseph ruled Village de Dieu, or Village of God, a shantytown in Port-au-Prince, and other communities, including some in Artibonite, which is Haiti’s largest department.

Authorities have not yet provided much detail about the breakout except to say that 60 inmates have been recaptured and the investigation is ongoing. State secretary, Frantz Exantus, said authorities have created several commissions to investigate who organised the breakout and why. Among those killed was the prison director, identified as Paul Joseph Hector.

Residents who declined to be identified because they feared for their life said they saw gunmen shoot at prison guards on Thursday before inmates escaped from the Croix-des-Bouquets penitentiary.

The prison is known for a 2014 breakout in which more than 300 of the 899 inmates escaped. Some believed that attack was designed to free Clifford Brandt, the son of a prominent businessman, who had been imprisoned since 2012 for allegedly kidnapping the adult children of a rival businessman. Brandt was captured two days later near the Dominican Republic border.

After the 2014 breakout, officials said they were taking steps to up security at the prison, including installing security cameras and placing ankle monitors on the most dangerous prisoners. It was not immediately clear if any of those measures were taken. At the time of Thursday’s breakout, the prison held 1,542 inmates, nearly twice its capacity.

Haiti’s largest prison breakout in recent history occurred after the devastating 2010 earthquake in which more than 4,200 inmates fled the notorious national penitentiary in Port-au-Prince.

Haiti’s president, Jovenel Moise, tweeted on Friday that he condemned the most recent jailbreak and asked people to remain calm. He added that Haiti’s national police was “instructed to take “all measures” to bring the situation under control.

Meanwhile, Helen La Lime, Haiti’s special representative of the secretary-general of the United Nations, said in a statement that she was deeply concerned with the mutiny and prison escape.

“I encourage the police to speed up investigations on the circumstances surrounding this incident, redouble its efforts to re-apprehend the escapees, and strengthen security around prisons throughout the country,” she said.

“This prison break further highlights the problem of prolonged preventive detention and prison overcrowding which remains matter of concern that must be urgently addressed by Haitian authorities.”

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