A dozen inmates escaped from an Alabama jail not by cutting through steel bars, drilling through walls or ripping a toilet from a wall.
They used peanut butter.
Walker County Sheriff Jim Underwood told reporters Monday that the inmates used peanut butter to make the number on one of the cell doors look like the number on a door leading to the outside of the jail. An inmate then asked an unsuspecting jail guard in the control room to open his cell, saying he needed to get back in.
But unknown to the guard, he had inadvertently unlocked the door that opened to the outside.
“That may sound crazy, but these people are crazy like a fox,” Underwood said.
Inmates in Alabama jailbreak did not need a weapon to escape. They had peanut butter.
Alabama prison guards ya'all.
They used peanut butter.
Walker County Sheriff Jim Underwood told reporters Monday that the inmates used peanut butter to make the number on one of the cell doors look like the number on a door leading to the outside of the jail. An inmate then asked an unsuspecting jail guard in the control room to open his cell, saying he needed to get back in.
But unknown to the guard, he had inadvertently unlocked the door that opened to the outside.
“That may sound crazy, but these people are crazy like a fox,” Underwood said.
Inmates in Alabama jailbreak did not need a weapon to escape. They had peanut butter.
Alabama prison guards ya'all.