Letters From Alcatraz - Michael Esslinger [218]
Mr. Latimer and I then went to the City Morgue where I watched the clothing being removed from the body. The body measured 6 feet and 2 inches in length and weighed 22 pounds. The inside surface of the right calf of the leg had the tattoo, “499-30-0783”, in large blue-black numbers. (This is the number on Burgett’s Social Security card now in his personal belongings.) There was also a “pachuco” tattoo in the form of an “X”, arc with rays, and a cross, below the series of numbers and upside down when viewed from the feet.
The officers at the Morgue assured me that their technicians would obtain pictures of the corpse and fingerprints for the institution. A copy of the dental chart furnished by Agent Keith,... B.I., was placed with the body and the remains were wheeled into the refrigeration room.
It is my opinion, based upon my acquaintance with inmate Burgett, clothing commonly worn by inmates at Alcatraz, the stiff right middle finger, tattoo marks, identical ridges on the fingers with the fingerprint cards on file, weight and measurements of the corpse, and other features, that the body was that of Aaron Walter Burgett, Reg. No. 991-AZ, beyond any reasonable doubt.
Burgett’s body was released to the Godeau Funeral Home on Van Ness Avenue in San Francisco.
Clyde Johnson was paroled from prison in 1971. While on parole, he was again convicted of armed bank robbery, assault with a deadly weapon, assaulting a Federal officer and attempted escape. He was sentenced to serve thirty-six years for his crimes. In August of 1994, Johnson was diagnosed with lymphoma of the stomach and colon. He died at the Men’s Federal Correctional Institution in Lexington, Kentucky on October 29, 1995.
ESCAPE ATTEMPT #13
Date:
June 11, 1962
Inmates:
Frank Lee Morris
John and Clarence Anglin
Allen Clayton West
Location:
Main Cellhouse (B Block)
Main Cellhouse (B Block)
The Great Escape from Alcatraz
The classic motion picture Escape from Alcatraz featured Academy Award-winning actor Clint Eastwood in an amazingly accurate portrayal of Frank Morris.
If there was ever an inmate who was destined to escape from Alcatraz, it was Frank Lee Morris. In the 1973 movie Escape from Alcatraz, Clint Eastwood accurately portrayed Morris as the brilliant mastermind of one of the most famous prison escapes in history. The escape plan took several months to design, and required the fabrication of clever decoys and water survival gear. Today it is considered one of the most ingenious escape plans ever attempted.
Frank Lee Morris
Frank Lee Morris – a chronology of mug shot photographs, representing a hardening lifetime spent in prison. On his Alcatraz admission card, officials listed one of his formal occupations as “escape artist,” and noted his superior intelligence. He would escape from nearly every prison to which he was ever committed.
Frank Lee Morris had spent a lifetime navigating the prison system before his arrival on Alcatraz. From his infant years until his teens, Morris was shuffled from one foster home to another. Frank’s years as a toddler are poorly documented, but it is known that he was convicted of his first crime at the youthful age of thirteen. Whether by fate or misfortune, Frank’s rudderless course had been dictated by his mother long before birth. Some sources indicate that his Morris’s mother was the daughter of an upper-middle-class family and that she began her misadventures as a runaway at a very young age.
It is alleged that Frank’s mother was in her teens when she found herself pregnant. Frank was born on September 1, 1926, in Ednor Maryland. In his responses to a questionnaire that he completed at sixteen years of age during incarceration