Video helps police recapture MMA fighter suspected of killing ex
An MMA fighter suspected in two killings who escaped from a prison van that stopped at a Texas McDonald’s was recaptured less than a mile away still wearing his jail-issued orange jumpsuit thanks in part to local surveillance video, police said Monday.
Cedric Joseph Marks escaped from the van Sunday morning when guards with the Texas Prisoner Transportation Service stopped at the restaurant in Conroe, about 40 miles (65 kilometers) north of Houston. Two guards in the van were transporting 10 prisoners, the Conroe Police Department said in a statement.
Police and the company have not commented on why the van stopped at the fast-food restaurant or how Marks escaped. Authorities have said the 44-year-old middleweight fighter was wearing leg, hand and belly restraints when he managed to flee.
No guards or other prisoners were injured in the escape, Conroe police Lt. Dorcy McGinnis said Monday.
The search for Marks narrowed after surveillance video showed him near a business in Conroe, McGinnis said. He was found hiding in a trash can in a residential neighborhood less than a mile from the restaurant around 4:45 p.m. – about nine hours after he escaped.
He had freed an arm and a leg from his shackles, McGinnis said. She declined to say whether authorities believe Marks was able to partially free himself from the shackles or if he was improperly secured. Federal regulations require violent offenders to be shackled at the legs and have double-locked handcuffs.
A person who answered a phone number listed for Texas Prisoner Transportation Service said Monday that no one was available to comment on the escape. The private company says on its website that all its transportation specialists have a minimum of two years’ experience in law enforcement, corrections or the military, and that the company treats all detainees “as maximum security.”
The Bell County Sheriff’s Department has a contract with the transportation service to move prisoners and Marks’ escape will be taken into consideration when that contract comes up for renewal, according to Major T.J. Cruz, a spokesman for the sheriff’s office.
Cruz said an investigation into the escape is being handled by the Montgomery County Sheriff’s office and that he’s not aware of any other such mishaps by the company.
Under federal regulations, guards with private prisoner transport companies must pass background checks and meet minimum training standards and there must be one guard for every six violent prisoners.
Marks was being held Monday in the Bell County Jail on charges including capital murder, burglary and violating a protective order, according to online jail records. His bond was set in excess of $1.75 million.
Marks is suspected in the killings last month of his ex-girlfriend, Jenna Scott, and Scott’s friend, Michael Swearingin, in the Central Texas city of Temple. Both disappeared on Jan. 4. Their bodies were found Jan. 15 buried in a shallow grave in Clearview, Oklahoma.
Marks was arrested in Michigan last month on a burglary charge in Bell County, Texas, alleging he had broken into Scott’s home in Temple in August. He was being transported to Bell County to face that charge when he escaped. Murder warrants were issued Sunday.
Scott requested a protective order against Marks last July, accusing him of choking her unconscious twice, Temple television station KCEN reported. The protective order request was denied.
Police in Bloomington, Minnesota, said Marks also remained a person of interest in the 2009 disappearance of April Pease, the mother of one of his children. The two were involved in a fierce custody dispute in Washington state and Pease, who had a drug problem, went to live in a Bloomington women’s shelter because she said she was afraid of Marks. She also said Marks had choked her unconscious more than once, according to a court custody investigator. Pease went missing in March 2009 and Marks won custody of their son.
Dottie Pease told KCEN last month that she had believed her daughter might have had a drug relapse, but that given the developments in Texas, it was possible that Marks had something to do with April Pease’s disappearance.
Marks compiled a record of 31-28-0 during his professional MMA career, which began in 1999, according to mixedmartialarts.com. His last fight was in September.
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