Escaped fugitive Danelo Cavalcante was apprehended in southeastern Pennsylvania after a nearly two-week manhunt, police announced Wednesday.
"I'm pleased to be able to report that thanks to the extraordinary work of law enforcement officials from here in the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, our local leaders here in Chester County, and from our federal partners, shortly after 8 a.m., our suspect was captured,” Gov. Josh Shapiro said during a morning press conference, adding that he was relieved there "were no injuries to law enforcement or to the public. We obviously became deeply concerned after the suspect was able to steal a weapon. He was apprehended this morning with no shots fired.”
Cavalcante had been convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison last month and escaped before he could be transferred to a state facility.
The hundreds of law enforcement personnel searching for Cavalcante had faced criticism for the long search, which had resulted in school and road closures and warnings to residents about securing their homes and vehicles.
Read more on Yahoo News: Danelo Cavalcante's manhunt echoes the 19 days Norman Johnston spent on the lam in 1999, via Delaware News Journal.
The capture
Pennsylvania State Police Lt. Col. George Bivens said Cavalcante, 34, was located after a burglar alarm at a residence went off shortly after midnight and an aircraft using fleer technology picked up a heat signal nearby. Bad weather grounded the craft but a tactical team moved into the general area over the course of the night. When the aircraft returned in the early morning hours, law enforcement was able to zero in on the thermal image.
While Cavalcante was crawling through the underbrush, a police dog was released who eventually subdued him. Police said the fugitive, who was wearing a Philadelphia Eagles sweatshirt, sustained a minor bite wound and was taken into custody. He will ultimately be transported to a state prison to fulfill his life sentence.
“Today is a great day,” Chester County District Attorney Deb Ryan said. “Our nightmare is finally over and the good guys won.”
Read more on Yahoo News:The daughter of the woman killed by Pennsylvania prison escapee Danelo Cavalcante told police he said he was going 'to do something bad' to their lives, via CNN
The manhunt
Over the course of the two weeks, law enforcement officials said they'd employed tactical teams, aircraft, tracking dogs and officers on horseback in the search for the 5-foot, 120-pound Cavalcante. The agencies involved include the Pennsylvania State Police, FBI, ATF and the U.S. Marshals Service. Authorities had cited the densely wooded area, an underground tunnel system and large drainage ditches as reasons for the difficulty of the search and raised the reward for a tip leading to his capture to $25,000.
Over the weekend, police say Cavalcante stole a delivery van from Baily's Dairy and drove it 20 miles to East Pikeland Township, escaping the initial 8-square-mile search area. He went to the home of a former co-worker in an attempt to meet with him, but the man was out for dinner and contacted authorities after reviewing the footage from his Ring doorbell camera. Police found the abandoned vehicle in a field behind a barn, saying they believed it was abandoned due to low fuel.
On Monday evening, Cavalcante broke into the garage of a Chester County resident and stole a .22 rifle. The homeowner fired at the fugitive with a pistol but police had said there was no evidence he’d been struck. Cavalcante had changed his appearance over the course of the manhunt, shaving and changing clothes. He had shed a green hoodie and white t-shirt near the home where the rifle was stolen on Monday evening.
Read more on Yahoo News:Danelo Cavalcante news timeline: Everything that happened from prisoner's escape to capture, via USA Today
The escape
Cavalcante was sentenced in August to life in prison without parole for the 2021 stabbing of his ex-girlfriend, Deborah Brandao, in front of her two children. He is also wanted in his home country of Brazil for a 2017 killing tied to a car repair debt.
On Aug. 31, Cavalcante crab-walked between two walls to escape the Chester County Prison before he was set to be transferred to a state facility. Security footage of his escape shows Cavalcante going from the recreation yard, up the walls, over the razor wire, across a roof and down to the ground, yet his absence was not detected for more than an hour following a head count. The corrections officer on duty at the guard tower during the escape, an 18-year veteran, was found to have had his personal cellphone on him at the time of the escape, in violation of prison policy, and was fired.
It was the second time this year an inmate escaped from the Chester County Prison using the same route. In May, authorities say 30-year-old Igor Bolte made it across the roof and cleared the prison only to be captured minutes later a half-mile away from the facility. Razor wire was installed following Bolte's brief time as a fugitive but did not stop Cavalcante's escape, which follows a string of Keystone State jailbreaks this year.