Crime & Safety
Escaped Oklahoma Inmates Spotted In Sapulpa
"We believe they could be heading east to Pennsylvania or Delaware," where both have ties, according to Major County Deputy Gary Swymeler.

SAPULPA, OK — After overpowering prison transport officers in Oklahoma, two escaped inmates from Illinois and Wyoming — who are considered armed and dangerous — were seen at a convenience in Sapulpa, near Tulsa, authorities said.
The search for Andrew Foy, 32, and Darren Walp, 37, moved to northeast Oklahoma on Thursday, according to the deputy sheriff leading the investigation. The duo stole the transport company's van Tuesday morning. The van was later found with an empty gun holster belonging to one of the guards inside.
"We believe they could be heading east to Pennsylvania or Delaware," where both have ties, according to Major County Deputy Gary Swymeler. But they might still be in Oklahoma. (For more information on the inmate escape and other Tulsa stories, subscribe to Patch to receive daily newsletters and breaking news alerts. If you have an iPhone, click here to get the free Patch iPhone app.)
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"Walp has contacts all over Oklahoma, particularly in Lawton and Walters," both in the state's southwestern corner.
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Foy, from Cheyenne, Wyoming, was wanted on a felony failure to appear in court warrant on charges that include burglary, theft and fraud. He was being extradited from Doylestown, Pennsylvania, where he was arrested on the Wyoming charge, according to Capt. Michael Sorenson of the Laramie County, Wyoming, sheriff's office.
Walp, whose address is listed as McLeansboro, Illinois, was wanted for failure to appear in court on an auto theft charge in Liberal, Kansas, when he was arrested in Tennessee, according to Gene Ward, undersheriff in Kansas' Seward County.
Swymeler said the two were caught on surveillance video at a Quik Trip store in Sapulpa, where they left the trailer of the semitrailer that was stolen in El Reno, near Oklahoma City.
"He (Walp) told the clerk he was having issues and would have to leave the trailer, but would be back," to get it, Swymeler said, but the clerk recognized him and called police immediately after the pair left.
The two escaped by overpowering the guards and stealing the transport van near Fairview, a small town about 80 miles northwest of Oklahoma City, authorities said.
The inmates are suspected of abandoning the transport van in Major County and stealing a pickup truck from a nearby oilfield, then traveling to Lawton, where another truck was stolen, then to El Reno where the semi was stolen and the truck stolen in Lawton was found nearby.
Four other inmates who were in the van stayed behind with the two guards, Swymeler said.
The van was found about 13 miles from where it was stolen, with the guard's belt that included the empty gun holster. Sheriff Steve Randolph has said the guard, whose name has not been released, claimed he didn't have a gun, but "we're not sure he was telling the truth."
Officials with West Memphis, Arkansas-based Inmate Services Corporation, which was transporting the inmates, have not returned phone messages from The Associated Press seeking comment.
"The guard is not licensed ... in any state" to carry a weapon, and could face charges if he did so, Swymeler said.
By KEN MILLER, Associated Press
Photo credit: Major County, Okla., Sheriff's Office via AP