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Wednesday, May 22
The Indiana Daily Student

Wife caught for crime committed more than 3 decades ago

Woman escaped after convicted of husband’s murder

INDIANAPOLIS – A convicted murderer captured more than 35 years after she escaped from an Indiana prison had been living a law-abiding life in a small Tennessee town, police said.\nLinda Darby, 64, was arrested Friday in Pulaski, Tenn., where she was going by the name Linda Joe McElroy. Darby was sentenced to life in prison in 1970 for her husband’s murder, but she escaped in March 1972 from the Indiana Women’s Prison in Indianapolis by climbing over a barb-wire fence.\nPulaski police Capt. John Dickey said Darby had been living a quiet life in the town some 70 miles south of Nashville for about 30 years.\n“This woman has led an exemplary life in Pulaski,” Dickey said. “There is no record of any criminal activity here whatsoever.”\nDarby, who was originally from Hammond, Ind., has waived extradition from Tennessee, said Karen Cantou Grubbs, a spokeswoman for the Indiana Department of Correction. She is being held at the Giles County (Tenn.) Jail.\nDickey said investigators in Indiana had contacted the Pulaski Police Department about Darby and Indiana and Tennessee authorities worked together to make the identification and arrest.\nHer arrest came two weeks after the start of the Indiana Department of Correction’s new Indiana Fugitive Apprehension Unit, which aids in the recapture of offenders who have escaped from confinement, fled residential programs or vanished while on parole.\nSince the unit’s creation, two other fugitives have been identified and apprehended. DOC officials said about 300 Indiana fugitives remain at large.

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