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Texas will resume inmate transportation after completing review of convicted murderer’s escape

The Texas Department of Criminal Justice will resume inmate transportation following a brief pause after a convicted murderer escaped from a prison bus and killed five people.
Jennifer Whitney
/
The Texas Tribune
The Texas Department of Criminal Justice will resume inmate transportation following a brief pause after a convicted murderer escaped from a prison bus and killed five people.

The review came after Gonzalo Lopez escaped on May 12 and eventually killed five people.

The Texas Department of Criminal Justice will resume inmate transportation on Monday following a brief pause after a convicted murderer escaped from a prison bus last month and killed five people.

During the pause earlier this week, TDCJ officials say they conducted “a comprehensive review of its transportation procedures” to investigate how the murderer escaped. On Saturday, the agency announced it had found solutions, which include having three officers on a bus, enhancing their search of inmates before they board, upgrading their bus cameras, transporting “high risk” inmates alone and upgrading jail medical facilities to reduce offsite transports.

“The public’s safety is the first duty and highest obligation for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice,” said TDCJ executive director Bryan Collier.

The review was sparked after Gonzalo Lopez, 46, who was serving two life sentences, escaped on May 12. He was being taken from the Alfred Hughes Unit near Gatesville to a medical appointment in Huntsville when he was somehow able to remove his handcuffs, cut through a metal door and attack the bus driver, causing the vehicle to stop. Lopez fled into a wooded area and was on the lam for three weeks.

Authorities say Lopez killed one man and his four grandchildren in Leon County while on the loose. Lopez was apprehended and shot by law enforcement on June 2 in Jourdanton, over 200 miles from where Lopez was originally housed in Gatesville, and 250 miles from where the victims died.

As reported by The Washington Post, authorities believe Lopez killed Mark Collins, 66, and his four grandchildren, Waylon, 18; Carson, 16; Hudson, 11; and Bryson, 11. The Collins family released a statement on Facebookvia their pastor, asking for privacy at this time and noting, “These precious people who loved and were loved by so many will never be forgotten.”