Tuesday, September 28, 2010

I Love You Phillip Morris:Steven Jay Russell

This post is not about the film 'I Love You Phillip Morris', its about real Steven Jay Russell which was played by Jim Carrey in the film. The film portrays real incidents or rather real escapes performed by Steven Jay Russell in prison. You will find here about Steven Jay Russell life and famous escapes...!




Early Life

Steven Jay Russell was adopted at birth by a conservative family in New York. In the 1970s, Russell was a deputy police officer and family man in Virginia. He spent some of his time successfully looking for his birth mother using law enforcement, the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications Service, and the National Crime Information Center databases, and learned to use them effectively. After learning these skills, he conned his way into a sales manager job with White Swan Foodservice in Houston by convincing Ronald Elmquist, the CEO at the time, that he had advanced degrees in fresh food service management.

When it was revealed that Russell was gay, he lost his job at White Swan, and he managed to convince the CEOs of two other food service companies of his qualifications before finally being discovered as a fraud. He was subsequently arrested on lewd behavior charges at a Houston park known as a gathering place for homosexual men.

Escaping from prisons

Over the years, Russell has had at least 14 known aliases. During his escapes he has masqueraded as a judge, a physician, a police officer and a handyman, among others.
On May 21, 1993 Russell got out of Harris County Jail in Houston, Texas, wearing civilian clothes he had obtained. Afterward he fabricated bogus credentials and got a job as CFO of North American Medical Management. He proceeded to embezzle thousands of dollars from the company. In 1995 he was caught and imprisoned for insurance fraud and again placed into Harris County Jail where he met Phillip Morris, who became his lover.

In 1996, while in Harris County Jail (Texas), Russell impersonated a judge and ordered his own bond decreased from $900,000 to $45,000, which he immediately posted. He was arrested 10 days later in Florida and was sent back to Texas. That same year he started taking art classes provided by the prison. Each time he attended a session, he snatched a green Magic Marker and hid it under his bed. Eventually, he had enough markers to dye his white prison uniform green. Since all the medical professionals in the prison wore green uniforms, Russell simply walked out of the prison disguised as a "doctor."

In 1998, he was again at the Harris County Jail, serving a 45-year sentence for stealing $800,000 from a Houston company that manages physicians' finances, plus 20 years for the previous escape. He later got Phillip Morris transferred to the Dallas County Jail and tried to have him released.

While in prison, Russell began to plot his most daring escape. At the prison library, Russell began reading up on HIV and AIDS. He began taking laxatives to make it seem as if he had the symptoms of AIDS. Russell used a prison typewriter to forge a medical document stating that he suffered from the disease, and used it to convince doctors of his "condition" on February 24. He fooled the prison doctor into believing that a 'special needs parole' to a Houston hospital had been authorized on March 13. While outside and free again, Russell posed as a doctor and informed the prison that Russell had died from AIDS.

On March 20, 1998, Russell posed as a Virginia millionaire and tried to take a $75,000 loan from NationsBank in Dallas. When bank officials got suspicious and alerted the police, Russell feigned a heart attack and was transported to a hospital. The FBI placed him under guard, but Russell managed to impersonate an FBI agent on his cellular phone and convinced officers guarding him to leave. He walked out of the hospital and the hunt for Russell began all over again.
Russell was arrested again on April 5, 1998 in Fort Lauderdale when he was walking to his car. He was again shipped back to Texas, receiving a 144-year jail sentence.


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