Greenough escape: Final fugitive Bradley Silvester is caught

The last remaining West Australian prison escapee who fled during a violent jailhouse riot has been caught.

Bradley Silvester was found in Glenfield by authorities about 8.40am on Thursday, 25km north of the Greenough Regional Prison in WA’s Mid West. 

The 35-year-old was one of 10 inmates who escaped on Tuesday afternoon.  

Seven News reporter Kate Smithers said she watched police recapture the fugitive, who was hiding under bushes. 

‘About seven different police officers pounced on him screaming ”we’ve got him, we’ve got him”,’ Ms Smithers told 6PR Mornings.

‘They’ve pulled him out, he’s changed his clothes, he’s out of his prison greens.’

Bradley Silvester (above), 35, was the last of the ten prisoners to be recaptured

Silvester was found by police north of Geraldton at about 8.40am on Thursday

Silvester was found by police north of Geraldton at about 8.40am on Thursday

Prison Officers’ Union acting secretary Paul Ledingham revealed details on Wednesday of the riot and subsequent escape.

‘There were bricks, debris. My understanding is prisoners got access to maintenance equipment and angle grinders,’ the Sydney Morning Herald reported him to say.

‘They were essentially looking to get into unit four, which is the female unit, and using cordless angle grinders to do so, and they did so successfully.’

Mr Ledingham wouldn’t confirm if any female inmates had been assaulted, but speculated there were ‘things going on’.   

‘If you’ve got riotous behaviour that goes for 10 to 12 hours in a prison under the cover of darkness where males and females are concerned, I think anyone’s imagination may lead them to think that there were things going on,’ he said.

Inmates used stolen angle grinders to break into a female prison unit during the 12-hour riot 

Inmates used stolen angle grinders to break into a female prison unit during the 12-hour riot 

Mr Ledingham said the riot and was finally contained early on Wednesday.

‘It’s utter devastation,’ Mr Ledingham said.

‘We’ve seen staff control rooms – supposedly secure areas for staff – smashed, destroyed and in one case burnt, fully burnt out.’ 

Premier Mark McGowan, who toured the trashed facility, said some of the women participated in the riot and their unit now appeared uninhabitable.

‘Somehow this group mentality took hold,’ he said.

Power tools were used to cut a lock off an inner fence and the escapees then used a ladder to scale the outer fence.

Silvester (above), 35, was still on the run after the mass breakout on Tuesday, but was caught on Thursday morning

Silvester (above), 35, was still on the run after the mass breakout on Tuesday, but was caught on Thursday morning

‘They were organised,’ Mr McGowan said. ‘It looked like a war zone in there.’

He said the damage bill will be in the millions.

Mr McGowan said the lives of some prisoners were at risk from fire and smoke during the riot.

Three guards were pepper-sprayed and molotov cocktails were thrown.

Prison officers are believed to have lost control when they tried to extinguish a cell fire that was sparked as a diversion. Other fires were then lit.

Mr Ledingham said state budget pressures had led to understaffing at WA jails, with regional facilities among the worst affected.

He called on the state government to ‘immediately’ recruit more staff, saying most WA prisons were ‘a powder-keg … ready to explode’. 

Devon Comeagain (above), 23, was recaptured at a house in Greenough area

Alan mcDonald (above), 28, was located at a house in Rangeway, not too far from Karloo where Comeagain was located

Devon Comeagain (left), 23, was recaptured at a house in Greenough area. Alan McDonald (right), 28, was located at a house in Rangeway,

‘According to our members, this has been brewing for some time,’ Mr Ledingham said.

Mr McGowan said there had been no indication of rising unrest among the inmates but there would now be ‘heightened monitoring’ at WA prisons.

The CPSU said senior Corrective Services executives had been warned the situation across all WA prisons was ‘dire’ including treatment courses not being run and prisoners spending large amounts of time in cells.

An extra 150 officers were sent to Geraldton to help search for the escapees. 

Darryl Councillor, 18, handed himself at Geraldton police station at 1.00pm on Wednesday

Darryl Councillor, 18, handed himself at Geraldton police station at 1.00pm on Wednesday

Residents and drivers were warned to not approach them and urged to lock their doors and windows. 

The jail holds remand prisoners under maximum security while other inmates are kept in medium and minimum security sections.

Seven escapees were found in the area before Brendan Bartley, 22, and 18-year-old Darryl Councillor handed themselves in to local police. 

All ten escapees will be moved to Hakea remand prison in Perth, Mr McGowan said. 

Brendan Bartley, 22, handed himself at Geraldton police station at 1.00pm on Wednesday

Brendan Bartley, 22, handed himself at Geraldton police station at 1.00pm on Wednesday



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