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Now-missing inmate John Manard, 27, holds a dog living in his cell block at the Lansing (Kan.) Correctional Facility last month. Officials say the van of the woman who runs the prisons dogtraining program wasnt checked as she left the prison Sunday.
Now-missing inmate John Manard, 27, holds a dog living in his cell block at the Lansing (Kan.) Correctional Facility last month. Officials say the van of the woman who runs the prisons dogtraining program wasnt checked as she left the prison Sunday.
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Lansing, Kan. – A dog trainer who did volunteer work at a prison ran off with a convicted killer after helping him escape in a dog crate loaded into the back of her van, authorities say.

Toby Young, a 48-year-old married mother of two grown sons, founded a program that rescued dogs from animal shelters and worked with inmates to train the pets to make them suitable for adoption.

Authorities at the state prison at Lansing said seven inmates apparently helped pull off the escape Sunday by putting 27-year- old prisoner John Manard into the crate, then hoisting it into her vehicle.

Two guards who were supposed to check the van before it left the prison didn’t, perhaps because they recognized and trusted Young, authorities said.

Young was “well-known and well-liked by everyone,” Corrections Department spokesman Bill Miskell said. “It appears that her familiarity with the staff may have played a part.”

Authorities refused to say whether Young and the inmate were romantically involved.

In preparation for the escape, Young gathered more than $10,000 in cash, took two guns from her home, bought a vehicle, rented a storage area and bought hair dye and an electric razor that could be used to alter her appearance or Manard’s, investigators said.

The state offered a $5,000 reward for information leading to Manard’s arrest, but investigators acknowledged the two could be anywhere in the world by now.

Young was known as the “Dog Lady” to inmates at the prison northwest of Kansas City, Kan. In numerous news stories about her Safe Harbor Prison Dog program, Young spoke passionately about her desire to help both the dogs and the inmates improve their lives.

Manard, who was serving a life sentence for murdering a man during a carjacking in 1996, was one of the inmates who helped train the dogs, and he was frequently quoted as praising the program.

Young’s family, including her firefighter husband, Pat, refused requests for an interview. On Wednesday, her father read a statement saying family members “simply don’t have any ideas why or how this happened.” They assured Young they loved her and pleaded with her to come home.

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