In June 1962, three inmates—Frank Morris and brothers John and Clarence Anglin—pulled off the most famous prison break in American history. Locked inside Alcatraz, the prison believed to be “escape-proof,” they spent months carving holes in their cells, crafting tools from spoons, and creating lifelike dummy heads to fool guards during bed checks.

Their boldest invention was a raft and life vests made from stolen raincoats. On the night of June 11, they slipped out through ventilation shafts, climbed onto the roof, and vanished into San Francisco Bay. By morning, chaos erupted inside the prison. The dummy heads had worked, the raft was missing, and the men were gone. The FBI launched an enormous manhunt, scouring the waters and coastline. Authorities eventually concluded the escapees had drowned in the frigid, fast-moving currents.

But the case refused to die. Over the decades, evidence surfaced that suggested the men might have survived. In 2013, a letter allegedly written by John Anglin reignited the debate. The author claimed all three men had lived for years under false identities and that he was ready to surrender due to illness. Handwriting experts studied the letter, but the results were inconclusive. Rumors grew, fueled by photographs supposedly showing the Anglin brothers in Brazil.

In 2003, MythBusters proved that a raft like theirs could cross the bay successfully, suggesting survival was possible. The real breakthrough came in 2018, when researchers used advanced AI facial recognition on a 1975 photograph from Brazil. The analysis revealed striking similarities between the men in the photo and the Anglin brothers. Combined with decades of speculation, the findings strongly suggested that the escape might have succeeded after all. Whether they drowned in the bay or lived quietly in hiding, the Alcatraz escape continues to fascinate. It is a story of ingenuity, determination, and mystery—one that proves even the most “escape-proof” prison couldn’t contain the human desire for freedom.

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