Richard Matt -- one of two convicted murderers who escaped from
a New York prison in June -- was drunk at the time of his death, toxicology
reports show.
Matt had a blood
alcohol content of .18% when he
was shot and killed in upstate New York not far from the
Canadian border, the New York State Police said Wednesday in a news release.
This BAC is more
than double the national legal
limit of .08% for driving a car.
According to the
State Police, an autopsy on Matt's body was conducted at Albany Medical Center
the day after he was shot and killed by an officer with the U.S. Customs and
Border Protection Tactical Unit.
Dr. Michael
Sikirica determined that Matt died of severe skull fractures and brain injuries
because of gunshot wounds to the head.
An investigation revealed that the Customs and Border Control
member discharged "several rounds from a semi-automatic weapon, striking
Matt in the head three times," the news release said.
Matt was killed
three weeks after he and fellow inmate David Sweat escaped from Clinton
Correctional Facility in Dannemora, New York.
Sweat was shot
and captured alive two days later, 16 miles north of where Matt was killed.
Alcohol was one of the reasons Matt and David Sweat had to
split, according to a law enforcement official briefed on Sweat's interviews
with investigators.
After being
captured, Sweat
told investigators that Matt was out of shape and hitting the bottle too hard after they broke into a cabin, a law
enforcement official said.
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