The night was black, cold, and silent—perfect for a desperate gamble that would become one of the greatest prison mysteries in history. On June 11, 1962, three inmates—Frank Morris and brothers John and Clarence Anglin—vanished from Alcatraz, the prison once deemed “escape-proof.”
Armed with nothing but homemade tools, the men spent months chipping through their cell walls with spoons and drills made from a vacuum motor. They disguised their absence with lifelike dummy heads and built a makeshift raft from 50 raincoats. That night, they crawled through the tunnels, climbed to the roof, and slipped into the icy waters of San Francisco Bay—never to be seen again.
The next morning, chaos erupted. Their empty cells and clever decoys stunned guards and embarrassed officials. Despite massive FBI and Coast Guard searches, no bodies were found. In 1979, after 17 years of investigation, the FBI closed the case—concluding the men had drowned.
But the legend refused to die. Over the years, alleged sightings, letters, and family stories kept hope alive. Then, in 2013, San Francisco police received a letter claiming to be from John Anglin, saying he and his brother—and Frank Morris—had survived and lived quietly in hiding. The handwriting and details seemed authentic, but tests were inconclusive.
In 2018, a photograph surfaced allegedly showing the Anglin brothers alive in Brazil in 1975. Facial recognition analysis found a strong match, reigniting debate. Combined with earlier clues and the successful MythBusters recreation of the escape, evidence now suggests they may have actually pulled it off.
Whether they drowned or disappeared into new lives, the Alcatraz escape remains one of history’s most captivating mysteries—a story of daring, brilliance, and the unbreakable human drive for freedom.