Georgia will seek death penalty for two inmates accused of killing guards


              FILE - In this June 21, 2017, file photo, Ricky Dubose, left, and Donnie Russell Rowe enter the Putnam County courthouse in Eatonton, Ga. The two inmates, accused of killing their guards on a Georgia prison bus three months ago, were indicted Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2017, on multiple charges including murder and the state plans to seek the death penalty. (Bob Andres/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP, Pool)
FILE - In this June 21, 2017, file photo, Ricky Dubose, left, and Donnie Russell Rowe enter the Putnam County courthouse in Eatonton, Ga. The two inmates, accused of killing their guards on a Georgia prison bus three months ago, were indicted Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2017, on multiple charges including murder and the state plans to seek the death penalty. (Bob Andres/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP, Pool)

ATLANTA (AP) - Two inmates accused of killing their guards on a Georgia prison bus three months ago were indicted Tuesday on multiple charges, including murder, and the state plans to seek the death penalty.

A grand jury indicted Donnie Russell Rowe, 44, and Ricky Dubose, 24. Each man faces two counts of murder, two counts of felony murder, one count of escape and one count of hijacking a motor vehicle.

Ocmulgee Judicial Circuit District Attorney Stephen Bradley filed notice with the court Tuesday that he plans to seek the death penalty against both men.

Rowe and Dubose are accused of disarming and killing Sgts. Christopher Monica 42, and Curtis Billue, 58, while escaping from the prison transfer bus on June 13 in Putnam County, southeast of Atlanta. Authorities say the pair then carjacked a motorist to get away.

They were arrested two days later in Tennessee following an intense manhunt.

A review of the escape determined the two inmates were able to easily free themselves from their handcuffs and then used an improvised tool to open an unlocked gate that separated the inmates from the guards around 6:40 a.m. They then attacked and overpowered the guards, using the guards' own guns to kill them, authorities have said.

Rowe and Dubose then carjacked the first driver to pull up behind the bus and drove off in his green Honda Civic to Madison, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) to the north, where they burglarized a house and stole a white Ford pickup truck from a quarry, authorities have said.

Two days later, they held a couple hostage during a violent home invasion in Shelbyville, Tennessee, and then fled in the couple's Jeep and fired on sheriff's deputies chasing them on Interstate 24 about 50 miles (80 kilometers) southeast of Nashville, authorities have said. The chase ended when the pair crashed the SUV, ran through some trees, climbed over a fence and surrendered to a homeowner.

A review by representatives from several state law enforcement agencies found that numerous security policy violations had been committed in the lead-up to the escape. The most egregious error was the failure to secure the gate to the inmate compartment in the bus, the review found. Monica and Billue also kept their guns in storage boxes rather than wearing them and failed to wear ballistic vests, among other errors, the review found.

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