NC inmate search: Teams confident they'll find convicted child killer, who escaped 3 days ago

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Thursday, August 15, 2024
Officers confident escaped NC child murderer will be captured
The search for convicted murderer Ramone Alston, who escaped custody in the parking lot of UNC Hospitals Hillsborough Campus on Tuesday morning is now in day 3.

HILLSBOROUGH, N.C. -- The search for convicted murderer Ramone Alston, who escaped custody in the parking lot of a North Carolina hospital campus on Tuesday morning, is now in day three.

The reward for information leading to his arrest now sits at $50,000, and a new phone number has been set up to help streamline tips for investigators focusing on the case: (919) 324-1082.

The reward breakdown:


  • $30,000 - From the state, approved by Gov. Roy Cooper
  • $10,000 - United States Marshals Service
  • $10,000 - FBI

"There is someone out there who knows where Alston is," said Secretary Todd Ishee, of the North Carolina Department of Adult Correction. "We hope that this reward will bring them forward with the critical information that leads to Alston's capture."

RELATED | NC murderer escapes, father of child he killed responds

Search officials said Wednesday afternoon that after more than 30 hours of searching, they were comfortable saying Alston was no longer in the immediate area, and people living there were not in any immediate danger.

As of Wednesday, a total of 335 people from 19 different agencies helped search 1,335 acres around the University of North Carolina Hospitals Hillsborough Campus. Officials said the coordinated ground search will phase out, and transition into an investigation led by the North Carolina Department of Adult Correction (DAC).

Search leaders gives Wednesday afternoon update manhunt for escaped NC murderer Ramone Alston

Tips and clues uncovered during the search so far suggest Alston headed north of the medical facility. However, after a second day of investigating, officials came up empty. They said they feel confident Alston is not within a 5-mile radius of the UNC Hospital Hillsborough Campus.

Still, Orange County, North Carolina Sheriff Charles Blackwood said he is confident they will find Alston, and bring him back into custody.

"We feel good about this investigation; we feel good about where we are," he said.

He said investigators have two very good leads.

"I'll tell you that there are two leads that we've got -- I'm not going to tell you what they are -- that we feel are solid. Rock solid, and that's a teaser to the folks out there that know what's going on, and know that they were involved in it. We know you, and we're coming for you," Blackwood said.

The escape

Blackwood detailed the timeline for Alston's escape:

3:56 a.m. - Alston transported from blue housing at Bertie Correctional Institution to intake
4:07 a.m. - Alston secured and placed in a NC Department of Adult Correction transport vehicle (Chevy Traverse), which subsequently departed for UNC Hospitals Hillsborough Campus
6:50 a.m. - Transport vehicle arrived at the health care facility and given instructions for getting Alston to his appointment
6:59 a.m. - Transport vehicle driven to the back of the building; deputies prepared to open the door and escort Alston to his appointment
7:00 a.m. - Alston bursts out of the DOC's SUV and takes off running.
7:01 a.m. - Command notified of the escape

The sheriff's office said Alston managed to free himself from leg restraints while inside a North Carolina Department of Adult Correction (DAC) vehicle in the parking lot of the clinic.

"As they (the officers) pulled up to the back entrance of the hospital, and as they were removing Mr. Alston from the vehicle, he broke away from the officers in the parking lot and ran to the woods," DAC Communications Director Keith Acree said. The two officers were in charge of getting Alston out of the vehicle and into the hospital for treatment.

The two officers remained on the job Wednesday.

"An internal personnel investigation is beginning because that's our standard procedure after an escape incident," Acree told ABC Raleigh-Durham affiliate WTVD on Wednesday. "Our after-action review of the incident will look at all aspects of the event and at possibilities for future improvements."

Alston was at the medical facility for a procedure. The specifics of that procedure and why Alston was transferred from lockup in Bertie County to Hillsborough have not been released, but Blackwood said Tuesday that he thought it had to do with a continuation of care. Acree confirmed that Wednesday, saying Alston's appointment was a follow-up with a health provider who previously treated him.

Blackwood said he had seen surveillance video showing Alston's escape from the medical facility's parking lot. However, he described the video as inadequate and not particularly helpful in determining all of the details about how Alston escaped.

"The door opens, his foot hits the ground, and then he is out of the frame, so he was moving quickly -- more quickly than the camera could capture," Blackwood said.

Alston is no stranger to the area because it's where he grew up, and not far from the scene of the crime he's serving a life sentence for.

Who is Ramone Alston?

Alston was convicted of shooting and killing 1-year-old Maleah Williams on Christmas Day in 2015. The shooting happened in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Williams' mother told WTVD then that the children were outside playing with their Christmas toys, and she was holding her daughter when someone started firing shots in the area. She was running from the area when she realized a bullet had struck Williams.

Maleah Williams was 1 year old.
Maleah Williams was 1 year old.
Courtesy of family

WTVD uncovered that Alston recently tried to get his sentence lightened. Records show Alston filed a motion for appropriate relief in October 2023.

The 20-page document goes through the evidence and facts of his case. In the document, Alston claims the state used misleading evidence in its case. The motion was denied in May, with a judge saying Alston had a fair, full hearing and the claims in the motion for appropriate relief lacked merit.