How was the several million acquired? That’s going to affect the plan. If it is legal money, then a bunch of it could go to more lawyers to get you a new trial or a pardon (if the bribe’s big enough.)
If it is ill-gotten booty, then you have to drop off the radar. Many of the above posters have addressed some of the things that may be done. The question then becomes whether a big city offers more anonymity than rural Wyoming, for instance.
Bad idea. The clothing in a donation box is going to be seen and examined by somebody. And they’re likely to notice it’s a prison uniform, which means they’ll probably contact the police. This gives the police a lead on where you’re moving.
You’re better off throwing the prison uniform out in the garbage. Preferably a dumpster. You want to get rid of it some place where it’s unlikely anyone will see it.
Now, you can’t rent an apartment from one of the big commercial property management companies, but there are plenty of landlords who aren’t so picky. (What, you think all of the illegal aliens in the US are living in their cars?) Cash can be a powerful motivator not to ask too many questions. Similarly, buying a house usually involves a bank that has regulatory requirements, but buying a house for cash can avoid the bank and the title company and other long-noses.
in a big city it’s not hard to get fake numbers … hell a few years ago they found a guy that was wanted for 20 years that owned a couple of subways about 40 miles from la …
Gee there’s lotsa good advice in this thread. I just hope I’ll never need to use it…
I have absolutely no experience , so I can’t add any info here.
But it occurs to me that this scenario isn’t so unusual. (well, except for the bit about having millions in cash on hand.)
Aren’t there some 10 million undocumented people in America right now?
They are living essentially undercover, just like the scenario in the OP…and most of them seem to be doing pretty well.
Why couldn’t the OP’s escaped convict just join them?
All he needs is a change of clothes.(Plus, he already has a huge advantage by having plenty of money.)
By the way: Tom Wolfe’s novel A Man in Full is based on a scenario sort of like this…an innocent man escapes from jail, and survives on the lam.
Thomas Perry wrote the Jane Whitefield novels, in which the main character helped people set up alternative personalities/lives. I always found the “how-to” portions interesting. Unfortunately, the endings were always formulaic. I think he had a reason for believeing mid-sized cities were more anonymous than either big cities or small. Also, they all involved readily obtainable alternative IDs. I believe the sort of - finding dead baby’s birth certificate – in the less tech advances 1990s.
Instead of getting a car, I wonder if it might be better to use public transportation. How does the risk of security in bus stations and in vehicles outweigh the risk of having ID that will allow you to buy/register a car and withstand a traffic stop?
How easy is it to obtain health care without providing ID? I know you do not need insurance, but I’d imagine most walk0-in clinics require SOME form of ID. And you’d better hope you don’t need some maintenance prescription.
The “age” of the cash is a potential issue, tho I don’t believe the US has ever required that old currency be turned in or declared it no longer legal tender.
There are tons of motels that you can rent by the week/month. Not sure whether cops keep any tabs of longterm residents of such places. And there is always the private renter who will look the other way for cash paid on time. Of course, you always run the risk of your landlord being a potential weak link - should he find any reason to mention this tenant who has no ID and pays everything in cash… I suspect the lower socioeconomic lifestyle you maintain, the better your chances of anonymity.
Finally - how does the math work out? And where do you stash the cash? Banks are likely out. So where do you keep it? In a rental unit somewhere? You’ll have to get back to it regularly to replenish your cash. How many millions are we talking about, and what is your life expectancy? Say you are 30, and expect to live 50 more years until you are 80. If you have $5 mill stashed, that will allow you to spend $100k/year. Won’t be a jet-setter, but should be able to live comfortably. But if you only have $1 mill, that is only $20k/yr - not counting for inflation…
People handling garbage aren’t going to be picking up each individual item of garbage and inspecting it the way that people going through a donation box will be.
I hear Zihuatanejo’s nice this time of the year. What about running for a foreign country? Would you have more luck in Mexico or Canada? Somewhere else?
Good plan, except for the last bit. If getting discovered is a potential issue, it would be unwise to count on Father Time to wrap up loose ends.
Similarly, with the scenario involving the needy roommate–you’ll want to nurture a semi-abusive relationship to get that Stockholm Syndrome support. If you go being nice and building up your roomie’s self-esteem their fog may clear and then you’re at risk when they decide to clean up their life. Best bet is to get in with someone old, alone, and feeble. Be super nice, get them used to introducing you as a grandchild, and get to work on forging a birth certificate–maybe a long form if you intend to run for POTUS one day.
On the other hand, if you’ve obtained transportation (even as a one-time thing) to put you far away from the donation box before the next pickup, it can be a useful misdirection tactic.
Id is easier than ever: laptop, good printer and a laminator and you can be whom you want. But id that will hold up to anything other than a cursory check is much harder: even just a credit check from a landlord will trip you, and if pulled over, your fake id will generate some excitement.
Depends. Not every prison uniform is an orange jumpsuit anymore. Here in Kansas, e.g., the average prisoner wears blue jeans and a light-blue or grey T-shirt; the only thing that marks it as “prison” is the name tape bearing the inmate number. If that can be removed or covered up, then it’s not really obvious that the remainder is a prison uniform.
It’s still a clue. It says you were at the location of that donation box in the time period between when it was emptied. That gives the police a place to focus their investigation on.
I’m going to assume that if the escapee feels he needs to get rid of what he’s wearing and buy a change of clothing, he must be wearing something that’s identifiable as a prison uniform.
Identifiable in what context? You don’t want to be wearing blue jeans and a light blue T-shirt in the vicinity of a Kansas prison during a manhunt, but those same items fished out of the bin weeks later and hauled miles away to a sorting center might attract no curiosity at all.