For nearly seven weeks, the American public knew alleged police
killer Matthew Eric Frein from a handful of images -- showing a
seemingly clean-cut young man, sometimes dressed in a Cold War-era
uniform and carrying a gun.
But this week, they got a
different glimpse of Frein. The bridge of his nose was cut and
bloodied. His face was scratched. And he wore an orange jail jumpsuit.
The new uniform is
because of what happened Thursday, when a team of U.S. marshals took the
31-year-old survivalist and military buff into custody at an abandoned
airport near Tannersville, Pennsylvania.
As to the suspect's
abrasions, Scott Malkowski -- who took down Frein, accompanied by about a
dozen other marshals -- told CNN they came about when these authorities
tried to detain Frein and avoid the firefight many feared.
Capturing a dangerous fugitive
Authorities have acknowledged Frein got special treatment in some ways.
After his arrest, he was
shackled in the handcuffs of Pennsylvania state police Cpl. Bryon
Dickson -- the officer that authorities say Frein killed on September 12
-- put in the backseat of the slain trooper's squad car, then sent back
to the barracks where the ambush on Dickson occurred. That's not
possible for every accused convict.
But Malkowski said that
Frein wasn't treated differently -- at least differently than anyone on
the FBI's Top Ten Most Wanted List considered armed and dangerous, after
having allegedly killed one officer and wounded another before melting
into the woods -- while being taken into custody.
When authorities
approached Frein, the suspect had his chest down on the ground but his
head was up looking at Malkowski, the marshal said. From a law
enforcement perspective, that is just what you don't want.
"Never have a fugitive look at you," Malkowski explained.
Per law enforcement
protocol, Frein was forced to be face-first on the asphalt looking away
from the marshals (so that a suspect can't anticipate an officer's next
move). In the process, his nose got cut and his face scraped.
"Sometimes things like that happen," Malkowski said.
An end to a tense 48 days
The U.S. marshal told CNN affiliate WPVI that his first sign of Frein came in the form of movement through nearby high grass and weeds.
"When I first saw him, I
was like, 'What's this guy doing in the field by himself?' " Malkowski
recalled Saturday. "For a split second, I didn't think it was him.
"But then we had a sixth sense, I guess. I knew it was him."
And so Malkowski and his
team of marshals got closer, without the suspect apparently not
knowing. Until, that is, Frein turned around and saw the law enforcement
officers approaching him.
"I told him to get on the ground...," Malkowski said. "We just kept closing distance (to) about 5 feet away.
"I said, 'Who are you? What's your name?' And he said, 'Eric Frein.' "
So ended the manhunt
that terrorized many in northeast Pennsylvania over a tense 48-day
stretch -- closing schools, canceling outdoor activities and prompting
the halt to hunting and trapping. As many as 1,000 federal, state and
local law enforcement officers scoured forests and thoroughfares looking
for Frein.
Authorities worried they
would get the worst from an armed man with a reported history of police
hatred, a man who had lashed out violently before and got away. In
fact, while Frein wasn't armed at the time of his capture, investigators
later found a cache nearby that included a sniper rifle.
The U.S. Marshal team that spotted Frein was well-aware of the worst-case scenarios when they went after him.
Yet, Malkowski said, "That's what the marshals do. We hunt fugitives. That's our job."
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