Sitts, who escaped from prison while serving a life sentence for murder, also shot and killed
Butte County Sheriff Dave Malcolm near
Spearfish, on January 24, 1946. Sitts had pleaded guilty to second degree murder in Minnesota for the December 12, 1945, slaying of Erik Johansson, a liquor store clerk, during a botched robbery. After spending three weeks sawing on the bars of his cell in the
Minneapolis city jail, Sitts and three other men broke out the day before Sitts was scheduled to be transferred to a state prison. South Dakota introduced the electric chair as the manner of execution in 1939 and Sitts was the fourth man sentenced to die in the chair. However, the three previous sentences, that of Clifford Haas (also known as Clifford Hayes), Paul Sewell, and Jacob Heinzman, were all reduced to life in prison on appeal. Haas became one of the longest serving inmates in the state and died in prison in 1993. Sitts's final words were a wry joke to the 41 official witnesses. "This is the first time authorities helped me escape prison," he said right before the four shocks surged through his body at 12:15 a.m. Special Agent Matthews name is inscribed on Panel 34 of the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial located on
Judiciary Square,
Washington, D.C. Sheriff Malcolm's name is inscribed on Panel 53. ==See also==