During a
Thanksgiving dinner on November 26, 1998, Gurule and six other death row inmates hid in a
recreation room. Prior to leaving their cells for dinner, they had placed cushions and sheets in their beds in such a way that the guards would not suspect anything was amiss. They also darkened their prison uniforms with
marker pens so that they would be less visible at night. After the cells were locked for the night, they broke through a door to the recreational yard and then through a separating fence. Once they reached the main prison yard, they scaled the roof of a building and waited for complete darkness. Shortly after midnight, guards at a post spotted the escapees climbing, immediately raising the alarm and opening fire. At this point, all six of Gurule's co-escapees surrendered, but Gurule ran approximately 100 ft over an open piece of land, scaled a
barbed-wire fence, ran another 70 ft across a clearing, scaled a second barbed-wire fence and disappeared into the darkness outside the prison boundary, despite the guards having fired 18 shots at him. More than 500 officers from surrounding towns, cities and counties took part in the manhunt, which was supported by
sniffer dogs, boats and helicopters.
Governor George W. Bush additionally called in the
Texas Rangers and announced a 5,000-dollar reward for information leading to Gurule's capture. Seven days later, two fishermen found Gurule's body in a tributary of the
Trinity River near
Huntsville. Gurule was wearing several layers of clothing and rolled up newspapers and cardboard to protect himself while scaling the prison's barbed-wire fences. The autopsy revealed that he had sustained a gunshot wound in the back, causing him to
drown in the river. His time of death was backdated to November 27, meaning that he died on the night of his escape. Investigators believe that he jumped into the river to remove traces that could allow sniffer dogs to locate him, and then drowned due to the severity of his gunshot wound preventing him from being able to get out of the river. As a direct result of Gurule's escape, the
Texas Department of Criminal Justice relocated its death row in March 1999 to the Terrell Unit (now renamed the
Allan B. Polunsky Unit), in
West Livingston,
Polk County. The Work Capable Program was discontinued. == Co-escapees ==