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Profile |
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Name: Manuel
"Duby"
Ayala
(Manual Hernandez, Cordora Manual, Manual Ramirez)
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Sex: Male |
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Race: White |
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Age Now: 38 |
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Height: 5'11" |
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Weight: 260 lbs. |
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Hair (Color, Description, Facial Hair): Black
Has a well-manicured goatee, but may shave it off |
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Eyes (Color and Correction): Brown |
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Wanted for :
Parole Violation - Manufacture and Delivery of Cocaine, Milwaukee, WI;
Apr 30, 2005
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Location(s) |
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Last Seen : Milwaukee, WI |
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Possible Location : Texas
Mexico
Police say Ayala and fugitive Cesar Lira have many friends and family in Texas. They may be trying to cross the Texas border into Mexico. |
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Last Known : Milwaukee, WI |
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Traits |
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Police say he's known to be a heavy drinker and goes to bars often |
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Case Story |
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Parole Violator Flees With Prison Escapee |
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Milwaukee County Sheriff's detectives say Manuel Ayala was about to go back to prison. The Milwaukee man was on parole after being convicted of manufacturing and delivery of cocaine in April 2003. But Ayala's parole was revoked on May 31, 2004 after two incidents involving a firearm.
Ayala knew authorites would be coming to pick him up in a matter of days. Police say instead of returning to prison, Ayala decided to flee in his 1991 white Range Rover. And he took another fugitive along for the ride. |
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Ayala's Friend Slips Out Of Jail |
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Police say Ayala knew Cesar Lira from childhood. But they became lifelong friends. Both men served time in prison as adults.
Ayala was on the wrong side of the law, but Lira was worse.
In the spring of 2004, Cesar Lira was in prison for violating parole on a 1992 drug conviction when he injured his leg. As prison officials took him to a Milwaukee hospital, Lira sprang from his wheelchair and jumped into a waiting getaway vehicle with his girlfriend and young daughter. State troopers spotted the getaway vehicle in Oklahoma and tried to stop Lira with a road block. But Lira crahsed through the barricade, killing his girlfriend and injuring his daughter. Lira received a 20-year prison sentence in Oklahoma.
In May 2005, Oklahoma officials sent Lira back to Wisconsin to face escape charges . But Oklahoma prison officials made a big mistake. The paperwork that accompanied Lira never specified that the prisoner was to be returned to Oklahoma to serve the remainder of his 20-year-murder sentence. So a Wisconsin judge unknowingly set a $15,000 bond for Lira, mistakenly allowing for his release.
Lira walked out of a Milwaukee jail on June 15, 2005. Before Wisconsin and Oklahoma officials realized their mistake, the convicted murderer hooked up with Manuel Ayala and the two fugitives hit the road. |
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"I'd Rather Die Than Go Back To Prison" |
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Police believe Ayala and Lira are heading to Texas, where they have lots of family and friends, before trying to slip over the border into Mexico.
Police say Ayala has an agressive, assualtive history and was spotted with a gun in the month before he fled. According to detectives, Ayala told his family that he would rather die than go back to prison. |
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