For more than half a century, the world has been obsessed with one of the most daring prison escapes in American history — the 1962 breakout from the supposedly “inescapable” Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary. Frank Morris and brothers John and Clarence Anglin vanished into the icy waters of San Francisco Bay one stormy night, leaving behind only a hole in the wall, a raft made of raincoats, and a haunting question: Did they make it out alive?
For decades, the FBI insisted the trio drowned. The currents, the cold, the distance — all made survival seem impossible. But now, newly uncovered evidence has flipped that story on its head. Investigators have confirmed that a letter, sent to the FBI in 2013 but kept secret until recently, may hold the final piece of the puzzle. The note reads:
“My name is John Anglin. I escaped from Alcatraz in June 1962 with my brother Clarence and Frank Morris. I’m 83 years old and in bad shape. Yes, we made it that night.”
Handwriting experts have verified that the letter’s style and phrasing match the known samples of the Anglin brothers. Even more shocking, photographic evidence discovered by Dutch investigators appears to show the brothers living quietly in South America years after their escape — older, but unmistakably recognizable.
If true, this revelation rewrites one of the greatest manhunt stories in U.S. history. It means that three men who defied every expert, every guard, and every odd managed to pull off the impossible — escaping the Rock and vanishing into legend.
As one retired officer said, “If they really survived, then they beat Alcatraz — and the system itself.”
The myth, it seems, was real all along.