The man who escaped from a state prison van on his way to Baltimore Circuit Court on Tuesday didn't have a very difficult time of it.
The corrections officer driving the van told a judge yesterday that she didn't normally transport prisoners to court but had missed a morning drop-off in Jessup with other officers who were supposed to take him to Baltimore.
After a conversation with a supervisor, Officer Deborah Barron said, she believed she had orders to bring him downtown herself.
She took a regular van that lacked cages and any other security features. She didn't have handcuffs, either.
But she put Marcus Anderson - a 6-foot, 3-inch, 220-pound convicted drug dealer who was facing gun charges - next to her in the front passenger seat anyway.
When she stopped at a red light at Baltimore and South streets, Anderson opened the door, "leaped out" and ran away in a light blue, V-neck Division of Corrections shirt, Barron said.
She couldn't call for help - she had no cell phone or radio. The light changed, and impatient commuters started honking at her, so she drove on to the courthouse alone, she said.
Anderson hasn't been caught, but yesterday Judge Charles G. Bernstein allowed his trial on charges of illegally possessing a firearm to move forward anyway.
After listening to the details of the less-than-thrilling escape, the judge asked a corrections lieutenant investigating the incident whether Barron had given Anderson "bus tokens, too?"
As the lieutenant, Arturo Perez, testified, Bernstein, who is known for his bluntness, frequently shook his head in disbelief and buried his head in his hands.
"If I were a young enterprising criminal, I'd come to Baltimore to set up my practice," he said with evident sarcasm. "This is the place to be. This is the Promised Land."
He called the circumstances of the escape "outrageous."
"Maybe I'll get reversed" by a higher court, Bernstein said of his decision to move forward with Anderson's trial. "Defendants just can't think, 'I don't want to go to trial today. I'm going to escape.' I'm not going to give him a continuance given his actions."
Margaret Burns, a spokeswoman for prosecutors, said that it was important to push for a trial because Anderson's co-defendant in the gun case has "speedy trial rights" and the office is "vigorously" prosecuting gun cases as part of an initiative with the Baltimore Police Department.