Authorities looking at whether kitchen job played role in ‘Devil in the Ozarks’ prison escape
May 29, 2025, 8:12 AM | Updated: 4:40 pm

This undated photo provided by the Arkansas Department of Corrections Communications Department shows inmate Grant Hardin. (Arkansas Department of Corrections Communications Department via AP)
Credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS
(Arkansas Department of Corrections Communications Department via AP)
Arkansas authorities are looking at whether a job in the prison kitchen played a role in the escape of a convicted former police chief known as the 鈥淒evil in the Ozarks.鈥
Grant Hardin, 56, was housed in a maximum-security wing of the Calico Rock prison from which he escaped on Sunday by donning an outfit designed to look like a law enforcement uniform, Arkansas Department of Corrections spokesperson Rand Champion told The Associated Press Thursday. But Hardin also held a job in the kitchen of the medium-security facility.
鈥淗is job assignment was in the kitchen, so just looking to see if that played a part in it as well,鈥 Champion said.
Hardin, the former police chief in the small town of Gateway near the Arkansas-Missouri border, was serving lengthy sentences for murder and rape. He was the subject of the TV documentary 鈥淒evil in the Ozarks.鈥
Local, state and federal law enforcement continued their search for Hardin on Thursday, and the FBI on announced Thursday it was offering a reward of up to $10,000 for information leading to his arrest. Champion said officials remained confident that Hardin was in the north-central Arkansas area.
Officials have said there are plenty of hideouts in the Ozarks Mountains area, from caves to campsites.
The department late Wednesday said search teams also responded to Faulkner County in the central Arkansas area after receiving a tip.
Champion did not immediately know how many other inmates were housed in the prison鈥檚 maximum-security wing.
Hardin’s assignment to the prison, formally known as the North Central Unit, has drawn questions from legislators in the area and family members of the former chief’s victims.
Hardin received culinary training at some point during his incarceration, said Cheryl Tillman, whose brother James Appleton was shot to death by Hardin in 2017.
Tillman said she was aware that Hardin had been working in the kitchen at the Calico Rock prison, and questioned why he would be allowed to do so.
鈥淚t sounds like to me that he was given free range down there,鈥 she said in an interview this week.
Now that he鈥檚 free, 鈥渋t makes it uneasy for all of us, the whole family,鈥 she said.