Escaped prisoner found in Georgia 30 years later, using the identity of a dead child
An Oregon fugitive that escaped from prison 30 years ago was arrested at his apartment on Tuesday afternoon in Macon, Ga. According to authorities, he had been living under the identity of a dead child.
Steven Craig Johnson, 70, fled from a prison work detail at the Mill Creek Correctional Facility in Salem, Ore., in 1994. He was serving a state prison sentence for three counts of sex abuse and one count of attempted sodomy.
Johnson was listed on the Oregon Department of Corrections "Most Wanted" list. He was described as a pedophile who "presents a high probability of victimizing pre-teen boys."
At the time of his arrest, Johnson was using the alias William Cox. According to the U.S. Marshals Service, Johnson stole the identity of a child who died in Texas in 1962 after obtaining the child's birth certificate and Social Security number in 1995.
Johnson secured a Georgia driver's license in 1998, and had been living in Macon since 2011. The Oregon Corrections Department requested the U.S. Marshals to take on the search for Johnson in 2015. After pursuing multiple leads, new technology used by the State Department's Diplomatic Security Service helped uncover new leads this year.
The facility Johnson escaped from was a minimum-security prison with no fence around it. Mill Creek prison closed in June 2021 under an order from former Gov. Kate Brown.
Johnson was booked into Bibb County Jail after arrest. He currently awaits extradition to Oregon.