Conclusion
This case has not been solved. There are a number of theories as to what happened to Clarence Anglin, John Anglin, and Frank Morris. They have never been found, but it is alleged they could have moved to Brazil and started a new life. Others say that they escaped and remained in the United States under a different identity. And others believe that the three escapees simply drowned, and the remains lie at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean, which is what the FBI had originally suspected. This case remains unsolved because if they truly did escape and died in Brazil, they will never be able to test anything on the bodies or know anything about their alleged life after escape. The photograph above is allegedly the Anglin Brothers on their farm in Brazil. A family friend from childhood allegedly ran into the Anglin Brothers wile visiting Brazil and they invited him to their farm and asked him to take a picture to be able to show their families that they are in fact alive. A retired U.S. Marshall investigator, Art Roderick, who was in charge of the probe into the three escapees disappearance for 20 years looked into this image and came to the conclusion that the men in these photos were in fact John and Clarence Anglin. The FBI closed the case on December 31, 1979 and then handed it over to the U.S. Marshals Service and will continue to accept information until the three men are proved to be deceased or they reach their 99th birthdays. In 2013, the San Francisco Police Department received a letter from someone who claimed they were John Anglin. The letter claimed that Frank Morris and Clarence Anglin were dead. The claims made in that letter were not proven and it is still unknown if the author of the letter was John Anglin. To this day it is still not known what happened to Frank Morris and John and Clarence Anglin.
This case has not been solved. There are a number of theories as to what happened to Clarence Anglin, John Anglin, and Frank Morris. They have never been found, but it is alleged they could have moved to Brazil and started a new life. Others say that they escaped and remained in the United States under a different identity. And others believe that the three escapees simply drowned, and the remains lie at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean, which is what the FBI had originally suspected. This case remains unsolved because if they truly did escape and died in Brazil, they will never be able to test anything on the bodies or know anything about their alleged life after escape. The photograph above is allegedly the Anglin Brothers on their farm in Brazil. A family friend from childhood allegedly ran into the Anglin Brothers wile visiting Brazil and they invited him to their farm and asked him to take a picture to be able to show their families that they are in fact alive. A retired U.S. Marshall investigator, Art Roderick, who was in charge of the probe into the three escapees disappearance for 20 years looked into this image and came to the conclusion that the men in these photos were in fact John and Clarence Anglin. The FBI closed the case on December 31, 1979 and then handed it over to the U.S. Marshals Service and will continue to accept information until the three men are proved to be deceased or they reach their 99th birthdays. In 2013, the San Francisco Police Department received a letter from someone who claimed they were John Anglin. The letter claimed that Frank Morris and Clarence Anglin were dead. The claims made in that letter were not proven and it is still unknown if the author of the letter was John Anglin. To this day it is still not known what happened to Frank Morris and John and Clarence Anglin.