2nd minimum-security inmate admits fleeing prison camp near Duluth

An additional five years of incarceration now hangs over the head of a Bloomington con artist who fled from the minimum-security federal prison near Duluth in March with a fellow inmate.

September 4, 2013 at 1:13PM
Gerald Greenfield walked away from a prison camp in Duluth. He was convicted of conspiracy to commit money laundering.
Gerald Greenfield walked away from a prison camp in Duluth. He was convicted of conspiracy to commit money laundering. (Dennis McGrath/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

An additional five years of incarceration now hangs over the head of a Bloomington con artist who fled from the minimum-security federal prison near Duluth in March with a fellow inmate.

Gerald Greenfield, 67, pleaded guilty Tuesday in federal court in Minneapolis to escaping with Michael Joseph Krzyzaniak, 64, of Minneapolis. Both were caught six days later 175 miles away at the Hampton Inn in Burnsville after law enforcement received a tip. A hotel spokeswoman said the two had been at the hotel since their flight, registered under an alias.

Krzyzaniak pleaded guilty in June and also faces up to an additional five years in prison. Sentencings for the two have yet to be scheduled.

At an April hearing, a Duluth prison camp guard said footprints in the snow showed that one had climbed a snowbank and jumped a fence and that the other had pushed open a loose gate.

The camp is described in a criminal complaint as having no "walls or fences to contain prisoners; rather, using an honor system." Inmates have access to recreational facilities, can take college courses and even "leave the confines of the institution on furlough for medical appointments."

In 1988, Krzyzaniak skipped town as he faced trial in connection with a bogus scheme to sell $550,000 worth of U.S. veteran commemorative medallions. He was arrested seven months later in West Palm Beach, Fla., where he was setting up another telemarketing operation. He has about nine years to serve for bilking investors by promoting development projects that never happened, including a NASCAR-style racetrack in the Elko New Market area and a resort and housing development in Desert Hot Springs, Calif.

Greenfield was serving four years for assisting a mortgage scam for the Sexton Lofts in downtown Minneapolis by helping hide profits with an attorney friend in Australia. His projected release date was Nov. 2, 2015.

Paul Walsh • 612-673-4482

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Paul Walsh

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Paul Walsh is a general assignment reporter at the Minnesota Star Tribune. He wants your news tips, especially in and near Minnesota.

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