Texas Man Acquitted of Murder Due to Insanity Escapes State Hospital

Alexander Ervin is to be considered armed and dangerous, police say

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A man acquitted by reason of insanity of murder in the 2013 stabbing death of his father in Austin has escaped from a state hospital to which he was committed, authorities said Monday.

Staff at the North Texas State Hospital in Vernon, near the Oklahoma border and 190 miles (306 kilometers) northwest of Dallas, advised police that Alexander Scott Ervin, 29, was found missing from the hospital shortly after 7:30 a.m. Monday, the Vernon Police Department reported.

A review of the hospitalโ€™s security video revealed that Ervin left his dormitory room at about 9 p.m. Sunday and scaled the hospitalโ€™s 8-foot security fence before heading north on foot at about 9:15 p.m.

Ervin was to be considered armed and dangerous, police said.

A Travis County jury in 2014 found Ervin, who is autistic, not guilty of murder by reason of insanity in Ray Scott Ervinโ€™s death. Police and emergency medical personnel dispatched to the Ervinsโ€™ home in west Austin found the suspect calm and quiet but scratched, beaten and covered in blood, the Austin American-Statesman reported.

His brother, Maxwell Ervin, testified that his brother attacked their father with a pipe wrench and a folding knife, alleging that Ray Ervin was an imposter. Alexander Ervin claimed to be a trained member of the CIA on a mission to kill his father, Maxwell Ervin testified.

Jurors deliberated for about 10 hours before acquitting the defendant. As recently as this April, a magistrate ordered Alexander Ervinโ€™s commitment to continue at a state mental hospital.

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