On 5 January 1988, Tanya Smith – then two years into a 13-year prison sentence in West Virginia – walked out of her cell and kept on walking. Smith, who had been convicted of bank and wire fraud, wanted a shot at an appeal. Having grown increasingly desperate, she hatched an unorthodox plan to try to win her freedom from the outside. With the help of an accomplice, she disguised herself as a lawyer and floated confidently past the security guards who observed her every move.
Like many elements of Smith’s life story, it sounds as if it was ripped straight from the pages of a pulpy thriller. “When I reached the gate, I turned to the guard standing in the doorway and waved,” writes Smith in her action-packed memoir, Never Saw Me…