A third person who escaped from Delaney Hall in Newark was captured, FBI officials said Tuesday.
The agency announced Tuesday morning that Franklin Norberto Bautista-Reyes, 21, and originally from Honduras was in their custody.
A spokesperson for the FBI did not share additional details about Bautista-Reyes’ arrest.
Bautista-Reyes escaped with three other detainees on Thursday after unrest at the jail over food and water at the facility led to a wall being torn down by inmates.
Authorities are still searching for Andres Felipe Pineda-Mogollon, 25, from Colombia, and have increased a reward for information leading to his arrest to $25,000 on Monday.
Pineda-Mogollon was initially arrested on local petty larceny and residential burglary charges, officials said.
His last known address was in Newark and he has ties to Queens, New York, according to FBI officials.
Two others who escaped were recaptured over the weekend at different ends of the state.
Joan Sebastian Castaneda-Lozada surrendered to FBI and Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents on Sunday, Department of Homeland Security officials said Monday.
Castaneda-Lozada attempted to turn himself in to a New Jersey State Police station in Bridgeton Friday, but was denied based on the city’s sanctuary policies, DHS officials said in a statement.
He later surrendered to FBI and ICE agents in Millville on Sunday, officials said.
New Jersey State Police did not immediately return a request for comment.
Castaneda-Lozada was being held at the Salem County Jail, but has since been moved, records show but do not list the new location.
Sandoval-Lopez was arrested by ICE, FBI and Passaic police on Friday and threatened and kicked officers, officials said. He is being held at the Essex County Jail, court records show.
After detainees escaped Thursday night, U.S. Senator Andy Kim and U.S. Rep. Robert Menendez Jr. met with officials at Delaney Hall and were told that inmates would be moved from the facility.
Kim said Friday that the facility was undergoing a security review after Thursday’s incident.
It was unclear how many inmates were going to be moved and where they were going to be taken.
A lawyer for an Egyptian man that was being held at Delaney Hall told NJ Advance Media that his client was moved to a facility in Louisiana.
Regular protests have been staged outside Delaney Hall since it reopened under the Trump administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration.
The GEO Group, a private company, was awarded a 15-year, $1 billion government contract to operate the facility in February.
GEO Group declined to comment further on Thursday’s incident beyond the statement the initial statement they issued.
Newark Mayor Ras Baraka was arrested outside the facility in May and charged with trespassing, but the charges were quickly dropped.
Federal officials later filed felony assault charges against U.S. Rep. LaMonica McIver, a Democrat representing New Jersey’s 10th Congressional District, who was with Baraka in May when he was arrested.
Baraka and city officials had visited Delaney Hall several times leading up to his arrest to serve citations on GEO Group officials for failure to allow city inspectors inside the facility.
Federal officials claim the facility has all current inspections and certifications to operate the facility.

Stories by Matthew Enuco
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