CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A burglary suspect who escaped from a New Hampshire jail five days ago and vowed revenge on two people in Maine has been caught, police said.

David Glenn Hobson was captured Tuesday evening in Rochester, N.H., according to Maine state police. He was in custody and couldn’t be reached for comment.

The U.S. Marshals Service had vowed to catch Hobson. On Tuesday, State Police received a tip late in the afternoon and coordinated the capture with the US Marshal Service, Maine Department of Public Safety spokesman Steve McCausland said in a press release.

“The arrest took place near the Market Basket store along Route 125, about two miles from the Maine-NH border. Hobson was in a car driven by another man and was taken into custody without incident . He was not armed,” McCausland said.

He was taken to the Strafford County Jail in Dover, the press release said.

Hobson escaped from an Ossipee, N.H., jail on Dec. 1 by scaling a razor-wire fence in the recreation yard, authorities said. Police believed he had a gun and appeared to hold a grudge against two people with whom he once had a personal relationship.

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U.S. Marshal Noel March said the two were aware of the threats and were “in a safe place.”

Hobson, 33, whose criminal record includes a series of burglary convictions, wasn’t going after past victims, March said before the capture.

But one of those burglary victims said she had lived in fear of Hobson since he ransacked her home several times in 2005 looking for pain medication she takes for a disability. Hobson pleaded guilty in 2006 to more than a dozen burglaries, including one at the home of Lynne Mansur of Alfred, Maine.

Mansur told The Associated Press on Tuesday that the most valuable thing Hobson stole from her was her sense of security.

“I’m scared and shaking and sleeping with all sorts of things around me,” Mansur said, adding that she keeps knives, tear gas and an air horn near her bed. “I’m really thinking I just need to leave my house, and that’s not right.”

Mansur said she had been reassured by authorities that she wasn’t one of the people Hobson was after. She was contacted by a victim advocate for the York County district attorney’s office soon after Hobson’s escape.

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“It doesn’t protect me, but it makes me feel like I’m not totally alone,” Mansur said.

March vowed earlier Tuesday that Hobson would be caught but that law enforcement officials would prefer he turn himself in so no one gets hurt.

“David Glenn Hobson is not Houdini and he’s not Whitey Bulger,” March said before the capture, referring to the famous escape artist and the notorious Boston mob boss who was on the lam for more than 16 years. “It’s important to point out this is not the manhunt of the century.”

March implored Hobson to turn himself in to end the stress on his family “and the anxiety he is causing the community at large.”

Homes belonging to Hobson’s relatives in the greater Alfred and Sanford areas in southern Maine were searched and were watched closely by law enforcement officials, Noel said. Relatives were interviewed multiple times, he said.

Hobson’s father was arrested Friday and was charged with hindering apprehension after being accused of leaving supplies for Hobson outside his Alfred home. Police said the package included food, water, medical supplies, blankets and clothing. Behind the house, police also found discarded clothing and a receipt showing where Hobson bought a change of clothes and supplies.

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Hobson stole a car in Wakefield, N.H., after escaping from jail, police said. The vehicle was found abandoned on a logging road in Alfred, and blood inside added to investigators’ suspicion that Hobson was seriously injured.

“You can clearly consider him desperate by virtue of his own actions — a very concerted effort he undertook to escape from the Carroll County House of Corrections, injuring himself in the process — coupled with his own statements he has intentions to harm others,” March said.

Law enforcement officials wouldn’t say how they learned of Hobson’s threats except to say their concerns were based on statements he had made.

Hobson’s police record dates back to a criminal mischief conviction in 1996. He was sentenced to two days in jail.

Hobson’s brother-in-law, Richard Lane, said Tuesday that no one in the family wanted to speak to reporters.

While Hobson was loose, aircraft buzzed over the greater Sanford area, and dozens of heavily armed state troopers, deputy U.S. marshals and members of a violent-fugitive task force searched on the ground.

The U.S. Marshals Service had offered a $1,000 reward for information leading to Hobson’s apprehension.

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