RENO, Nev. – Las Vegas police have arrested a convicted bombmaker who escaped from a Nevada prison where he was serving a life sentence for a deadly 2007 explosion outside the Las Vegas Strip, authorities said.

Las Vegas police said they received information Wednesday night that a person matching the description of Porfirio Duarte-Herrera was in the area. Officers took the man into custody, confirmed he was Duarte-Herrera and arrested him, the department said in a statement.

Additional information wasn’t immediately released by Las Vegas police.

Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak had earlier ordered an investigation into the escape after he said late Tuesday his office learned the escapee had been missing from the medium-security prison since early in the weekend.

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Officials didn’t realize that Duarte-Herrera, 42, was missing until Tuesday morning during a head count at Southern Desert Correctional Center near Las Vegas.

In a press release, Sisolak called the incident “unacceptable.”

“My office has ordered NDOC to conduct and complete a thorough investigation into this event as quickly as possible,” Sisolak said. “This kind of security lapse cannot be permitted and those responsible will be held accountable.  

Duarte-Herrera, from Nicaragua, was convicted in 2010 of killing a hot dog stand vendor using a motion-activated bomb in a coffee cup atop a car parked at the Luxor hotel-casino.

Records show his co-defendant, Omar Rueda-Denvers, remained in custody. The 47-year-old from Guatemala is serving a life sentence at a different Nevada prison for murder, attempted murder, explosives and other charges.

A Clark County District Court jury spared both men from the death penalty in the slaying of Willebaldo Dorantes Antonio, whom prosecutors identified as the boyfriend of Rueda-Denvers’ ex-girlfriend.

The Luxor hotel and casino is pictured in Las Vegas on Monday, May 7, 2007. A small device left atop a vehicle outside a Las Vegas Strip resort exploded killing one man and injuring another person Monday morning. Las Vegas Police said the blast was not a terrorist act, but an apparent murder of a man who worked in the hotel.

Prosecutors said jealousy was the motive for the attack on the top deck of a two-story parking structure. The blast initially raised fears of a terrorist attack on the Strip.

Contributing: Associated Press