Tacloban City Jail in the Philippines seems quiet, now.<br /> <br />But when the storm surge of Typhoon Haiyan smashed open the prison's main gate, well over a hundred inmates swam to freedom.<br /> <br />Most remain on the loose, but a few -- like Joey Gerona Taborada -- serving eight years for drug dealing, chose to come back.<br /> <br />(SOUNDBITE) (Waray) PRISONER SERVING EIGHT-YEAR SENTENCE FOR DRUG DEALING, JOEY GERONA TABORADA, SAYING:<br /> <br />"I was afraid of what was happening to my family. That's why I decided to get out of the prison. I was always thinking of returning to the prison. I'd been serving this detention sentence for so long, it would have been a waste if I didn't return."<br /> <br />Prisoners on the loose just add to the sense of unease among residents here, in the wake of the devastating storm.<br /> <br />The inmates are convicted of crimes like robbery and drug dealing -- but more violent offenses, too, like rape and murder.<br /> <br />Jail Warden Joseph Nunex says prisoners who willingly come