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Saturday, November 14, 2009 - 3:16 PM
In 2004, the FBI noticed a pattern — the bodies of murdered
women were being dumped along Interstate 40 in Oklahoma, Texas,
Arkansas, and Mississippi. The victims were mostly prostitutes and
transients who hung out at truck stops. They were picked up, sexually
assaulted, sometimes bound or mutilated, murdered and dumped on the
side of the road. To help better connect suspects to victims, the FBI
began a database of such victims and officially launched the Highway Serial Killings initiative
in April 2009. The initiative helps conduct investigations between
jurisdictions, which can be difficult to do, but is vital to solve
cases in which the suspects travel hundreds of miles each day.
Currently, the database contains over 500 victims and 200 suspects.
Agents and Violent Criminal Apprehension Program (ViCAP) analysts work
diligently to find answers in this tangled and sadly ever-growing web
of highways, truck drivers and murder victims.  FBI map shows the more than 500 cases in the Highway Serial Killings Initiative database; the red dots mark where bodies or remains have been found along highways over the past 30 years.
Bruce
Mendenhall is on that list, as an apprehended offender, and his victims
are there as well. Police say Mendenhall confessed to six killings, all
in 2007. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire In court, Mendenhall pleaded not guilty to killing Sara
Hulbert. He remains in a Tennessee jail awaiting trial for that charge,
as well as the three other homicide charges in Tennessee, Alabama and
Indiana. Tennessee prosecutors intend to seek the death penalty if he
is convicted. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire In August 2008, Mendenhall was charged with plotting to
kill detectives and witnesses in his case while in jail. He pleaded not
guilty.
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