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Saturday, November 14, 2009 - 12:43 PM
Bruce Mendenhall was initially charged only with the murder of
Sara Hulbert, but during interrogation he implicated himself in five
other crimes, including the murder of Symantha Winters. He revealed
details of the January 29, 2007, killing of Deborah Ann Glover, 43,
whose body had been found behind a hotel near a Suwanee, Ga., truck
stop. Like Winters, Glover had been a prostitute.Mendenhall
confessed to the killing of Sherry Drinkard, also 43 and a prostitute,
whose body had been found on February 22, 2007, shot in the head and
tossed into a snow bank at another TA truck stop, this one in Lake
Station, Ind. He also claimed responsibility for the murder of Lucille
Gretna Carter, 44, whose body had been found near a trash bin on the
side of a road outside of Birmingham, Ala., on July 7, 2007. Carter had
been shot and her body had been stripped naked, similarly to Drinkard's.  Carma Purpura Mendenhall
also spoke of the Indianapolis killing of 31-year-old Carma Purpura,
who had been last seen on July 11th, the day before Mendenhall was
captured. Mendenhall denied being Purpura's killer, but told police
that she had died from a gunshot to the head at a Flying J truck stop
in Indianapolis. Also a prostitute battling drug addiction, Purpura's
body was never found despite Mendenhall's description of a dumpster
near a Hardee's restaurant. Purpura's blood, as well as her cell phone,
ATM card and clothing were found in Mendenhall's truck, and in 2008 he
was charged with her murder.
Mendenhall was charged
with killing Sara Nicole Hulbert, Symantha Winters, and Lucille Carter.
All four had been shot with a .22 caliber handgun. According to Marion
County Prosecutor Carl Brizzi, assigned to the case, told the press
that the victims' heads had been wrapped with plastic wrap and duct
tape before they were shot.  Latisha Milken After
Mendenhall had implicated himself in six murders, police from across
the Midwest and the South began to look through their unsolved cases,
knowing that a man who had allegedly killed at least six in one year
was likely to have killed before. Over 100 police agencies contacted
the Nashville Metro police, hoping to connect a cold case or a missing
person to Mendenhall. Because Mendenhall had crossed state lines, an
FBI task force was assembled to go through Mendenhall's banking history
and the records of the trucking company he worked for to retrace his
steps over the prior two decades. One hit came from a town just north
of Nashville. Analyses revealed the blood of Latisha Milliken, missing
from Millersville, Tenn., since February 2007, to have been present in
the cab of Mendenhall's truck. According to a posting on the North
American Missing Persons website, Milliken was addicted to crack
cocaine and supported her habit by picking up truckers at TravelCenters
of America.
Police also sought to connect Mendenhall
to the death of Jennifer Smith, a 24-year-old prostitute whose naked
body had been found in 2005, at a TA truck stop parking lot in
Bucksnort, Tenn., about an hour west of Nashville. Although there were
many similarities between the slaying of Smith and the women Mendenhall
described to police, he was not her killer. In 2008, based on DNA
evidence, convicted killer John Wayne Boyer was indicted with her
murder. At the time, Boyer was already serving a 12-year sentence for
the Illinois killing of 31-year-old Scarlett Wood. Like Mendenhall,
Boyer was a trucker and had picked up Wood at a truck stop.  Police Sketch Could
Bruce Mendenhall's alleged killing spree have extended all the way back
to 1992, when Tammy Zywicki was driving on I-80 through Illinois?
Several circumstances connect Mendenhall to a killing that took place
in 2001, possibly expanding the scope of his already extensive resume:
Cindy Rogers is convinced that Mendenhall killed her sister Belinda
Cartwright, who was run over by a big rig truck while hitchhiking in
Valdosta, Ga. A composite sketch of Cartwright's suspected killer bears
a striking resemblance to Mendenhall — like his 2007 mug shot, the face Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
in the composite sketch is gaunt, tight-lipped and bespectacled. When
news of Mendenhall's arrest hit the media, Todd Matthews, member of a
missing persons organization out of Cookeville, Tenn., said he
immediately recognized Mendenhall from the composite. Because Belinda
Cartwright was one of several women who had been killed near Interstate
75, Matthews said he had began to formulate a theory of an I-75 serial
killer years before Mendenhall's arrest. Matthews, who produces Missing
Pieces, a weekly public service announcement intended to raise public
awareness and help locate missing persons, said authorities Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire and
newspapers didn't take notice of his theory until Mendenhall was
captured in 2007.
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