Of course, Addie could not have known it, and she certainly did not mean to do so, but when she reported McDuff missing, she contributed greatly to his eventual apprehension. Throughout Texas, virtually all law enforcement agencies had access to databases that now listed Kenneth Allen McDuff as a missing and possibly endangered person from Bell County. Virtually all inquiries would henceforth land on the desk of a Bell County Investigator, a central location. More significant was whose desk it would land onInvestigator Tim Steglich.
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A native of Central Texas who had lived for some time in Houston, Tim Steglich looked into the reputation of various police academies and chose to enroll in Houston's. Upon graduation, he worked as a Houston Police officer, a goal he set for himself as a young man. As he grew older, he wanted to raise his daughters in the more agrarian Central Texas, so in the mid-1980s, he moved to one of the Blackland Prairie's hamlets. He became heavily involved in the activities of its public schools. In truth, he always wished he could have been a football coach; and he would have made a good one. Tim Steglich never watched much television, and has little patience for reading. His gifts as an investigator lie in how he deals with people. He can find anyone, and when he does, he never burns bridges. Over the years, he has nearly perfected methods of effectively communicating with even the smallest of intellects; he gets information out of them. He is an astute observer of body language, and can analyze responses as well as many, more highly trained interrogators. And he never, ever, gives up. "Every once in a while, in some small towns and rural sheriffs' offices, you come across an investigator who is every bit as good as anyone, anywhere. Tim Steglich is one of them," said ATF Special Agent Charles Meyer. 18
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On the day Addie reported him as a missing person, McDuff was scheduled to report to his parole officer in Temple. Naturally, he failed to do so. The next day, one of McDuff's sisters went to Sabine Hall and cleaned out McDuff's room. Meanwhile, Tim Steglich, who had never heard of McDuff, did a criminal history on him to determine if he wanted "to make himself missing." As Tim stood and gazed at the printout near the only computer the department had to do such searches, immediately, and long before he had any idea of who Melissa Northrup or Colleen Reed were, he had a bad feeling about the entire case. Tim decided it was time to call Addie McDuff. 19
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