gency in the Waco area. Like Austin's reaction to the disappearance of Colleen Reed, friends and family spread out, handing out fliers and asking questions. McDuff's other victims had no such advocates, except for Regenia Moore, whose mother, Barbara Carpenter, courageously searched for her daughterbut she was alone in her determined search. Out in West Texas, Brenda Thompson's family wondered why she quit calling home, but no one from that family lived in the Waco area, and there is no record of her family reporting her missing. Valencia Joshua's family did not know she had been in the Waco area, much less that she was a missing person or a possible victim of a serial killer. The observation that law enforcement did not connect the string of murders until "good" girls became victims is correct. As a criticism, however, it is not entirely fair. It is not common for accountants and convenience store clerks with jobs and families to get into the cars of strangers. Melissa and Colleen left behind evidence of stable lives, like purses, driver's licenses, cars, homes, and people who knew better than to believe that they just ran off. These victims' families organized themselves, and provided useful information to law enforcement officers. For example, Bethany Sneed, Melissa's sister-in-law, and her husband Kirk, grabbed a stack of fliers and visited Waco business establishments. Soon, thousands of the mint green posters with Melissa's picture papered Waco. At one convenience store on University Park Drive, Bethany and Kirk met a man who said, "I don't know that woman, but I know the store. A man asked me to rob it." They had encountered Louis, a resident of Sabine Hall, and the young man McDuff had, on numerous occasions, invited to rob the Quik Pak.
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Louis and all other Sabine Hall residents were afraid of McDuff. "He had seen McDuff beat the crap out of some people," remembered McLennan County District Attorney Mike Freeman, who later developed a close working relationship with Louis. Within days, the FBI had pictures of Kenneth McDuff to show Louis, 7 but FBI agents were not the only officers interested in him.
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After lunch with the McNamaras, Bill arrived at the Sheriff's Office with FBI Agent Freddie Vela. From there, a deputy called the District Attorney's office to see if any movement had been made to indict McDuff. The answer was "no"; there just wasn't enough there. "I can't fault them for that," remembered Bill. At the time, the only thing linking McDuff to Melissa's abduction was the discovery of his Thunderbird near, not at, the scene. Bill asked around the office and came across a deputy who
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