McDuff alleged was stolenwhich also was never located. From Love's Truck Stop, McDuff and Al drove to Waco. At New Road in Waco, Al said the T-Bird had broken down. While they were working on the T-Bird someone in a gray car picked up Al and said they were going to get jumper cables. They left and never returned. Poor Kenneth was stuck with two cars, one that did not run and the other one stolen. He then testified that he threw his wallet and all identifying information with the name "McDuff" on the front seat of his car, took Al's car, and drove to his dorm room and went to sleep. (He added that he slept in his clothes.)
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Throughout the testimony, McDuff's lawyer, Mike Charlton, tried to keep him on topic, but it was no use. Every attempt Charlton made was met by, "Well, let me explain," and followed by endless nonsense. It was as if McDuff felt that embellishing his lies with detail somehow made them the truth.
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McDuff stated that from his dorm in Waco, he went south to San Antonio. It was there he claims to have gotten the fake identification he used in Kansas City From San Antonio he went to Austin. At that point into his testimony he launched into another long, irrelevant story Charlton tried again. "Did you ultimately leave the Austin area?" he asked in vain.
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"Well, let me describe step-by-step what occurred," McDuff answered.
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Judge Burdette cut him off by calling for a recess. When everyone returned, Burdette sighed and said, "All right, Mr. Charlton, I think you were making phone calls and leaving Austin."
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From Austin, McDuff said, he went to Fort Worth, then to Wichita Falls, where he hitched a ride with a black truck driver who dropped him off in Lawton, Oklahoma. He slept under a tree in Lawton, awakened and walked to a bus station, where he bought a ticket to Oklahoma City. (He added that at the bus stop he mistakenly used the women's restroom.) In Oklahoma City, he slept in an abandoned burnt-out house (just like he claimed in 1966 while Roy Dale Green murdered three teenagers).
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Mike Chariton tried again: "And from Oklahoma City where did you go?"
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"Let me explain what happened in Oklahoma City," McDuff said.
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Seated at the prosecution table, John Segrest thought to himself, "This guy won't shut up." But he knew the state was in pretty good shape. The more McDuff talked, the more he became a star witness for the prosecution. Segrest also noticed an unusual change in the jury. The courtroom
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