end of a quiet country road, five miles outside eustis. this is where richard wendorf, a manager at a packaging firm, lived with his wife, naomi and their two teenaged daughters. the day it happened, heather wasn t in school that day. she had met up with rod. i believe they came to greenwood cemetery. i didn t speak with her until that evening when she called me to tell me that he had showed up in town and we re planning on running away. it was tough because i had very strong feelings for her. i told her that i had wanted to see her and talk to her and at that point, she was driven to my house. they left rod and scott back near to the wendorfs home and that s when he went in and did what he did.
that was heather s whole position. it wasn t serious. she didn t mean it. rod deserves to be in jail for what he did. it was wrong. it was horrible. i won t tell you that rod was a good person. but he s a passionate person. and if he thinks that he s taking care of somebody he cares about, he s going to act and then think. he knew his actions and he knew what effect would come from them. he knew, you know, the consequences. he just didn t care. it turns out the murder of the wendorfs maybe wasn t the first homicide rod ferrell witnessed. during our exclusive interview, rod ferrell made a startling admission. he says in murray, kentucky, as a child, he watched a human
with the wendorfs dead in eustis, rod ferrell and his teenaged vampire followers were on the run in a stolen explorer, heading for new orleans in hopes of finding refuge with another vampire clan. but after three days on the road, hungry and broke, one of the girls, charity casey, phoned home. her mother immediately tipped off the police. it was thanksgiving evening. i had just gone to bed and i got a call from my lieutenant. rod ferrell was caught in louisiana. i drove 14 hours to baton rouge. i knew that he was being
she admitted to talking to rod saying, you know, but it was just a teenaged thing. that was heather s whole position. it wasn t serious. she didn t mean it. rod deserves to be in jail for what he did. it was wrong. it was horrible. i won t tell you that rod was a good person. but he s a passionate person. and if he thinks that he s taking care of somebody he cares about, he s going to act and then think. he knew his actions and he knew what effect would come from them. he knew, you know, the consequences. he just didn t care. it turns out the murder of the wendorfs maybe wasn t the first homicide rod ferrell witnessed. during our exclusive interview, rod ferrell made a startling admission. he says in murray, kentucky, as a child, he watched a human sacrifice organized by a network
end of a quiet country road, five miles outside eustis. this is where richard wendorf, a manager at a packaging firm, lived with his wife, naomi and their two teenaged daughters. the day it happened, heather wasn t in school that day. she had met up with rod. i believe they came to greenwood cemetery. i didn t speak with her until that evening when she called me to tell me that he had showed up in town and were planning on running away. it was tough because i had very strong feelings for her. i told her that i had wanted to see her and talk to her and at that point, she was driven to my house. they left rod and scott back near to the wendorfs home, and that s when he went in and did