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Saturday, November 14, 2009 - 2:20 PM
Mendenhall's alleged victims do not have much in common with
Tammy Zywicki. Unlike the truck stop prostitutes the accused killer
targeted, Tammy was wholesome and athletic. She played soccer and
collected sea shells. Unlike the middle-aged Symantha Winters, Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire Deborah
Ann Glover, Lucille Carter and Sherry Drinkard, Tammy was only 21. At
first glance, Sara Nicole Hulbert, 25 and without major arrests,
appears similar to Tammy. But Sara Hulbert's life was very different
from Tammy's. Hulbert's sister, Roxanna Wayman, told Tennessee's News
Channel 5 that Hulbert and Symantha Winters were acquainted on the
street. Family described Hulbert, a mother of two, as a good person who
made bad choices. Drugs and the prostitution which paid for them,
police said, are what led her to stand, vulnerable and desperate, at
that TA truck stop on the day she was killed.  Tammy Zywicki'S car But
Tammy was vulnerable in her own way, too. Based on the report of a
passing motorist, she was last seen standing on the side of the road by
her broken-down car near mile marker 83 on I-80 in central Illinois.
Helping her was a man, described as 35 to 40 years of age, over six
feet tall and with dark bushy hair. The witness also recalled that the
man's tractor trailer was pulled over near Tammy's car. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
When
Tammy's body was found 490 miles away, in a ditch on the side of
Interstate 44 in Missouri, the case gained national attention. The idea
of a cold-blooded killer posing as a good Samaritan caused a wave of
anger and fear to sweep through the hearts of many. At Grinnell
College, a small private liberal arts school nestled on a sprawling
rural campus, the community of students and faculty was awash with
sadness at the loss of one of their promising young scholars. Were
young women driving across the country to college at risk of abduction,
assault and murder at the hands of a killer trucker? Was a stranger's
offer to help with a broken-down car to be taken as a threat? An
FBI task force were assigned to the case. Fourteen investigators set
out to gather any information regarding Tammy's killer. In January
1993, an anonymous female witness called the task force and told
investigators that the wife of a man who matched the FBI's description
— the bushy hair, the age and height — entered her workplace for some
routine bloodwork. The woman showed the witness a watch her husband had
given her. The Lorus-brand wrist watch was unique — it had an umbrella
on the face and played the tune "Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head." It
matched the description of one of the personal items Tammy was said to
have had with her when she disappeared but which were never recovered
after her body was found. The witness and the watch led investigators
to Lonnie Bierbodt.  Kenworth logo Bierbodt,
31 at the time of Tammy's death, was a convicted felon who'd been
serving two concurrent 20-year terms for a pair of armed robberies
until he was paroled in 1990. He lived in Missouri, close to that
stretch of highway between Springfield and Joplin where Tammy's body
was discovered. After his release, Bierbodt began to drive trucks,
specifically a Kenworth truck. The red blanket in which Tammy's body
was found was decorated with a Kenworth logo. A further coincidence was
that Bierbodt had been visiting some family in Illinois, mere minutes
from the spot on I-80 where Tammy was last seen. Yet after Bierbodt was
questioned and swabbed for DNA, he was released and no arrest was made.
With no other leads, the task force dedicated to Tammy's case was
disbanded shortly thereafter.
Ten years later, one
of the investigators who served on that task force is still convinced
that Lonnie Bierbodt was the person they were looking for. Now retired,
former Illinois State Police Master Sargeant Martin McCarthy announced
in 2002 that the details surrounding Bierbodt caused him to believe
that the man was a suspect and should have been arrested. The facts
regarding Bierbodt's residence, the visit to his family and the
Kenworth logo were not known to the public until McCarthy came forth.
McCarthy, father to one daughter, retired from the force a month after
Bierbodt died in June 2002 at the age of 41.
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