I am new to the site, so please bear with me. I was living in the Ozark area at the time the girls were murdered. The attached PDF came from information on a link called HenryCountyReport. I can't vouch for the accuracy. The information may already be common knowledge here, and I just overlooked it. The PDF was constructed 3 years ago, and the website has since taken this information down, probably because of the defamation lawsuit brought against the site administrator by Ozark Police.
If I am off base posting this, forgive me, and offer any constructive guidance. I would love to see this crime solved for several personal reasons. Thanks, All
I still cannot understand why anyone thinks that J.B. Beasley and Tracie Hawlett were involved in some type of situation where they were followed.
I do not think J.B. Beasley and Tracie Hawlett had a plan about where they were going to go that night. Whether they got lost on the way to the party near Haleburg when they stopped at the gas station, a BP in Headland(often confused with the second gas station they stopped at, the Big Little in Ozark, AL), they do not seem to know where or what they are going to do next. So the only way anyone could murder them would be to follow their car around all night and stop and wait at the same places they stopped at. That seems kind of ridiculous doesn't it?
I think it is more likely that they either stopped for someone in authority(or who they thought was authority) or they stopped somewhere that night and ended up meeting their murderer. And this only occurred after they left the Big Little gas station in Ozark, AL.
This has likely been said repeatedly, but here goes. Upon departing the Big Little, westbound on East Broad St., at the intersection with 123, the girls could have gone straight ahead on Andrews Ave. till it intersected 231. Or, if they followed the signs (see attached photo), they would have turned left on South Union (123) intending to follow it to 231. This is the more likely scenario. As 123 leaves the downtown business district, passing College St., the road broadens to four lane and slopes steeply down to a creek, then fairly steeply up the other side, leveling out after it passes the Dale County jail. The downhill slope is deceptively good at causing cars to drift above the 25 MPH speed limit. Add to that, darkness, late hour, and a sense of youthful urgency to progress toward points south, and you have the makings of a car sufficiently above the limit to get stopped.
OPD frequently used the parking area between Logan's Cleaners and Sanders Electrical to set up. They had a command view of traffic in both directions while having concealment till a car's speed had already been recorded. If the girls were in this situation and saw the blue/red lights come on, the nearest, safest, well lighted place to stop would be the Dale County jail parking lot (a mere 1/2 mile from Herring Ave.).
From this point, this scenario assumes that we have a bad cop and that, owing to artificial light, Ms. Merritt was mistaken about how clean the car was.
The bad cop, either persuasively or authoritatively has the girls follow him, either supposedly to police headquarters (which would be believable with the current location being the jail), or to a location less public. Herring Ave. is undeveloped, uninhabited, and unlighted with dense vegetation on both sides all the way down past the creek, which is about 600 feet from the James St intersection. There are plenty of briers, mud, and water there. The car was found parked about 150 feet from the intersection.
OPD at that time was on a more limited budget, as it was prior to the influx of federal funds following 9/11. They had wisely configured an older dark navy blue pickup truck with grille lights and siren. In the dark or in artificial light, it could pass for being black. This unmarked vehicle was ideal for its purpose. Unless you noticed the municipal license, or the blue grille lights came on, you would never know it was a cop. Once shots were fired and trunk was closed, Bad Cop could have been hurriedly leaving the scene as curious Johnny B arrived at the James St intersection, lending some believability to his assertion of a black truck. I think his claim of Dothan license is not credible. Licenses are identifiable by county based on population. Dale County is 26, and Houston County is 38. So the first two digits of the tag number identifies the county. It is very unlikely that one could identify the difference between 26 and 38, given the environment and circumstances.
When a crime is committed, I think the primary objective of LE is to get an iron-clad conviction that will not be overturned. If they get the guilty party convicted, that is even better. When a cop does bad, it brings heat, dishonor, and scrutiny down on the entire department. I think it is possible that the killer could have acted alone. I think that LE will look much harder outside their own ranks and may accept the story of their own more readily than they would that of anyone outside the blue shield.
I seriously doubt that the officers on traffic duty that night have been DNA tested for a possible match. It could either yield a break, or it could go a long way toward dispelling the suspicions of folks like me.