More added to KNE -
Another newspaper carrier, Eric Parrent, said he drove by the house at about 9 a.m. and saw an officer in plain clothes taking photographs of the two Direct TV vans in front of the house.
Lindsey Clark and his wife, Lynn, of Harton Place, were walking to the Lions Club pancake breakfast when they heard a loud noise. Lynn Clark, who works for Hopkinsville Electric System, thought it was a transformer. Lindsey Clark said it sounded like a gunshot.
When they approached the corner of Sterling and Cox Mill Road, a plainclothes officer who identified himself as a state police officer said the noise was a diversionary tactic and not a gunshot. The officer told the Clarks to wait until they could be allowed to walk through the neighborhood.
While they waited, Clark said, they saw two men being brought out of the house in handcuffs. One was a black man, the other was white. Both were wearing Direct TV uniforms. Clark said the black man may have been placed in a police vehicle. He did not see him again.
They seemed more focused on the white guy, Lindsey Clark said. He was surrounded by several officers. He was scary looking. He was standing in the front yard and they were questioning him.
Clark said he couldnt hear the conversation, but he said he felt uneasy when looking at the man.
He didnt look happy. He was staring at me for some reason, he said.
If this was them, Im glad they were arrested. Its a scary thought that they were in our community, Clark said.
Because the murders happened several miles away in another county, Clark said, he didnt have any reason to feel scared prior to Saturday morning.
Its scary to think you have people in service industries coming into your house and you dont know anything about them.
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http://www.kentuckynewera.com/articles/2008/10/18/news/free/doc48f9f620b5021105945181.txt