He made hundreds, perhaps thousands, of excursions from his Sabine Hall home base. On some of those occasions, weak-willed, slow-witted followers tagged along, and of course, Kenneth regaled them with stories of his brutality and murder. Even if only a small portion of his many stories were true, he preyed upon hundreds and murdered dozens of people in Central Texas. But with Kenneth McDuff, truth was always a mystery, and in his mind, it consisted of whatever he wanted to say at a given moment.
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One excursion was a trip to Austin, which included a man named Harrison. Harrison lived in Temple with his grandmother, who had allegedly snatched him, while still an infant, from a day-care center. Others in the subculture called him "Indian." (There were a number of "Indians"; it was one of the more popular names.) In any case, Harrison met Mac during the summer of 1990 in the Bell County Jail while Mac awaited his parole revocation hearing for making a terroristic threat in Rosebud.
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During the spring of 1991, Harrison, Mac, and Alva Hank Worley left Temple for Austin to look for drugs. The trio traversed the northern sections of Austin and its adjoining suburbs. After several unsuccessful stops, they decided to go back to Temple. In statements and testimony, Harrison indicated that Mac started the trip with a vivid description of a young woman. Harrison thought, at first, that Mac was describing a girlfriend. Near the Bruceville-Eddy exit on I-35, Mac admitted that he did not know the girl, and that he was just going to "take" her. He said that she worked in a convenience store during the graveyard shift. Harrison eventually concluded that Mac was really talking about kidnapping and murder. He told Mac that he wanted no part of such a scheme. 26
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Only weeks later Mac learned that Larry, the man who had murdered his brother Lonnie, had been released from prison. Larry was the only person that Mac ever admitted he wanted to kill; all his other threats were general in nature. Mac was incensed that his brother's murderer had been paroledquite an irony. He made sure all of his acquaintances knew that he intended to kill Larry, and his search for a firearm appears to have intensified. That search took him to the home of one of his sisters, where he violated federal law by taking a revolver. Mac probably thought that Larry would become frightened, as had all others he sought to intimidate. Precisely the opposite happened. Larry, though a much smaller man than either Kenneth or Lonnie McDuff, refused to run. He
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