Body Parts (48 page)

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Authors: Caitlin Rother

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When he wasn’t driving his truck, Wayne lived in this trailer in Arcata.
(Courtesy of
the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Department)

Wayne kept this coffee can, filled with a substance rendered from baking his first victim’s breasts, under his trailer’s kitchen sink.
(Courtesy
of the Humboldt County Sheriff’s
Department/By John McCutchen)

Wayne went by his middle name, Adam.
(Courtesy of the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Department/By John McCutchen)

The torso of Wayne’s first victim was found here, in Ryan Slough in Eureka, in October 1997.
(Courtesy of the Humboldt County
Sheriff’s Department/By John McCutchen)

Wayne lost his job at this cement and gravel plant before he got a job at Edeline Trucking. He buried some of his first victim’s body parts in the Mad River behind the plant.
(Courtesy of the Humboldt
County Sheriff’s Department/By John McCutchen)

Juan Freeman, now a retired sergeant from the Humboldt County Sherriff’s Department, worked on the case of Wayne’s first victim for a year before Wayne showed up at the sheriff’s station in Eureka.
(By Brenda Godsey)

Gary Rhoades, now a sergeant for the Kern County Sheriff’s Department, worked on Tina Gibbs’s case and spoke with her parents.
(Courtesy of
the Kern County
Sheriff’s Department)

Tina Gibbs was working as a prostitute when Wayne picked her up in Las Vegas. He dumped her body in the California Aqueduct near Buttonwillow in Kern County, where it was found June 2, 1998.
(Courtesy of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department)

Rachel Holt, aka Sonoma County Doe, was the only one of Wayne’s surviving victims to testify about her experiences in the black truck.
(By Ron Forbush/
John McCutchen)

During his interview with detectives, Wayne said he picked up Lanett White while she was walking along a road near this truck stop in Fontana, which was a couple of miles from her house.
(By Caitlin Rother)

Patricia Tamez’s body was found caught in this gate of the California Aqueduct, which is near Hesperia in San Bernardino County, on October 23, 1998.
(By Caitlin Rother)

Mike Jones and Joe Herrera, now sergeants with the San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Department, interviewed Wayne about the death of Lanett White.
(Courtesy of Vonda Kay Jones;
San Joaquin Sheriff’s Department)

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