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On September 7, 2024, five people were wounded during a mass shooting on Kentucky's Interstate 75. A gunman, subsequently identified as Joseph A. Couch, fired at least 20 rounds at passing cars from the overpass at exit 49. He escaped from the scene and was the subject of a manhunt.
Just under a year later, on June 11, 1972, Cable escaped from the Kentucky State Reformatory but was caught later that same day, leading to his receiving an escape conviction. [ 2 ] In April 1977, 35-year-old Willie S. Daniels, who was serving a life sentence for manslaughter and two counts of robbery, was attacked by Cable in the prison's gym.
Gonzalo Artemio Lopez (February 10, 1976 – June 2, 2022) [1] was an American fugitive, mass murderer, and prison escapee who killed a total of six people in separate murders in 2005 and 2022. In 2005, Lopez kidnapped and murdered a man in Weslaco, Texas. He was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to life in prison. [2]
ANN GOTLIB, Age now: 50, Missing: 06/01/1983. Missing from LOUISVILLE, KY. Anyone having information should contact: FBI - Louisville, Kentucky - 1-502-583-3941 Or Your Local FBI.
Joseph Couch, the fugitive wanted for the mass shooting on Kentucky's I75 had allegedly texted someone that his goal was to "kill a lot of people" before turning the gun on himself, according to a ...
Kentucky I-75 shooting suspect vowed over text to ‘kill a lot of people,’ arrest warrant says Elizabeth Wolfe, Zoe Sottile and Gloria Pazmino, CNN September 9, 2024 at 7:08 PM
As the shooting unfolded, the Florence Police Department received calls of an active shooter at the home and responded to the scene. When they arrived, the attack was still ongoing. Garvey managed to escape in a vehicle. Partygoers identified him to responding officers and told them that he had fled and gave them a vehicle description.
[28] [138] The District Attorney denied most of the original reports containing misinformation; the source was a federal deputy U.S. Marshal after the suspects' arrest in Kentucky. [138] The president of Criminal Justice Journalists, an association of crime, court, and prison writers, editors, and producers, said: