GRANITE CITY, Ill. (AP) - July 1, 2008 Nicholas T. Sheley, who was the subject of a multistate manhunt
after authorities linked him to the deaths of eight people in
Illinois and Missouri, was arrested around 7 p.m. outside of
Bindy's, a Granite City bar, said bartender Katie Ronk.
Sheley ordered a glass of water and went to the bathroom before
another bartender and customer recognized him, Ronk said. They
notified police, who arrived minutes later with FBI agents and took
Sheley into custody while he smoked a cigarette outside the bar.
FBI spokeswoman Kelly Brennan confirmed Sheley, 28, was caught
in Granite City, about 10 miles north of St. Louis. She didn't
elaborate on the arrest.
Tim Lewis, the police chief in the St. Louis suburb of Festus,
Mo., said publicity from news reports paid off after 6 p.m. when a
number of Granite City residents reported seeing Sheley.
"He was desperate and he gave up without a fight," Lewis said.
"He looks rough. He's had a rough two days," he said.
A spokeswoman with the Granite City police department said
Sheley was in custody there.
The FBI on Tuesday launched a manhunt for Sheley, who they
warned should be considered armed and dangerous. Among those
authorities believe Sheley killed were a 93-year-old man, a child
and a couple whose blood-soaked dogs were found roaming a motel
parking lot.
Sheley has only been charged in the death of one of the eight.
He faces charges of first-degree murder, aggravated battery and
vehicular hijacking in the death of Ronald Randall, whose body was
found Monday behind a grocery store in Galesburg, in northwestern
Illinois, police said. An autopsy showed the 65-year-old died from
blunt force trauma to the head, likely on Saturday.
Investigators said the other victims all appeared to have died
in the same manner and that evidence linked to Sheley was recovered
at each scene. The FBI and Illinois State Police declined to
elaborate.
Authorities said the killings began with the beating death of
93-year-old Russell Reed, a Sterling man whose body was found
stuffed in the trunk of a car Thursday. Sheley also is from
Sterling, a town of 15,000 about 100 miles west of Chicago.
On Monday, police discovered the bodies of two men, a woman and
a child in an apartment on a street of single-family homes in
nearby Rock Falls. Investigators believe they likely died late
Saturday or early Sunday.
Sheley was acquainted with the male victims, Brock Branson and
Kenneth Ulvey, both in their 20s, said Illinois State Police Region
Two Commander Mark Maton. Police did not identify the woman or
child.
More than 250 miles, the bodies of Tom and Jill Estes of
Sherwood, Ark., were found Monday behind a gas station in Festus,
said Bill Baker, with the St. Louis Area Major Case Squad.
The couple had checked into a Comfort Inn in Festus on Friday
and were last seen late Sunday. Their dogs were found in the hotel
parking lot, unharmed but covered with blood.
Public records show Sheley has multiple convictions for robbery,
drugs and weapons charges and has spent three years in prison.
Sheley's uncle, Joe Sheley, 47, of Sterling, told The Associated
Press before his nephew's capture that Nicholas Sheley recently
struggled with drugs and his rap sheet includes arrests for home
invasion.
"He's been in trouble many times over the years, but something
like this, yeah, it's out of character," Joe Sheley said. "He's
got a temper like anybody else. Just doesn't want to be messed
with. Won't back down. But to go looking for a fight, looking for
trouble, no."
Sheley spent nearly three years in the Illinois Department of
Corrections for aggravated robbery between 2000 and 2003 and
another 17 months on parole, which ended in April 2005, said IDOC
spokesman Derek Schnapp.
Federal prosecutors in northern Illinois charged Sheley on
Tuesday with fleeing the state to avoid prosecution for a June 14
felony home invasion in Sterling.
At one point Sheley was in Iowa, and stopped to call his wife
Saturday from a rest area between Davenport and Bettendorf, Iowa,
an FBI agent said in an affidavit.
William Monroe, an assistant special agent in charge of the
FBI's Chicago field office, said he believes Sheley also traveled
last week to buy drugs in Chicago, where authorities recovered two
handguns taken from Reed - the first man killed.
---
Associated Press writers Daniel Yovich in Sterling, Sophia
Tareen, Ashley M. Heher and Don Babwin in Chicago contributed to
this report.
Captured: Ex-convict suspected in spree killing
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