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Hack and Drew vanished from a wedding reception at the hall that August. Their bodies were later discovered in the woods. Hack had been stabbed and Drew had been tied up and strangled. Investigators found semen on her pants, which they would later use to link Edwards to their killings. Investigators questioned Edwards around the time of the killings, but he left Wisconsin the next month. He later surfaced in Pennsylvania, where he rented a house, sold the furniture and then burned down the place, said Richard McBane, a former Akron Beacon Journal reporter who helped Edwards write his book. Pennsylvania Department of Corrections records indicate he was sentenced in 1982 to 2 years and 3 months for arson in Butler County. Edwards' whereabouts in the 1990s remain largely a mystery. He moved into a trailer park on the edge of Louisville around 2000, police there said, and stayed out of trouble. Messages left for Edwards' wife, Kay, at his trailer haven't been returned. No one answered the door when a reporter visited recently. Wisconsin investigators submitted DNA evidence in the Hack-Drew killings to the state crime lab in 2007, and analysts developed a profile of the suspect. After a Madison television station profiled the case in March, investigators got what Lee characterized only as a "lead." They obtained DNA from Edwards in Louisville in June and arrested him in July after making a positive match.
Drew's mother, Norma Walker, said after the arrest she was shocked to hear of the break in the case after so many years. Instead of giving her closure, though, the 70-year-old said the arrest has ripped open old wounds. "You hope this day would come, but now that it's here, it's really hard. Everything starts all over again. All the memories come back," she said. "He robbed me of my daughter, robbed me of Christmases, birthdays, weddings, everything families do together." Hack's father, David Hack, said all he wants to know now is why his son and his son's girlfriend were chosen. "I'm glad it's over," he said. "I don't know how you can't admit to it if the DNA matches."
[Associated
Press;
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