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He says his stepfather gave him a ride to Chicago, and after a long day of physical and psychological tests, he hitched a ride with someone he'd just met to Rockford. From Rockford, a drive of more than 40 miles from Sycamore, he called home to ask his stepfather to come pick him up. Investigators wrote in the affidavit that they have verified that a collect call was made from a Rockford pay phone to McCullough's childhood home that night, lasting from 6:57 to 6:59 p.m. If he made that call, he said, "How am I involved in a kidnapping at 6 p.m. in Sycamore? A fifth-grader can figure this out." He said he didn't believe investigators had ever tried to verify that he was in Chicago that day for medical tests
-- and records of that day should still exist at the National Archives repository of military personnel records in St. Louis, he said. "St. Louis will have records of everything," he said. "If somebody would go there, it would exonerate me." McCullough was born in Belfast, Ireland, in 1939, and said he moved with his mother to England when she took a position as a searchlight operator with the Royal Air Force, once lighting up a Nazi plane during a bombing raid. His father left when he was 3
-- his mother claimed he was killed in the war, but McCullough always suspected that he simply left the family. McCullough and his mother came to the U.S. in 1946 and settled in Sycamore, where he lived until he was 18, he said. He said the town was a lot like the television show "Happy Days" when he was growing up. McCullough said he served four years in the Air Force followed by 10 in the Army, including a stint in Vietnam for which he said he was awarded a Bronze Star. He then settled in Washington state, where he worked as a police officer and security guard and started a company driving pilots between hotels and Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. He married three times, the last time to his current wife in 1994. It was then that he changed his name from Tessier, his stepfather's name, to McCullough, his mother's maiden name. He had been living with his wife at a North Seattle retirement home, where he worked as a night watchman, when he was arrested. Residents there describe him as pleasant and helpful. "If I'd have done this, how could I have possibly lived with myself?" he said. "That had to have been an emotional trauma." McCullough maintained that he doesn't know how his high school sweetheart wound up with the unused train ticket
-- but learning of its curious discovery behind the photograph tickled him. The couple broke up when he left to join the Air Force. "She doesn't know it, but I loved her for decades," he said. "She
got married and I put it aside and said, 'Eh, give up.' "But she keeps a picture of me and her for 50 years. Imagine that."
[Associated
Press;
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