Wendy Thomas was driving her old Chevy pickup truck home from a friend’s house shortly before 8 p.m. Sunday. The sun was low over rural Sibley County, a place of woods, streams, fields and crops an hour’s drive southwest of Minneapolis.
Then the 43-year-old looked to her left.
She saw a man in the grass, dressed in black and covered in mud. He must have noticed her gaze, Thomas later told the Minnesota Star Tribune, because he walked toward a culvert and squatted low to the ground as if trying to hide.
She knew it was him: Vance Boelter, Thomas’ 57-year-old neighbor from just east of the hamlet of Green Isle, the quiet husband and father who’d once visited Thomas’ home for a hog roast, the fugitive who now stands accused of two politically motivated murders and two more attempted murders.
Drones and a helicopter buzzed the skies above, using infrared imaging to search for Boelter. Hundreds of law enforcement officers searched on foot, in squad cars and in armored vehicles, looking for the man suspected of shooting two state legislators and their spouses in their suburban Twin Cities homes the morning before.
Thomas soon came upon police officers. She threw her arms outside the truck and pointed.
“He’s right there!” she shouted.
Moments later, a heavy-duty truck and other law enforcement vehicles sped down the road and into the dusk. Bright lights shone on farm fields and timber.