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Kentucky couple who livestreamed discovery of I-75 shooter's body also showed area he shot from

Brian Simms, Lexington Herald-Leader on

Published in News & Features

The livestreaming couple who found the body of the man who shot five people this month on Interstate 75 in Southern Kentucky on Wednesday also filmed a video purporting to show the area from which the shooter fired at cars.

The video showed a view of the interstate, rugged terrain, including a cliff that they admitted they should not have tried to cross, and two state troopers questioning them about what they were doing.

The couple, Fred and Sheila McCoy, say they are descendants of the famous feuding Appalachian families the Hatfields and McCoys. They previously operated a museum in Casey County dedicated to the feud.

And on Wednesday, they did what 14 law enforcement agencies could not: While streaming live video on YouTube, they found the body of 32-year-old Joseph Couch, who opened fire Sept. 7 on the busy stretch of highway near Exit 49, and prompting an 11-day manhunt through the woods of north Laurel County. The body was found near the interstate.

The McCoys were on day six of their own search for Couch when they found the body. They told WKYT they had decided to start searching for Couch as a date night idea.

Their previous livestreams predictably garnered less attention than Wednesday’s, which had nearly a half-million views as of Thursday afternoon. But the day before finding the body, in another video, they showed the area of rugged terrain near the interstate where they think Couch fired at cars, hitting 12 and injuring five people.

 

The early parts of the video, which is more than an hour long, showed Fred and Shelia walking a wooded path along the interstate with the sound of traffic roaring in the background. About 18 minutes in to the video, they make it to where it appeared Couch fired on the vehicles.

“This is it, this is his perch,” said Fred, who served more than 40 years in law enforcement as a Pike County sheriff’s deputy and fire and police chief in Hustonville, a rural city in Lincoln County.

Trees are cut down in the area, and Fred wonders if Couch cut the trees down to improve his view of the interstate, or if police cut them down during the manhunt.

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©2024 Lexington Herald-Leader. Visit at kentucky.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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