After murdering Dehart, Paul Devoe fled to New York and returned to his hometown in Long Island. Meanwhile, the police conducted a manhunt for Devoe, and on August 27, 2007, two days after the murder of Dehart, Devoe was arrested by officers affiliated with the New York/New Jersey Regional Fugitive Task Force. Devoe reportedly threatened to turn a gun on himself before he was persuaded to surrender. In September 2007, it was decided that Devoe would be first sent back to Texas and stand trial for the murders he committed there before Pennsylvania could prosecute him. On November 20, 2007, Devoe was formally indicted by a Travis County grand jury for the
capital murders of both Danielle Hensley and Haylie Faulkner. Under Texas state law, an offence of capital murder carries the
death penalty or
life imprisonment without the possibility of
parole. On December 19, 2007, Assistant District Attorney Gary Cobb announced that he would seek the death penalty for Devoe. Before Devoe could be brought to trial for the murders, two psychiatrists had submitted reports that Devoe was mentally unfit. In December 2008, Devoe was formally found mentally incompetent to stand trial, and a court order was issued for him to be detained at a maximum-security psychiatric hospital for treatment until he was fit to be tried. Chuck Ardo, the press secretary of Pennsylvania Governor
Ed Rendell, announced that the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania still intended to have Devoe tried in Pennsylvania for the murder of Betty Dehart upon the conclusion of trial proceedings against Devoe in Texas. In April 2009, Devoe was found to be mentally competent to stand trial for the murders. District Judge Brenda Kennedy issued the ruling after she received psychiatric reports in February of that same year, in which the medical staff from
North Texas State Hospital certified Devoe to be mentally fit to plead. On August 26, 2009, Devoe officially pleaded not guilty to the capital murder charges against him. ==Capital murder trial in Texas==