On April 27, 1994, 23-year-old Carmen Gayheart, a nursing student and mother of two, was reported missing after she failed to pick up her children from daycare. Gayheart had been attending nursing classes at Lake City Community College in Lake City, Florida, and was last seen in a nearby parking lot earlier that day. When she did not arrive to collect her children as expected, her absence raised immediate concern. After an initial search by her husband, father, and classmates proved unsuccessful, she was officially reported missing. Unbeknownst to her family and investigators at the time, Carmen Gayheart had been abducted at gunpoint by Anthony Wainwright and Richard Hamilton while loading groceries into the Ford Bronco she was driving in the parking lot of a
Winn-Dixie supermarket. Just two days prior to kidnapping Gayheart, both Hamilton and Wainwright escaped from the
Carteret Correctional Center, a minimum-security prison in
Newport, North Carolina, where Wainwright was serving ten years in jail for burglary while Hamilton was serving 25 years for armed robbery. The pair additionally stole a vehicle and burglarized a home, where they took two rifles before they fled to Florida, where they eventually abducted and later killed Gayheart. After abducting Carmen Gayheart, Anthony Wainwright and Richard Hamilton abandoned their original getaway vehicle at a lumber yard on
U.S. 41 and fled the scene in Gayheart's Ford Bronco with her held hostage. The men drove her to a remote wooded area behind the Fuel City Truck Stop off
State Route 6 in neighboring Hamilton County, Florida. There, in an isolated location far from public view, the two men subjected Gayheart to a brutal sexual assault. According to Hamilton, following the assault, Wainwright strangled her in an apparent attempt to kill her. To ensure her death, he then shot her twice in the head with a
bolt-action .22 rifle, fatally wounding her. Her body was left at the scene, and the perpetrators continued their attempt to evade law enforcement. During the trial, both men confessed that the other man was to blame for strangling and shooting Gayheart. The day after Gayheart's murder, on April 28, 1994, Wainwright and Hamilton were located near
Brookhaven, Mississippi. When confronted by a Mississippi State Trooper, the two fugitives engaged in a gunfight with the trooper. The result ended in Hamilton being shot in the face and Wainwright sustaining a gunshot wound, both of which were non-fatal. During their arrest, authorities recovered Gayheart's Ford Bronco, which the suspects had been driving since fleeing the crime scene in Florida. Although the vehicle was found, there was still no sign of Gayheart at that time. Following his arrest, Hamilton waived extradition and was promptly returned to
Columbia County, Florida. There, investigators with the Columbia County Sheriff's Office conducted an in-depth interrogation regarding the disappearance of Carmen Gayheart. During the interview, Hamilton provided a detailed confession and cooperated with authorities by drawing a map of the remote site where Gayheart had been taken, raped, strangled, and ultimately shot. Though he had drawn the map, he could not identify the city or county where the area was located. Hamilton also claimed that while both he and Anthony Wainwright participated in the sexual assault, it was Wainwright who carried out the murder by shooting Gayheart. On May 2, 1994, Tina Wheeler, a dispatcher with the Hamilton County Sheriff's Office, advised that she had recognized the map Hamilton drew as an area near State Route 6. Deputy Sheriff Mel Black and Albert Jones drove to the area at approximately 4:30 a.m. in an attempt to locate Gayheart's body. During the search, Jones noted a foul smell in the area and alerted investigators. At sunrise, approximately 7 a.m., the decomposed remains of Gayheart were discovered. The Hamilton County Sheriff's Office took the investigation into Gayheart's murder and sent the remains to the District 4
Medical Examiner's Office in
Jacksonville. After Gayheart's body was transported to the medical examiner's office, investigators conducted a follow-up search of the crime scene. At the recommendation of Dr. Margarita Arruza, the medical examiner, who noted that Gayheart's remains were missing several teeth and the hyoid bone, investigators returned to the site. During the search, they successfully recovered some of her missing teeth and the hyoid bone. ==Trial proceedings==