. February 3, 1958 On January 21, 1958, Starkweather went to Fugate's home. He hid the bodies in an outhouse and chicken coop behind the house. Starkweather later said that Caril was there the entire time, but she said that when she arrived home, Starkweather met her with a gun and said that her family was being held hostage. She said Starkweather told her that if she cooperated with him, her family would be safe; otherwise, they would be killed. A note reading "Everybody is sick with the flu" was placed in the family home's window. The pair remained in the house until shortly before the police, alerted by Fugate's suspicious grandmother, arrived on January 27. Starkweather and Fugate drove to the farmhouse of seventy-year-old August Meyer, one of his family's friends who lived in
Bennet, Nebraska. Starkweather killed him with a shotgun blast to the head. Fleeing the area, the pair drove their car into mud and abandoned it. When Robert Jensen and Carol King, two local teenagers, stopped to give them a ride, Starkweather forced them to drive back to an abandoned
storm cellar in Bennet. He shot Jensen in the back of the head. He attempted to
rape King, but King put up too much resistance for him to do so. He became angry with her and fatally shot her as well. Starkweather later admitted shooting Jensen, but claimed that Fugate shot King. Fugate said she had stayed in the car the entire time. The two fled Bennet in Jensen's car. Starkweather and Fugate filled Ward's black 1956
Packard with stolen jewelry from the house and fled Nebraska. Law enforcement agencies in the region sent their officers on a house-to-house search for the perpetrators.
Governor Victor Emanuel Anderson contacted the
Nebraska National Guard, and the Lincoln chief of police called for a block-by-block search of that city. After several sightings of Starkweather and Fugate were reported, the Lincoln Police Department was accused of incompetence for being unable to capture the pair. Needing a new car because of Ward's Packard having been identified, the couple came upon traveling salesman Merle Collison sleeping in his
Buick along the highway outside
Douglas,
Wyoming. After Collison was awakened, he was fatally shot. Starkweather later accused Fugate of performing a
coup-de-grâce after his shotgun jammed. Starkweather claimed Fugate was the "most trigger-happy person" he had ever met. Fugate denied ever having killed anyone. Starkweather drove off and was involved in a car chase with three officers—Romer, Douglas Police Chief Robert Ainslie, and Converse County Sheriff Earl Heflin—exceeding speeds of . A bullet fired by Heflin shattered the windshield and flying glass cut Starkweather deep enough to cause bleeding. He stopped, surrendered, and was taken into custody near Douglas on January 29, 1958. Heflin said, "He thought he was bleeding to death. That's why he stopped. That's the kind of
yellow son of a bitch he is." ==Trial and execution==