Officials: Suspect in 4 slayings shot himself in standoff

Suspect Shot Himself During Standoff

AP-A woman faces multiple charges in two states after surrendering to authorities following a standoff at a Georgia motel that ended with another suspect in the deaths of four women fatally shooting himself.

A tip called in about 2:30 p.m. Tuesday led law enforcement to a motel in West Point, Georgia, where Mary Rice, 37, and William “Billy” Boyette, 44, were holed up in a room. Troup County Sheriff James Woodruff told reporters that deputies had set up a perimeter and the SWAT team was preparing to enter the room when Rice stepped outside and surrendered. Moments later, a gunshot was heard and deputies found Boyette dead inside the room.

The pair had been on the run since Jan. 31, when the bodies of two women — Alicia Greer, 30, and Jacqueline Jeanette Moore, 39, were found at the Emerald Sands Inn in the Florida Panhandle. They also were suspected in the Feb. 3 death of Peggy Broz, 52, across the state line in Lillian, Alabama. They took her car, which was later found in Pensacola.
Early Monday morning, Rice and Boyette went to the home of Kayla Crocker, 28, where they shot her and took her car, according to Escambia County Sheriff David Morgan. They were spotted on surveillance video a short time later at a nearby gas station and in a Hardee’s restaurant. Crocker died Tuesday, according to authorities in Pensacola. Her 2-year-old child wasn’t injured.

A citizen on Tuesday afternoon spotted the stolen vehicle the two were seen driving and alerted authorities who surrounded the west Georgia motel, Woodruff told reporters, according to video posted online by WTVM-TV.
Boyette allowed Rice to leave the motel room Tuesday evening and she was seen crying as she was taken into custody, Woodruff said. Authorities then heard a single gunshot from inside the motel room and subsequently found Boyette dead inside, Woodruff said.

Rice is being held at the Troup County Jail.

Authorities in Alabama had issued capital murder warrants in the case earlier Tuesday as the search for the pair entered its second week.

Agencies across the Panhandle and southern Alabama earlier had been told to consider Rice a person of interest in the attacks. On Monday she was upgraded to an official suspect. Authorities said she had had multiple chances to flee or ask for help.
Authorities have given no motive for the four killings or said how the suspects may have chosen their victims.
___
Associated Press writer Jay Reeves in Birmingham, Alabama, and Kate Brumback in Atlanta contributed to this report.