Stinson had found a dark, four-door Ford F-150 truck with a Tennessee license plate abandoned in a wash bay at Weinbach Car Wash on Evansville's Southeast Side, the keys still inside and windows down. More: The stories you've never heard about Casey and Vicky White's time in Evansville. "His version and the real version is a little bit wonky," said Detective Justin Bean, an Indiana State Police trooper assigned to the Marshals Service and lead local investigator on the White case. Marshals Service here and in Alabama, who all but said Stinson grossly exaggerated his role in the case. But it would also put him at odds with members of the U.S. that day made him a hero to many who cheered the apprehension of Alabama fugitives Casey and Vicky White and a true-crime celebrity. The call he would place to Evansville-Vanderburgh Central Dispatch at 9:19 a.m. Watch Video: James Stinson call to Central Dispatch
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