Authorities shifted their strategy Tuesday while trying to track down an interstate highway shooter in Kentucky, pulling searchers from the woods to bolster patrols in communities near where the gunman opened fire, hitting a dozen vehicles and wounding five people.
After searching 28,000 acres (11,331 hectares) over 11 days, authorities acknowledged they're no closer to finding the suspected gunman, 32-year-old Joseph Couch. Hundreds of law enforcement personnel were assigned to ground and air search efforts, which focused on a rugged, wooded area near London, a city of about 8,000 people roughly 75 miles (120 kilometers) south of Lexington.
''We do not have any specific evidence or any details that have led us any closer to his apprehension at this time,'' Kentucky State Police Commissioner Phillip Burnett Jr. said in an update Tuesday.
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear added: ''I don't think you can definitively say he's still in the forest, he's outside of the forest, or that he's still alive.'' He called the shooting an ''act of violence and evil'' and said the plan now is to bolster security in area communities in hopes of calming fears among residents.
Police have received more than 400 tips since the Sept. 7 shooting on Interstate 75, most pointing to areas outside the sprawling forest, Burnett said. The decision was made to reassign law officers from the woods to the communities to bolster security as people resume their lives.
''On day 11, we know that bringing the boots on the ground from the forest into the communities is going to give the best reassurance to our citizens that if he's still out there, we are right here with you — where you go to school, where you go to church,'' Beshear said.
Resident Heather Blankenship said she welcomed the increased police patrols, citing the anxiety she has felt while driving in the area since the interstate shooting.
''Looking up on the cliffsides, that's not normal," she said by phone. "Looking up in the trees, that's not normal. Thinking that someone could just ‘off' you in a split second, when you're driving from point A to point B. You shouldn't have that kind of fear in America.''