Doctor: Couple had meth in their systems
By JOE RUFF / The Associated Press
Originally Published Online: Friday, Jan 21, 2005 - 04:00:21 pm CST
PAPILLION
— Methamphetamine may have impaired the judgment and ability of a young
couple to feel the cold weather when they became lost in a snowstorm and
died of hypothermia, authorities said Friday.
Michael Wamsley and Janelle Hornickel, both 20, had enough methamphetamine
in their systems to create confusion, hallucinations, hot flashes and
anxiety, said Dr. Henry Nipper, director of toxicology at Creighton
University Medical Center in Omaha.
Investigators believe the couple died Jan. 5, the same day they called 911
more than five times from a cell phone trying to explain their pickup was
stuck in the snow and they were lost in a rural area southwest of Omaha. The
calls, however, had bounced off different cellular telephone towers, making
it impossible to accurately trace their whereabouts.
At times during their calls, the couple appeared to make no sense.
A one point Hornickel, sounding frightened, told the 911 operator about
people breaking up cars and putting the parts in trees. The operator said
police were on their way as she tried but failed to get an accurate
description of where Hornickel and Wamsley were.
Just how the couple wound up in the wooded area, pockmarked with small lakes
and sand pits, was not fully known, but they could have been disoriented
even before they got out of the truck, Sarpy County Sheriff Pat Thomas said.
Wamsley's snow-covered body was found the next day. After intensive
searching involving police and volunteers, Hornickel's body was found six
days later, at the edge of a sand pit lake. Both were within two miles of
the truck. They did not have coats on.
A small amount of methamphetamine also was found in the truck. Learning the
couple had been using drugs was frustrating, Sarpy County Chief Deputy
Sheriff Jeff Davis said.
"It makes you angry from a lot of aspects," Davis said. "Two people lost
their lives. Two families are going through and will continue to go through
a terribly traumatic ordeal. Secondary to that, we talked about the expense
to taxpayers; the volunteers, the danger they were put in."
Investigators trying to find the source of the methamphetamine served a
search warrant in Kearney early Friday and arrested a mother and son.
Judy Morel, 56, and Mica Morel, 19, were arrested on suspicion of possessing
a controlled substance and drug paraphernalia, Davis said.
On the evening before they died, Wamsley and Hornickel had been stopped by
police for traffic violations in Geneva, about 100 miles west of Omaha. The
couple, both from Ord in central Nebraska, said they were lost, and the
officer pointed the right way to Omaha. Geneva police officials have said
the officer who stopped the couple didn't notice anything unusual about
their behavior.
Hornickel was a junior at Creighton University in Omaha. She and Wamsley had
dated about a year, and most recently they had worked at the same
telemarketing company.
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