A 61-year-old man has been charged over some of the deaths that occurred in the ‘Texas Killing Fields’, a notorious stretch along the I-45 corridor southeast of Houston, where more than 30 women and girls were murdered or went missing from the 1970s to the 1990s.
A Galveston County grand jury indicted Texas man James Dolphs Elmore Jr. on charges related to the 1986 deaths of Laura Miller, 16, and Audrey Cook, 30. Their remains were found in a rural field near League City. Elmore was arrested on Tuesday and is being held without bond.
The case is part of a series of killings along Interstate 45. Investigators believe multiple perpetrators may have been responsible.
“These women and their families deserve justice. This FBI will never stop working to deliver it. More to come,” he said.
The indictment comes after advances in forensic technology and decades of stalled investigations.
Miller and Cook were among four female bodies found in the same field between 1984 and 1991. Miller vanished in 1984 after walking home from a pay phone. Her body was found more than a year later.
Cook was among two victims whose identities remained unknown for decades.
In 2019, advances in forensic genealogy, such as DNA analysis, led authorities to identify one as Cook. She was a mechanic and was last seen in 1985.
Donna Gonsoulin Prudhomme, a 34-year-old mother last seen in July 1991 in Nassau Bay, was also identified. Her remains were found later that year.
Elmore faces manslaughter and felony tampering with evidence charges in Miller’s death and a tampering with evidence charge in Cook’s killing, prosecutors said.
Authorities have also named another suspect, Clyde Hedrick, 72, who they allege was responsible for several killings. Hedrick died by suicide in March before he could be indicted.
Hedrick was convicted of manslaughter in 2014 in the death of Ellen Beason, a young woman whose body was found in 1985 after going missing the previous year.
He was released in 2022 and was still on parole at the time of his death, according to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.
Unsolved Crimes
Despite the arrest, most deaths in the Texas Killing Fields remain unsolved. Prosecutors say the investigation continues and authorities are pursuing new leads to provide closure for families.
“I think with everything that they had in the past, it’s inexcusable that Clyde Hedrick had the opportunity to die without never been indicted, convicted,” said Tim Miller, the father of Laura Miller. After his daughter’s death, Miller founded Texas EquuSearch, a nonprofit that helps look for missing people.
Miller said that in the last four years, he had met 30 times with Elmore, who had shared information, but he declined to elaborate on what Elmore told him because he didn’t want to jeopardize the case against him.

This photo provided by the Galveston County Sheriff’s Office shows James Dolphs Elmore Jr. Galveston County Sheriff’s Office via AP
Nina Jager, Fye-Villareal’s niece, celebrated Elmore’s indictment but said it was also “bittersweet” because her grandfather had investigated the case. He long believed Hedrick was responsible, but his efforts were ignored by authorities.
“Maybe today is a result of all the work that he put in, all the searching the fields, going and talking to people and doing his own investigation because he just didn’t feel supported,” she said.
On Wednesday, Galveston County District Attorney Kenneth Cusick said that he’s committed to continuing to work on these cases and that there are active leads that can be pursued “to bring to justice some people who may have escaped justice thus far.”
Few other prosecutions in the Killing Fields cases have occurred in recent years.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
