February 11, 2009 7:38 PM
- Text
Couple Died Despite Calling 911
(AP)
A young couple lost in rural Nebraska died in a snowstorm despite calling 911 at least five times from a cell phone.
Details of how Michael Wamsley and Janelle Hornickel, both 20 years old, died Jan. 5 and the police search for them were to be discussed by law enforcement officers on Friday.
Copies of the 911 tapes were being prepared, as well as a timeline of events, maps and a videotape of the area that was made during the search.
Sarpy County Chief Deputy Sheriff Jeff Davis says toxicology and autopsy results also will be made public.
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.
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.
Police say they received telephone calls from the couple from about 2 a.m. CST until 4:56 a.m. the day they died. The calls, however, had bounced off different cellular telephone towers, making it impossible to accurately trace their whereabouts.
Wamsley's snow-covered body was found Jan. 6, and Hornickel's was found six days later at the edge of a sand pit lake. Both were within two miles of the truck.
Fellow students from Creighton University had helped the families in the search.
One of Hornickel's sisters, speaking at the funeral this Wednesday, says it is now her crusade to change Nebraska's 911 system to include technology to pinpoint cellular phone calls.
Details of how Michael Wamsley and Janelle Hornickel, both 20 years old, died Jan. 5 and the police search for them were to be discussed by law enforcement officers on Friday.
Copies of the 911 tapes were being prepared, as well as a timeline of events, maps and a videotape of the area that was made during the search.
Sarpy County Chief Deputy Sheriff Jeff Davis says toxicology and autopsy results also will be made public.
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.
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.
Police say they received telephone calls from the couple from about 2 a.m. CST until 4:56 a.m. the day they died. The calls, however, had bounced off different cellular telephone towers, making it impossible to accurately trace their whereabouts.
Wamsley's snow-covered body was found Jan. 6, and Hornickel's was found six days later at the edge of a sand pit lake. Both were within two miles of the truck.
Fellow students from Creighton University had helped the families in the search.
One of Hornickel's sisters, speaking at the funeral this Wednesday, says it is now her crusade to change Nebraska's 911 system to include technology to pinpoint cellular phone calls.
Latest Now in National
- Ohio judge grants new trial in fire that killed 9
- Report: Teacher's aide sent love letters to boy
- In 911 call, worker fears for Josh Powell's sons
- Ecuador opposition columnist asks US for asylum
- Ohio school bus, truck collide; injuries reported
- Conn. mom to plead guilty in school residency case
- Missouri teenager sentenced to life in prison with possible parole for killing 9-year-old girl
- NY boy, 12, who got hit with lacrosse ball dies
- Pa. woman gets probation for fake cancer claims
- Top general to visit Egypt amid US-Cairo tensions
- Wright brothers' Ohio bike shop may be demolished
- Experts: Marriage ban's path to high court unclear
- Explosion at horse center kills worker, horse
- Mo. teen gets life with possible parole in killing
- AP Interview: Homecoming inspires wounded Marine
- AP Interview: Homecoming inspires wounded Marine
- NYC hotels to equip workers with panic alarms
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- APNewsBreak: Susan Powell case called 'murder'
- Greek premier: Default would lead to "chaos"
- CA man accused of killing Chihuahua with golf club
- Mo. teen described as thrill killer by prosecutors
on Facebook
- Adele sings a cappella for Anderson Cooper
- Josh Powell had "incestuous" images on his home computer, authorities say
on CBS News






