WELEETKA, Okla., June 11, 2008

2 Suspects Sought In Murder Of Girls

Two Weapons Used To Kill Best Friends, 11 And 13, Who Were Shot To Death On Rural Okla. Road

  • Play CBS Video Video Double Child Murder In Okla.

    Two girls found dead on the side of a road near Weleetka, Okla. have been identified. Police are now searching for their killer but have no suspects or motives yet. KWTV's Doug Warner reports.

    • Skyla Whitaker, 11, left, and Taylor Paschal-Placker,13, each suffered multiple gunshot wounds to the head and chest.

      Skyla Whitaker, 11, left, and Taylor Paschal-Placker,13, each suffered multiple gunshot wounds to the head and chest.  (AP Photo/Ruth Kelly Studio)

    • A memorial to Taylor Paschal-Placker and Skyla Whitaker is pictured in Weleetka, Okla., Tuesday, June 10, 2008, at the spot along a rural road near Taylor's home where the girls' bodies were found.

      A memorial to Taylor Paschal-Placker and Skyla Whitaker is pictured in Weleetka, Okla., Tuesday, June 10, 2008, at the spot along a rural road near Taylor's home where the girls' bodies were found.  (AP Photo)

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(CBS/AP)  State investigators in Oklahoma say they believe two people are responsible for the killing of two young girls on a country road.

Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation spokeswoman Jessica Brown said Wednesday two different caliber weapons were used to kill 13-year-old Taylor Paschal-Placker and 11-year-old Skyla Whitaker. Because two weapons were used, Brown says investigators believe there were two killers.

Brown declined to say what type of weapons were used.

The girls were discovered Sunday afternoon. The state medical examiner's office says each suffered multiple gunshot wounds to the head and chest.

Brown says a reward for information leading to an arrest in the case has been increased to $25,000.

No suspect or motive has been identified in the mysterious killings.

The bodies of Whitaker and Paschal-Placker were found on an isolated county road near a small town, about 70 miles south of Tulsa.

The pair, best friends who lived a few miles apart in an impoverished part of the community, had walked the road dozens of times for sleepovers. Family said they didn't have an enemy in the world.

Residents in this close community of 1,000 remained on edge knowing a murderer could be in their town.

"Believe it or not, I have never pulled any shades in my house and I keep my doors unlocked," said Dena Priddy, a teacher's aide at the public school the victims attended. "You just don't expect these things to happen here."

OSBI Special Agent Ben Rosser said it appears unlikely the girls were sexually assaulted. They were clothed when found and had been missing only a half hour. Full autopsy results were not back yet, he said.

Investigators were examining evidence, including tire tracks, shell casings, ballistics and shoe prints for any possible leads.

"We will bring all the resources we need to try to help in our investigation," Rosser said in an afternoon news conference.

But as of Tuesday afternoon, authorities had identified no suspects or persons of interest in the crime.

"Nobody we could put a finger on and say this guy's good for it," Rosser said.

Kevin Rowland, chief investigator with the state medical examiner's office, said the girls each suffered multiple gunshot wounds to the head and chest.

Rosser said the fact that the killings took place in such an isolated rural area leads investigators to presume a local person may have been involved in the crime.

Possibilities include that it was a random shooting, they had intended to meet someone or may have interrupted a crime that was occurring, Rosser said.

News that a killer, or killers, could still be in town sent shivers through many people in the small town. Locals are used to living in a place where everybody watches out for everybody else, your next-door neighbor may be two miles away and murders are something that happen in the big cities.

"I can't put it into words," said Jake Fenley, Skyla's basketball coach. "This doesn't happen in rural middle America."

For Priddy, that fear means taking extra precautions: "I got guns loaded," she said defiantly. She also refuses to let her 14-year-old daughter out of the house.

Tuesday morning, Taylor's uncle, Joe Mosher, drove up on the makeshift memorial at the place the bodies were found. Yellow crime scene tape had been torn away and thick patches of grass were matted down.

A rosary hung from a branch, and stuffed animals and a bouquet of flowers just beginning to wilt formed the grim reminder of innocence lost.

"It's the most tragic thing that I've ever seen," said Nell Mosher, Taylor's aunt. "They were just two precious little babies; they were good girls."

© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by tubicha June 13, 2008 10:33 AM EDT
back in the 80''s visiting some people in hawai they took me to a fire range and one of them showme how aman can shot with a peace maker 45 on the rigth and a smith & wesson 38 on the left,- he din''t miss a target,I''ve read that the police in weleetka is handling the posibility of a single shooter well, that sound ok, I''m sure that there are crazy guns lovers over there who think they''re like the lone ranger.However, in a remote place like that and with no signs of sexual molestations it leaves me thinking that maybe some others teens who got hands on daddy''s weapons and to try to conceal the facts they may have been the killers .my preyers goes to the families and that grandpa. Alfredo Denmark
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by mculp1971 June 13, 2008 1:17 AM EDT
A few years ago I moved from California to Rural Oklahoma and now reside near the community in which these 2 girls were murdered. The school they went to my step son attends and is 8 miles from my home. I thought that it would be a safe place to raise my children now I have added dead bolts once again. I am very afaird for the children around here. Even my teeenagers a have to be by dark and stay in groups. What scares me the most is they think it may be some one local. Perhaps a friend of my kids, someone they know or even someone I have had in my home. And in this small of community no matter what the law is there is always a gun around. Its not the registered ones we all should worry about.. If there a pickup in oklahoma it has a shotgun or two in it...
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by skorpion66 June 12, 2008 8:09 PM EDT
My prayers go out to the families of these children. Having an 11 yr old myself it angers me beyond description the absence of the value of life people have. I hope these murderers are caught and punished to the full extent of the law!!! God bless! ~Jerry~
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