Following the breakthrough arrest of suspect Richard Allen in the infamous Delphi murders, officials cautioned that the case is far from over.
Mr Allen, a 50-year-old living in Delphi, was arrested on 26 October in connection with the 2017 slayings in the Indiana town with a population of just 3,000. He was charged with two counts of murder on Friday, more than five years on from the double slayings of teenage best friends Libby German and Abby Williams.
Police have insisted that the investigation is not fully resolved and have been cautious to reiterate that more suspects could have been involved in the crime. Tip lines have been left open and the public has been encouraged to continue submitting potential leads.
“This is really important: While I know you are all expecting final details today concerning this arrest, today is not that day. Today is not that day. This investigation is far from complete,” Indiana State Police Superintendent Doug Carter said.
Little is known about the evidence that led to Mr Allen’s arrest. Court filings in the case have been sealed for at least 30 days, meaning they will become available to the public on 28 November at the earliest.
Among the few concrete details shared during a press conference on Monday, authorities confirmed that a pretrial hearing was set on 13 January 2023. Meanwhile, a trial date was scheduled for 20 March.
As the high-profile case continues to unfold, more details are expected to be revealed in the case that has captured international attention for years.
Mr Allen, a married man and worker at a CVS, was initially booked into Carroll County Jail following his arrest. He was eventually moved to a state facility, reportedly for his own safety.
He has pleaded not guilty to the charges and is said to be refusing to cooperate with the investigation.
State Police confirmed the arrest and announced the charges on Monday, a bombshell development in the case that has rocked the small, close-knit community of Delphi and had gone unsolved for more than half a decade.
Officials did not rule out the possibility that other individuals were also involved in the teenagers’ brutal murders and, if so, vowed that they will also face charges.
The arrest comes just months after Indiana State Police were spotted searching the Wabash River in Peru – around 40 minutes east of Delphi – in August and after investigators urged members of the public to come forward with information about an online catfishing account in December.
Before his sudden arrest, Mr Allen’s name had never before been publicly linked to the murders. Mr Allen, who would have been 44 at the time of the murders, is a local resident of Delphi, the small, close-knit town where the teenage girls lived with their families.
His family home is less than a five-minute drive away from where the bodies of Libby and Abby were found, residing in a neighbourhood southwest of the Monon High Bridge.
According to online records, Mr Allen has lived in Delphi since at least 2006, and in Indiana his whole adult life.
Libby and Abby went missing on 13 February 2017 after they set off on a hike along the Monon High Bridge Trail in Delphi, Indiana. Their bodies were discovered the next day in a wooded area around half a mile off the trail.
For years, police have refused to say how the girls died and have revealed few details about the crime scene. However, shocking new details about the murders came to light in a search warrant application obtained by podcast The Murder Sheet and shared with The Independent back in May.
The warrant, filed by an FBI agent investigating the murders back in 2017 and partly redacted, was to carry out a search on the home of a local man Ronald Logan.
In it, the agent revealed that the girls had lost “a lot” of blood during their deaths and that their killer is believed to have moved and staged their bodies, before taking some sort of souvenir from the scene. For the first time, the warrant also revealed that the teenagers had been killed by some type of weapon.
The word for the weapon was redacted in the document.
The murderer would have been covered in the victims’ blood in the aftermath of the slayings due to the “large amount of blood was lost by the victims at the crime scene”, it reads.
Married to his wife Kathy with whom he shares an adult daughter, Mr Allen is a trained pharmacy technician, receiving his most recent pharmaceutical licence in February 2018 – one year on from the murders. He most recently worked at the local CVS store – coming into contact with members of the community as part of his job.
Libby’s grandparents Mike and Becky Patty said that they recalled Mr Allen processing photos for them at the store.
CVS offered its condolences to the victim’s families and said it would cooperate with the investigation in any way it can.
“As members of the Carroll County community, we remain devastated by these murders and our hearts go out to the German and Williams families,” the company said in a statement to local outlet WRTV.
“We are shocked and saddened to learn that one of our store employees was arrested as a suspect in these crimes. We stand ready to cooperate with the police investigation in any way we can.”
Local residents reacted with shock when news broke on Friday of his arrest, saying that he seemed “like a normal guy”.
“When I will go into CVS as a customer myself, he would say ‘do you need any help?’ I would be like ‘no’,” Chandler Underhill, the manager of the local Brick & Mortar Pub, where he said Mr Allen was a regular, told Fox59.
“Just like a normal guy that I’ve seen for the last couple years, not really thinking anything.”
Mr Underhill said that Mr Allen always seemed “normal” when he would come into the pub where he works.
“I would talk; he wouldn’t say much. He seems like a normal guy,” he said. “One of my servers was telling me that he wouldn’t speak much.”
Libby’s grandfather told reporters after Monday’s press conference that his granddaughter’s accused killer had been “hiding in plain sight” the whole time.
“As [Indiana State Police Supt] Doug Carter said that earlier, if you recall. He said he’s hiding in plain sight,” he said.
“And that’s the case. Didn’t know, I don’t know the gentleman personally at all. I’ve probably seen him. It’s a small county. But definitely I don’t know him.”
It has also emerged that the accused killer brazenly posed for a smiling selfie in front of one of the police sketches of the murder suspect.
In a chilling photo, posted by Mr Allen’s wife Kathy on Facebook in December 2021, Mr Allen is seen smiling alongside his wife in a local bar in Delphi. On the wall behind him is the 2019 police sketch. Mr Allen bears some likeness to the drawing.
The selfie was posted on social media the same month investigators issued a fresh appeal urging members of the public to come forward with information about an online catfishing account thought to be tied to the murders.
Prior to his arrest on suspicion of double homicide, Mr Allen appears to have no prior criminal record. However, the Carroll County Jail record lists Mr Allen as also going by the alias of Craigh Ross Rentfrow.
On the day the girls went missing, Libby had posted photos on Snapchat of her and Abby walking along the trail. The happy image of the two best friends is believed to be the last photo of them before they died.
In a move that propelled the investigation forward, Libby also captured a grainy video on her phone of a man dressed in blue jeans, a blue jacket and a cap walking along the abandoned railroad bridge. Investigators released a grainy image from the video and a chilling audio of the man telling the two girls: “Go down the hill.”
This grainy image was taken on Libby’s phone on the trail the day the girls went missing. Investigators believe the man is the killer
Investigators have long suspected that this man is the girls’ killer and have praised the girls for documenting the video as evidence. Up until now, the man has never been identified.
Police gave the description of the man as a white male aged between 16 and 40 years old, between 5’ 6” and 5’ 10” in height and weighing between 180 and 200 pounds.
Two police sketches – one in 2017 and one in 2019 – were circulated of a man matching the description of the man in the footage.
Mr Allen’s newly-released mugshot bears some likeness to these police sketches.
Over the years, authorities have honed in on several other suspects.
A 27-year-old Indiana man fell under the spotlight last year when the online account he used to groom underage girls online was tied to the teenage victims. His home had been searched on suspicion of child porn charges just two weeks after the 2017 murders.
In December 2021, Indiana State Police announced that officials had “uncovered” a fake online profile called anthony_shots. Kegan Anthony Kline is the man behind the fake anthony_shots account.
The profile was used from 2016 to 2017 on platforms including Snapchat and Instagram and used photos of a known male model, portraying him as being extremely wealthy and owning numerous sports cars.
Investigators said the person behind the account was Kegan Anthony Kline, 27-year-old man with addresses in Kokomo and Peru, close to Delphi.
According to an affidavit, Kline posed as the model in order to groom underage girls and get them to send nude photos and their addresses and try to get them to meet him. The male model whose photos were used had no connection to the case.
Kline was arrested on charges of child sexual abuse images and child exploitation tied to the account in 2020.
He allegedly admitted to investigators that he groomed underage girls online.
Kline allegedly told investigators he would use social media accounts to talk to underage girls and had exchanged messages with and received about 100 sexual photos and about 20 sexually explicit videos from around 15 underage girls. However, he denied any knowledge or involvement in the two teenagers’ deaths.
Kline was charged with 30 felonies in 2020 over the case. The documents, filed in 2020 and heavily redacted, do not mention the murders of Libby and Abby and he was not accused of involvement in their deaths.
Libby’s grandmother Becky Patty told The Independent in December that the teenager had never mentioned speaking to anyone online prior to her death and that there had never been any indication that the two girls had arranged to meet anyone online the day they were killed.
Investigators urged anyone who had communicated with, met, or attempted to meet the individual posing as anthony_shots to come forward with information.
Prior to this, Ronald Logan had previously been on police radar, according to the 2017 search warrant application.
Logan owned the land on which Libby and Abby’s bodies were found and his home was just 1,400 feet from the crime scene.
The warrant application cites multiple complaints that he was violent towards women and that he owned multiple weapons, including handguns and knives.
Logan also allegedly lied about where he was at the time that the teenagers disappeared, claiming he was out of the area with a friend on the afternoon of 13 February when cellphone location data actually placed him in the area around the trail.
The document also says that his voice was “not inconsistent” with the man captured in the video by Libby. Mr Logan was never charged and he died in 2020, before the case was solved.
It is currently unclear if Mr Allen has any connection to Logan or Kline or to the anthony_shots account.