Woman beaten to death
By Nick Hiltunen
Published in News on July 24, 2008 1:42 PM
DUDLEY -- About 12 hours before Herman Phillip Best turned himself in for the murder of his girlfriend, he paced with a flashlight in his front yard and burned trash, a neighbor said.
Best's flashlight-guided walk was at 3 a.m. on Wednesday, when he burned refuse in a barrel, as he was often seen doing, said Tiffany Warren, who lives across the street.
About 12 hours later, at 3 p.m., Best, 45, walked into the main branch of Wayne County Sheriff's Office and told a receptionist that he had severely beaten his girlfriend.
By 3:20 p.m. on Wednesday, detectives and Sheriff Carey Winders were at 114 Kevin Drive -- the home of Martha Cook Carter, 45, -- where they found a gruesome scene. Ms. Carter had been beaten to death.
"It was some type of physical assault," Detec-tive Lt. Shawn Harris said. "I know apparently no firearm was used -- I can say that."
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Herman Phillip Best
Harris said the investigation had not yet revealed exactly what time Best allegedly killed Ms. Carter.
Nearby neighbors described Best as "quiet" and "somewhat strange," a man who had a seemingly far-fetched dream of entering his truck in a Daytona truck race.
"We just kind of took it (the Daytona truck dream) as being odd," said a next-door neighbor who asked not to be identified.
Her 2-year-old son often waved at Ms. Carter, who drove a light-blue, 18-wheeler cab for Beverage Transporta-tion Inc. of Thomasville, Pa.
"She (Ms. Carter) loved him (the 2-year-old), because he loved big trucks," the next-door neighbor said. "She hadn't lived here maybe a year, drove the truck at night. Whenever I saw her, she'd wave.
"My son just called her 'the blue truck, the lady that drove the big blue truck,'" the 2-year-old's grandmother said.