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NewsMay 11, 2012

GUNTOWN, Miss. -- A manhunt for a fugitive accused of kidnapping and a double-slaying ended Thursday after the suspect apparently shot himself and died. The girls he fled with safe, police said. Adam Mayes, 35, was killed Thursday evening after authorities acted on a tip and found him in the area near New Albany, Miss. When they went to arrest him, he shot himself in the head, said Guntown police chief Michael Hall...

By ADRIAN SAINZ and HOLBROOK MOHR ~ The Associated Press
A U.S. marshal stands next to his car holding a rifle in the parking lot of a command center set up Thursday to coordinate the search for two Tennessee girls and the man accused of abducting them and killing their mother and sister in Guntown, Miss. (Adrian Sainz ~ Associated Press)
A U.S. marshal stands next to his car holding a rifle in the parking lot of a command center set up Thursday to coordinate the search for two Tennessee girls and the man accused of abducting them and killing their mother and sister in Guntown, Miss. (Adrian Sainz ~ Associated Press)

GUNTOWN, Miss. -- A manhunt for a fugitive accused of kidnapping and a double-slaying ended Thursday after the suspect apparently shot himself and died. The girls he fled with safe, police said.

Adam Mayes, 35, was killed Thursday evening after authorities acted on a tip and found him in the area near New Albany, Miss. When they went to arrest him, he shot himself in the head, said Guntown police chief Michael Hall.

The girls, Alexandra Bain, 12, and Kyliyah Bain, 8, were being taken to a hospital for observation, Hall said. It was not immediately clear if they were with Mayes when he was killed.

Mayes had been charged with first-degree murder in the April 27 deaths of Jo Ann Bain, 31, and her daughter, Adrienne, 14. Their bodies were found buried outside the Mayes' home a week after they were reported missing by Jo Ann Bain's husband.

Mayes' wife, Teresa, also is charged with first-degree murder in the deaths. She told investigators he killed Jo Ann and Adrienne Bain at their Whiteville, Tenn., home so he could abduct the two young sisters, according to court documents.

Teresa Mayes told investigators that after she saw her husband kill the two in the garage at the Bain home, she drove him, the younger girls and the bodies to Mississippi, according to affidavits filed in court. She faces six felony counts in the case: two first-degree murder charges and four especially aggravated kidnapping charges.

Authorities refused to comment on the motive for the April 27 slayings and abductions.

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Mayes' mother-in-law Josie Tate said Mayes thought the missing sisters might actually be his daughters and it caused problems in his marriage to her daughter, Teresa, who is jailed in the case.

"She was tired of him doting on those two little girls that he claimed were his," Tate said.

Adam Mayes' mother, Mary Mayes, also has been charged with conspiracy to commit especially aggravated kidnapping.

Mary Mayes' attorney, Somerville attorney Terry Dycus, said his client maintains she is not guilty.

The hunt for Adam Mayes and the two young sisters encompassed parts of at least three counties in northern Mississippi.

State and local law enforcement agents on Thursday searched a densely wooded area about 10 miles from Mayes' home near Guntown. State troopers blocked a road, stopped vehicles and searched their trunks.

"This is the last place he was seen in, in the Alpine area," said Union County Sheriff Jimmy Edwards. "We don't have anything to lead us anywhere else."

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