Here’s what I can share based on recent reporting.
Direct answer
- Four men have been arrested in connection with the 1982 rape and murder of Roxanne Sharp, a 16-year-old from Covington, Louisiana. The arrests followed renewed investigations sparked by a true-crime podcast and contemporary investigative methods.
What moved the case forward
- Investigators credited tips generated by a podcast and new DNA technology that helped re-examine the cold case after decades. The suspect list includes Perry Wayne Taylor, Darrell Dean Spell, Carlos Cooper, and Billy Williams Jr., all charged with aggravated rape and second-degree murder; some were already in custody on unrelated charges.[1][2]
Context and ongoing status
- The case had remained unsolved for over 40 years, with prior false confessions (notably from Henry Lucas) having misled inquiries before new evidence and community cooperation contributed to charges being filed. Local outlets and national coverage describe the community impact and the DA’s statement highlighting persistence and collaboration.[2][1]
If you’d like, I can summarize the key developments from each outlet or pull the latest official statements and court filings as they become available. I can also provide a concise timeline of the case and the podcast’s role in reopening it.
Citations
- CBS News reporting on the arrests and podcast influence.[1]
- The Guardian reporting on the same developments.[2]
- WDSU/Associated coverage noting the reopening and arrests.[3][9]
- Oxygen coverage and related video material discussing the podcast’s impact.[6][8]
- Additional national coverage on the arrests and charges.[4][5][7][10]