WMOK – METROPOLIS, IL — Tracking down a lead in a modern criminal investigation often takes just a few keystrokes from a squad car laptop. But in 1984, that same piece of information required hours of manual labor, long-distance phone calls, and physical paper trails.
During a recent discussion regarding the 1984 Lisa Carnes case, Massac County Sheriff Chad Kaylor put the technological gap into sharp focus, using the recovery of an abandoned truck as a prime example of how drastically law enforcement capabilities have changed over the last forty years.
In today’s investigative environment, a vehicle’s registration, history, and owner identity can be pulled up on a computer screen in a matter of seconds. In contrast, Sheriff Kaylor noted that discovering the ownership of the abandoned truck tied to the 1984 investigation was a grueling, time-consuming process. Investigators at the time had to rely on manual ledger entries, physical paper titles, and state agency telephone verification—processes that could easily stretch across hours or days just to establish a single baseline fact.
This stark contrast highlights the unique hurdles faced by detectives four decades ago, where the sheer speed of information gathering was one of the biggest obstacles to a timely resolution.
Hear More From the Sheriff: To hear Sheriff Chad Kaylor break down the reality of 1980s detective work and the slow crawl of information during the initial investigation, listen to the audio clip below:




