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Police Don’t Believe His Story So He Tries This…

Bessie T. Dowd by Bessie T. Dowd
January 15, 2026
in Uncategorized
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Police Don’t Believe His Story So He Tries This…

Prosecutors say Wisconsin husband murdered his wife and staged the scene to look like a freak car accident

By Dena Goldstein

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Todd Kendhammer says his wife Barbara died in a freak car accident. But authorities questioned his story from the beginning, and he was tried and convicted of intentional homicide.

Todd and Barbara Kendhammer
Todd and Barbara KendhammerBarbara Kendhammer/Facebook

Kendhammer and his children have refused to accept the verdict and are seeking a new trial. Their fight for what they say is justice is the focus of “Mystery on County Road M,” reported by “48 Hours” correspondent Erin Moriarty. An encore of the broadcast is streaming on Paramount+.

Just after 8 a.m. on September 16, 2016, a distraught Todd Kendhammer called 911 to report a car accident on a rural road outside La Crosse, Wisconsin. “A pipe or something came through the windshield,” he told the operator.

Kendhammer car
On the morning of September 16, 2016, Todd Kendhammer told investigators that a pipe flew off a truck, smashed through the windshield of his car, and gravely injured his wife Barbara. She later died at a hospital. La Crosse County Sheriff’s Office

When authorities arrived, he told them a pipe flew off a truck driving in the opposite direction, came through the windshield and struck his wife. Barbara Kendhammer, 46, was rushed to the hospital but died the next day. The couple had just celebrated their 25th anniversary. 

Their children, Jessica Servais and Jordan Kendhammer, say their parents were still very much in love. “Whatever my mom wanted, my dad gave it to her,” Servais told Moriarty. “They were just in a really good time in their lives ’cause they had their first grandchild, and they were well off.”

An autopsy revealed that Barbara died of blunt force injuries to the head and neck. She also had three lacerations to the back of her head. The medical examiner did not think Barbara’s injuries were consistent with the accident as described by Todd.

“She said that the injuries to Barb were very inconsistent with a pipe … that size and that weight coming through the windshield,” says Tim Gruenke, La Crosse County district attorney.

Erin Moriarty with prosecutor Tim Gruenke
“48 Hours”  Erin Moriarty, with La Crosse, Wisconsin DA Tim Gruenke, holds the pipe that Todd Kendhammer told investigators flew off a truck and pierced the windshield of the car he and his wife Barbara were riding in. But the story didn’t make sense to Gruenke. CBS News

Surveillance video from a horse ranch down the road showed what appears to be the Kendhammer car pass by at approximately 7:57 a.m. on the day of the incident. But at around the same time, no truck that matched the description Todd gave police was ever seen heading in the opposite direction.

Todd Kendhammer told police that he and Barbara were driving to pick up a truck that needed a windshield replaced, belonging to a man named Justin Heim. Kendhammer did windshield replacement work as a side job.

“When the police looked into that, they found Justin Heim never had ordered a windshield from Todd, didn’t need a windshield. Todd didn’t even know where he lived,” says Gruenke. Kendhammer then told police he was going to see a friend of Heim’s.

Gruenke believes Todd Kendhammer killed Barbara and staged the scene to look like an accident. Kendhammer was arrested three months later and went on trial a year after that. “Every day I was in a constant state of anxiety and couldn’t eat and couldn’t sleep,” says Jessica.

Evidence in the Barbara Kendhammer case
Evidence in the Barbara Kendhammer case15 photos

At trial, both sides argued about what caused Barbara’s injuries — a tragic accident, or a brutal fight. The windshield was as hotly disputed as the medical evidence. Dueling experts had different theories of what caused the glass fracture patterns.

Jessica and Jordan don’t believe prosecutors ever answered critical questions about what happened. 

“They never really said how he killed her or what he did to stage everything,” says Jessica. Her brother added, “If he wanted to kill Ma, why the hell would he go through all the work and trouble to find a pipe, drive all the way out to the middle of a busy road—.” “He has like 28 guns in the basement,” Jessica interrupted. “More than that,” said Jordan.

The prosecution had to admit they didn’t know why Todd would kill Barbara. They found no evidence either one was having an affair, no history of domestic violence or financial trouble.

Todd Kendhammer made the unusual decision to testify in his own defense. He told the jury he was distraught during his interview with police, when he told those different stories of where they were going that morning. “I’m not in the right state of mind… I wasn’t thinking of where I was going or what I was doing. I was thinking of Barb,” he said on the stand.

Todd Kendhammer testifies
Todd Kendhammer made the unusual decision to testify in his own defense.WKBT

But he continued to struggle with his memory of the incident and told the jury about a third person he was going to see that morning. Gruenke asked him: “Did you change your story for trial because you knew police had figured out your lies?” “No,” he responded.

Todd Kendhammer’s children stood by him. “He doesn’t lie. So when he says he didn’t do it, we believe him,” Jessica said. But the jury didn’t believe him, and Kendhammer was convicted and sentenced to life in prison, with the possibility of parole in 30 years.

After the conviction, the Kendhammer family hired attorney Jerry Buting, of “Making a Murderer” fame, to handle the appeal, along with his wife and co-counsel Kathleen Stilling. 

“This was an accident,” Buting told Moriarty. “The idea that out of the blue he would snap and kill his wife and then stage the accident, it just seems so implausible to me,” Stilling added.

In 2021, Todd Kendhammer was back in court before the same judge for an evidentiary hearing. It was a chance to argue that his original defense team had been ineffective, and that there was critical new evidence. The forensic pathologist who testified there disagreed with the original medical examiner and said Barbara’s injuries were caused by an accident.

“We aren’t going to stop until he can be home,” Jessica says.

Prosecutor Gruenke believes justice has already been served for Barbara Kendhammer. “Do you have any concerns at all that you might have convicted an innocent man?” Moriarty asked. “Not in this case, no,” Gruenke replied.

Roofman: You Won’t Believe the True Story

Here are the facts behind Channing Tatum’s stellar new movie, which follows the thief who burrowed into restaurant rooftops and lived secretly in the crawl spaces of a Toys “R” Us.By Anthony BreznicanPublished: Oct 10, 2025 6:00 AM EDTbookmarksSave Article

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Here’s a way to gauge what’s true about the alleged “true story” depicted in the new Channing Tatum crime comedy Roofman. Whenever your gut tells you, Okay, come on … chances are it actually happened.

The hard part for writer-director Derek Cianfrance was toning it down. Too often, the story sounded either preposterous or contrived. “It happened all the time,” the filmmaker says. “If I wrote this as pure fiction, I’d be a terrible screenwriter.”

Was there really a North Carolina man named Jeffrey Manchester who was convicted of robbing 42 fast-food joints by tunneling into their rooftops overnight and sticking up the minimum-wage workers in the morning? Yes, that’s entirely true. The crime spree lasted two years and ended (temporarily) when the then 28-year-old was convicted in November 2000.

And yes, he really did endear himself to his victims by being apologetic and friendly while holding them at gunpoint—which made the witnesses remember more about him. The Charlotte Observer headline when he was convicted declared: A ‘Polite’ Robber Still Goes to Jail.

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He really did escape from prison in 2004 by hiding out underneath a delivery truck. And Manchester remained on the loose for nearly a year by living inside a Toys “R” Us, where he survived on jars of baby food and fistfuls of candy. (He built a nest in an abandoned Circuit City that was next door, but Roofman streamlines this to keep him only in the toy store.)

Manchester would also sneak out of his retail hideaway and attend events at a local church, where he befriended and started dating a single mom named Leigh Wainscott (played by Kirsten Dunst). The one major leap of fiction that the move takes is having Leigh also work as an employee at the toy store. That part is false.

Finally (spoiler warning), there’s the bittersweet climax of the movie, when Manchester is headed to the airport with a pocketful of cash and forged identification documents. He’s nabbed by police because he feels obliged to go back and see Wainscott one more time. That has to be bullshit, right? Except no. That happened too.

“In fact, it was Jeff’s humanity that made him a bad criminal,” says Cianfrance. “He would lock someone in a freezer at McDonald’s but make sure they had their jacket. He was at the off-ramp to an airport with a plane ticket in his hand to his freedom, and he turned around because he didn’t want to just leave his girlfriend without saying goodbye. I think if he was more coldhearted, we wouldn’t know the story of Jeff Manchester. He would be in Venezuela or Brazil or Costa Rica or someplace with no extradition laws. He would be on a beach somewhere.”Paramount Pictures

Jeffrey Manchester escaped from prison in 2004 by hiding out underneath a delivery truck. He remained on the loose for nearly a year by living inside a Toys “R” Us, where he survived on jars of baby food and fistfuls of candy.


Instead, Jeffrey Manchester is back in Central Prison in Raleigh. He’ll be there for a long time to come. With nothing left to hide, he became the primary source for Cianfrance as he researched the Roofman story. “I can’t call him. He can only call me,” Cianfrance says. “Phone calls last for 15 minutes. They’re always being recorded and supervised by someone listening in. I’ve had hundreds of hours of phone calls with him.”

After a while, the Blue Valentine and A Place Beyond the Pines filmmaker began to fear he was just another dupe falling prey to Manchester’s lies. “There was a time during our conversations that I was like, I’ve got to talk to someone else, because this sounds crazy,” Cianfrance says. “I mean, I was starting to wonder: Is Jeff just a tall-tale teller? Is he conning me?”

To avoid relying solely on Manchester, the filmmaker began reaching out to the other true-life figures in the incident. “I talked to so many people in his life,” Cianfrance says. “I talked to the police that arrested him, the judge that sentenced him to 45 years, his mom, his brother, his girlfriend Leigh, the pastor of the church, basically anyone that would talk to me. Those people validated these stories.”

Cianfrance also feared he was being suckered by Manchester’s spin that made him sound more like a nice guy than someone who had caused irrevocable harm to the people he had deceived. But the filmmaker was surprised again.

“I thought, They’re probably pissed off at him. They probably feel betrayed by him. They’re probably going to tell me he was a piece of crap,” Cianfrance says. “But they spoke of him as this unicorn that had entered their lives. Leigh said, ‘He was the greatest adventure of my life.’ And, ‘I don’t regret a second of it.’ So that perspective was also something I had to keep in mind.”

A key insight came from Crossroads Church pastor Ron Smith (played by Ben Mendelsohn in the movie.) “I asked Pastor Ron to tell me about the Bible, and he said, ‘Well, the first thing you’ve got to know is the Old Testament’s about judgment and New Testament’s about grace.’ And he said in his life, he tries to err on the side of grace. So I thought, Okay, society has judged Jeff pretty harshly: 45 years in prison, nine of those years he’s been in solitary confinement. Maybe the movie could kind of see him with a little bit of that grace. Not let him off the hook but understand the humanity of it.”

Not everyone was so forgiving. Among those holding a grudge was a local dentist who treated Manchester as a patient during his months on the lam. It turns out wolfing nothing but candy really is bad for your teeth. Manchester later burned the practice to the ground, fearing that his dental records might help police track him down. (This part of the movie is also true, of course.)

“I talked to that dentist and he very much didn’t want to be in the movie,” Cianfrance says. That’s why in the credits, when the filmmaker’s interviews with the real individuals are featured, it’s a “neighboring” dentist who recounts that part of the story.

One doubt Cianfrance had trouble getting over was how Manchester could carry on a double life out in the open while on the run from police. “I was asking him, How could you leave the toy store and go to the church and have no one recognize you? Weren’t you all over the news?” he says. “And Jeff told me, ‘Today’s news is tomorrow’s toilet paper.’ There’s so much news that you go from the front page to page 2, to page 3 to page 4, and pretty soon you’re out of the paper and out of people’s minds.”Paramount Pictures

Manchester would sneak out of his retail hideaway to attend events at a local church, where he befriended and started dating a single mom named Leigh Wainscott (played by Kirsten Dunst).


To add even more veracity to Roofman, the film used several real locations from the story. So, for instance, the Crossroads Church plays the Crossroads Church onscreen. “I had to go down to Charlotte, because this story is so wild. I had to go down there to be in the place to say, Wow, it actually happened here,” Cianfrance says.

The filmmaker offered bit parts in the movie to pretty much everyone who spoke to him. “Sometimes they play themselves, like the prison truck driver, Charles Cummings,” the director says. “He asked me at the end of our meeting, ‘Who are you going to get to play me?’ I was like, ‘I’m open to any ideas.’ And he was like, ‘I think it should be me.’ I was like, ‘All right, it’s you. Take it.’ ”

Former Charlotte police sergeant Katherine Scheimreif and several other law-enforcement officers who tracked down Manchester back in the day also played themselves, and Cianfrance cast actual ex-cons as the prisoners Tatum’s character interacts with behind bars. The filmmaker recalled a strange moment at the hometown premiere for the movie, when all of them were on the red carpet. “[The police] were all decked out in their nicest clothes. And then over to the left was all of the ex-prisoners that I cast,” Cianfrance says. “Here I was on the red carpet between the cops and the robbers.”

The last bit of authenticity came from Tatum himself, the director said. In their initial conversations about the role, the actor didn’t look much like the wiry Manchester. “In that meeting, he was like 240 pounds. He was just this hulking mass that is Channing Tatum,” Cianfrance says. “He said to me, ‘Hey, I think I should lose some weight for this role, because Jeff has to get into tight spots. He has to be able to cut holes in roofs, and I’m this big guy, it’s just harder to get in.’ I was like, ‘That makes sense.’ And then he showed up to set a couple months later and he had lost 65 pounds.”

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The filmmaker said he became worried that the actor, like the character he was playing, was taking things just a little too far. “He was almost emaciated. It was a bit scary. My assistant director was like, ‘You need to eat a cheeseburger,’ because he was kind of starving himself,” Cianfrance says.

Tatum was fine and clearly had the energy for scenes like Manchester’s naked sprint through the toy store after being surprised in the midst of a restroom sponge bath one morning. Cianfrance says the actor’s physical transformation captured something of Jeffrey Manchester’s spirit too.

“In a way, I think what he saw with that character was this great emptiness and this great kind of loneliness,” Cianfrance says. “This guy had tried to keep this family together but made these giant mistakes and now was incarcerated and alone. He had so much love, but he was empty, and so Channing wanted to feel empty.”

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