A massive manhunt Saturday in Birmingham ended after a man suspected in at least four murders stretching from Auburn to Birmingham surrendered in his boxers and socks.

The suspect has been identified by Auburn Police as 32-year-old Derrick Hightower of Columbus, Ga. He was taken by ambulance with a gunshot wound to the arm, presumably suffered when he exchanged gunfire with police. Those on the scene when he surrendered said Hightower appeared tired after more than 24 hours on the run and ready to turn himself in. A second person of interest is also being questioned as she had been with the suspect at some point during the night.

Auburn police have charged Hightower with capital murder and first-degree theft of property in connection with the death of a Smiths Station woman that happened early Friday. They said they have also charged Kentrice Symonee Hill, a 21-year-old Birmingham woman, with first-degree theft of property in the case as well. Police said they will extradite the pair to Lee County.

The ordeal began Friday morning with the shooting death of a 54-year-old Smiths Station woman, continued along U.S. 280 to Dadeville where a couple in their 60s was shot to death and continued to escalate Saturday morning with a home invasion and another homicide, followed by a shootout between the suspect and Birmingham police.

No police were injured in the gunfire and the suspect managed to escape. Blood at the scene indicated he was wounded.

Birmingham police, along with other law enforcement agencies and their federal partners, set up a massive police dragnet along Crestwood Boulevard. The search included tracking dogs, SWAT and Jefferson County’s Star 1 helicopter.

Authorities cautioned nearby residents to shelter in place. "This person is armed and dangerous,'' said Birmingham police spokesman Sgt. Rod Mauldin.

If all the crimes are indeed proven to be linked – and police strongly believe they are – the rampage began close to sunrise in Auburn on Friday. Auburn police responded to the Farmville Volunteer Fire Department’s call for assistance on a vehicle fire in the 9500 block of U.S. Highway 280 West around 6 a.m. Friday. When officers arrived, they found a white 2005 Chevrolet Silverado truck on fire and 54-year-old Nancy Nash of Smiths Station dead nearby at Creative Habitats Landscaping.

Nash worked at the landscaping business and is believed to have been killed while possibly interrupting a burglary. Her vehicle, a black 2019 Nissan Frontier, was discovered missing and later located in Irondale. That case is being investigated by Auburn police, the state Fire Marshall’s Office, the state Medical Examiner Office and the Lee County Coroner’s Office.

Birmingham police hold press conference Birmingham police hold press conference Posted by al.com on Saturday, April 18, 2020

Next, the suspect is believed to have been involved in the double murder of a couple in Dadeville Friday evening. Dadeville Police Chief Johnathan Floyd said the husband and wife were found slain in their home in a possible robbery. Floyd identified the victims on Saturday as Willie Tidwell, 61, and his wife Barbara, 65. Floyd said they were communicating with Birmingham investigators.

Willie and Barbara Tidwell were shot to death in their Dadeville home Friday, April 17, 2020. (Contributed)

In Birmingham, Mauldin said officers were notified about 11 p.m. Friday that a vehicle being sought out of Auburn was spotted at the USA Economy Lodge on Crestwood Boulevard. That vehicle, Mauldin said, was taken in Auburn and involved in the homicide there.

Mauldin said they had also received reports that the suspect was seen in the area of the motel. A silver sedan was seen leaving the area and Birmingham police tried to stop the vehicle. At that point, Mauldin said, a man got out of the sedan and exchanged gunfire with Birmingham police. Officers lost sight of the suspect after the shooting.

Early Saturday morning, as police continued their search, evidence led them to a home in the 100 block of Briar Grove Drive. A resident in the area was letting his dogs out in the backyard to use the restroom when a black male wearing all black appeared seemingly out of nowhere and said, “Hey, you got a phone?” the resident told AL.com, asking that his name not be used for fear of retribution.

The resident said, “no,” and the man fled on foot toward the area of Briar Grove Road. It was then, investigators believe, that the suspect broke into a home and a man was shot and killed. A woman and her three children live at the home but were not there when the home invasion and subsequent shooting took place.

A short time later, the resident who encountered the suspect said, he heard a barrage of gunfire. The next thing he knew, his neighborhood was flooded by SWAT. It is believed he took a vehicle from the house on Briar Grove and was in that vehicle when Birmingham police tried to stop him.

He got out of the vehicle and exchanged gunfire with officers before fleeing the scene. It is believed Hightower fled on foot after crashing the stolen car. The police used the tag information on that vehicle to go to the home on Briar Grove Road where they found the slain man.

Hayden Kurz lives across the street from where the shooting happened on Briar Grove. He said he was awakened by the massive police presence. He said he heard a helicopter circling above and thought to himself, “Wouldn’t that be something if a SWAT team was in my neighborhood."

It was.

“It was a helluva way to wake up,’’ Kurz said. “It was full force.”

He said he was stunned the incident happened in the neighborhood. “It was weird,’’ Kurz said. “I feel super safe in this neighborhood.”

A large perimeter was set up in the Crestwood Boulevard and Montevallo Road areas. Police initially set up a command post in the Jack’s parking lot in Irondale but later moved to a nearby location. Jefferson County’s Star 1 helicopter at one point circled the perimeter around Crestwood Plaza and the 5 Points East shopping plaza.

When the suspect surrendered, he walked out of a neighborhood that backs up to the Jack’s. He is also being investigated for other robberies throughout Alabama. Deputy Chief Scott Praytor said the suspect has no known connection to the man killed in Birmingham and they believe he was the victim of a random home invasion by a suspect on the run.

Saturday’s efforts were a joint investigation by the U.S. Marshals Gulf Coast Regional Fugitive Task, the FBI, the Birmingham Police Department, Irondale Police Department, Dadeville Police Department, Colombus Police Department, Shelby County Sheriff’s Office, Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office, State Fire Marshal’s Office, State Medical Examiner’s Office, the Lee County District Attorney’s Office and the Lee County Coroner’s Office.

The U.S. Marshals Gulf Coast Regional Fugitive Task Force, the FBI, the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office and Irondale police assisted in Saturday’s search. Auburn police also were working with Birmingham police throughout the day. "All of our partners showed up and helped and we were able to lock down the area,'' said Praytor. “We were able to take this suspect in custody and hopefully stop this crime spree.”

This morning’s homicide is the sixth homicide in Birmingham since Monday and the 34th so far in 2020. Of those, four have been ruled justifiable and therefore are not deemed criminal. In all of Jefferson County, there have been 53 homicides including the 34 in Birmingham.

Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 205-254-7777.