IT HAS been 11 days since “America’s Most Wanted,” the Fox TV show, cast its national spotlight on Leo Burt, Madison’s most infamous fugitive, and the accused Sterling Hall bomber remains at large.
The segment on Burt aired Sept. 29, and when I spoke with producer Jenna Griffiths a few days later, she said it had generated more than two dozen calls to the show’s tipster hotline.
I spoke with Griffiths again Tuesday, and she said the tips are still coming in, maybe one or two a day now, and she dutifully passes them on to the FBI.