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This Is Very Sad

Lewis

Member
So what do you think should be done with the idiot who did this.


An 11-year-old California girl kidnapped in 1991 while waiting for a school bus has been found alive, and a convicted sex offender is accused of raping and fathering two children with her while he and his wife held her captive in their backyard.

Despite the shocking revelations, the discovery of Jaycee Lee Dugard brought sudden relief to her family 18 years after their young girl disappeared.

Dugard had been kept with the two girls, ages 11 and 15, in a series of tents and sheds hidden behind the Antioch, Calif., home of Phillip and Nancy Garrido, the El Dorado County Sheriff’s Office said Thursday at a news conference. The couple has been arrested on several charges stemming from the discovery.

Dugard and her two daughters are "in good health, but living in a backyard for the past 18 years does take its toll," Undersheriff Fred Kollar said.

Now 29, Dugard was reunited Thursday with her mother, who was overjoyed to learn the ordeal was over and the daughter she feared dead was actually alive and well.

Dugard's stepfather, Carl Probyn  the last person to see her in 1991 and a longtime suspect in the case  said he was overwhelmed after doing everything he could to help find her. He said the news that she was found was like winning the lottery.

"To have this happen where we get her back alive, and where she remembers things from the past, and to have people in custody is a triple win," Probyn, 60, told The Sacramento Bee.

The Garridos were arrested Wednesday after Phillip Garrido raised suspisions of campus police at the University of California, Berkeley. Garrido was spotted there with two young girls trying to gain access to the campus library, Kollar said.

Campus police then notified Garrido's parole officer who arranged an interview. Garrido, who was on parole from a 1971 conviction for rape and kidnapping, arrived for the meeting accompanied by the two girls, as well as wife and another woman, named Allissa.

Allissa later was identified as Jaycee Dugard, the blond, pony-tailed 11-year-old who was taken from the school bus stop minutes after she left her South Lake Tahoe home in 1991.

"None of the children have ever been to school, they've never been to a doctor," Kollar said. "They were kept in complete isolation in this compound."

The Garridos are being held in the Contra Costa County Jail in Martinez on potential charges of kidnapping and conspiracy on Wednesday, police said. Phillip Garrido also could face charges of rape by force, lewd and lascivious acts with a minor and sexual penetration.

Click here for more on this story from FOX40.com.

At the Garrido's house, barriers were constructed to "inhibit outside viewing and prevent the victims from contact with the outside world," Kollar said.

Garrido was on lifetime parole and his arrest raises questions about how closely parolees are monitored. But Kollar said a parole officer who had visited Garrido's house previously had not noticed anything amiss  the compound was well concealed by shrubs, garbage cans and a tarp.

The neighborhood is described as a residential area, with the Garridos home raising no suspicion from the outside world as to the horrific compound concealed in the backyard.

Neighbor Helen Boyer, 78, described the Garridos as nice and friendly and said they cared for Phillip Garrido's elderly mother.

"If I needed something, they would be the first I would call on," Boyer said.

Dugard left for school the morning of June 10, 1991, dressed all in pink and stood at the bus stop two blocks from her house. As her stepfather watched from the driveway, a gray car with two people inside pulled up, grabbed the child and sped away, according to witnesses.

In media reports at the time, the girl's stepfather said he heard Jaycee scream then jumped on a bicycle and frantically pedaled after the car in a failed effort to follow it up a hill. He then turned around and shouted at neighbors to call the police.

The case attracted national attention and was featured on TV's "America's Most Wanted," which broadcast a composite drawing of a suspect seen in the car.
 
Lifetime parole? What a joke. When they begin to prosecute the parole board for allowing this to happen because...THEY DO ALLOW THIS TO HAPPEN, they are complicit in the crime and should be prosecuted as accomplices!!!
 
What do I think they should do?

100yrds with .17 hmr's. Five shooters, ten rounds per shooter, nuff said. :mad

They took her life and made it their own.
 
When is enough going to be enough and we stop letting these monsters out?


Joseph Duncan
1978: Convicted and sentenced as a juvenile and sent to Dyslin's Boys' ranch in Tacoma, where he told a therapist who was assigned to his case that he had bound and sexually assaulted six boys, according to a report by the Associated Press. He also told the therapist that he estimated that he had raped 13 younger boys by the time he was 16.

1980: Abducted a 14 year old boy and sodomized him at gunpoint. Duncan was sentenced to 20 years in prison, but served 14 years then was released on parole and re-incarcerated for three more years for parole violations.

2004: Was charged with groping the genitals of a six-year-old boy. He was arrested in April 2005 in Detroit Lakes, Minnesota. The judge granted bail at $15,000. A businessman in Fargo, North Dakota, Joe Crary, gave Duncan money for bail. When freed, Duncan skipped bail.

2005: Murdered Brenda Groene, Slade Groene and Mark McKenzie. Kidnapped and tortured to death Dylan Groene (age 9). Kidnapped and sexually assaulted Shasta Groene (age 8).

In a January 23, 2007 interview, Duncan admitted to killing three other children in the California area. He was extradited in 2009 to stand trial for the murder of 10-year-old Anthony Martinez in 1997.

John Wayne Gacy
1968 Convicted of sodomy in the sexual assault of two teenaged boys. Was sentenced to 10 years in prison. Was paroled after 18 months. Went on to murder 33 boys and young men.

John Couey
1978: Accused of grabbing a girl in her bedroom, placing his hand over her mouth, and kissing her. Was sentenced to 10 years in prison but was paroled in 1980.
1991: Arrested in Kissimmee on a charge of fondling a five-year-old child. Was released early.
2005: Kidnapped, raped and murdered 9 year old Jessica Lunsford.

Jesse K. Timmendequas
1979: Pled guilty to the attempted aggravated sexual assault of a five-year-old girl in Piscataway Township, New Jersey. He was given a suspended sentence but, after failing to go to counseling, he was sent for nine months to the Middlesex Adult Correctional Center.
1981: Pled guilty in regards to the assault of a seven-year-old girl, and was imprisoned at the Adult Diagnostic & Treatment Center (ADTC) in Avenel, New Jersey for six years.
1994: Raped and murdered 7 year old Megan Kanka.

Sadly, all too sadly, I could go on. When are we going to stop letting convicted rapists and child molesters out?

I'm not a big prison-time person. I believe that if someone is convicted of non-violent crimes, then community service, restitution etc is the way to go.

But, some crimes show a very sick heart. Rape and child molestation are such crimes. In cases like these, lock them up, throw away the key.
 
If my child was treated that way, they wouldn't have to worry about prison time.
 
He and his wife grabbed this girl at the age of 11, now she is 29, that is just some insane stuff. This fool took away her youth and much more, he put her parents through hell, and his wife had the nerve to cry on TV. But it is speculated that he had complete dominance of his wife too. And the reason why the girl did not run when she could have, was because of his mind controlling dominance. She also was suffering from Stockholm syndrome, where the person starts to identify, well take a look below for yourself.

Stockholm syndrome is a psychological response sometimes seen in abducted hostages, in which the hostage shows signs of loyalty to the hostage-taker, regardless of the danger or risk in which they have been placed. The syndrome is named after the Norrmalmstorg robbery of Kreditbanken at Norrmalmstorg in Stockholm, in which the bank robbers held bank employees hostage from August 23 to August 28, 1973. In this case, the victims became emotionally attached to their captors, and even defended them after they were freed from their six-day ordeal. The term "Stockholm Syndrome" was coined by the criminologist and psychiatrist Nils Bejerot, who assisted the police during the robbery, and referred to the syndrome in a news broadcast.[1]

In 2007, a group of scholars studied twelve highly publicized cases of Stockholm syndrome, publishing their results in Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavia. They argued that, as the media accounts lacked "access to primary sources" or an "identification of a pattern of features exhibited in Stockholm syndrome," the characterization of any of these events as Stockholm syndrome could have been due to reporting bias.[2]
Psychological Explanations

One theory to explain the Stockholm syndrome is cognitive dissonance. Specifically, people don't like being unhappy for long periods of time, but when people are kidnapped for a long period of time, they will be unhappy for that time, unless they come to love their captors. Thus, to resolve the cognitive dissonance, the victim may begin to identify with the captors. [1]]

[edit] Psychoanalytic explanations

The Stockholm Syndrome is a psychological shift that occurs in captives when they are threatened gravely but shown acts of kindness by their captors. Captives who exhibit the syndrome tend to sympathize with and think highly of their captors, at times believing that the captors are showing them favor stemming from inherent kindness. Such captives fail to recognize that their captors' choices are essentially self-serving. When subjected to prolonged captivity, these captives can develop a strong bond with their captors, in some cases including a sexual interest.

According to the psychoanalytic view of the syndrome, this tendency might be the result of employing the strategy evolved by newborn babies to form an emotional attachment to the nearest powerful adult in order to maximize the probability that this adult will enable  at the very least  the survival of the child, if not also prove to be a good parental figure. This syndrome is considered a prime example for the defence mechanism of identification.[3]

[edit] Evolutionary Explanations

The syndrome has also been explained in evolutionary terms. Historically raptio (e.g. Rape of the Sabine women) and bride kidnapping have been (and still are in some places) very common practices. Women who were kidnapped and consistently fought back were likely to be killed or imprisoned and thus not have children. But women who bonded with and submitted to their captors were more likely to have children and their children were more likely to receive the genes that made their mothers more passive and bonding towards their captors. And over several generations, this made the population of humans more genetically prone to submission and bonding when kidnapped.

In many cases, capture may also involve the killing of the captive's relatives, thereby isolating the captive. The captive is subjected to isolation and so sees even a small act, such as providing amenities, as a great favor. Such captives may side with their captors while believing their captors have conferred on them great importance and love. Furthermore, captives who perceive themselves as the only members of their group not to have been killed may believe that they have been shown a special interest.

[edit] Examples

* Millionaire heiress Patty Hearst was kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army. After two months in captivity, she actively took part in a robbery they were orchestrating. Her unsuccessful legal defense suggested that she suffered from Stockholm Syndrome and was coerced into aiding the SLA. She was convicted and imprisoned for her actions in the robbery, though her sentence was commuted in February 1979 by President Jimmy Carter, and she received a Presidential pardon from Bill Clinton.

* Shawn Hornbeck was kidnapped at age 11 in 2002 and held for four years by Michael J. Devlin in Missouri. Shawn Hornbeck started using Devlin's last name and despite talking to police on two separate occasions about other unrelated matters, did not seek the assistance of law enforcement. Many questions were raised in the media reports surrounding his rescue in January 2007 about why he did not speak out earlier, leading to reported speculation that he suffered from Stockholm Syndrome. Other victims of sexual abuse and kidnapping have expressed their understanding and support his decisions not to make an attempt to escape.[4]

* Jaycee Lee Dugard was abducted from a school bus stop within sight of her home in South Lake Tahoe, California at the age of 11. She was freed in August 2009 after 18 years in captivity. She had been held captive in makeshift tents and huts in a backyard. There is a possibility that, though the captivity was allegedly brutal, some bonding took place, and the girl was forced to have two children with the abductor. This case has echoes of earlier cases, such as those involving victim Natascha Kampusch in 2006 and Josef Fritzl and his victim, his own daughter, in 2008, both in Austria.
 
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