Kidnapped woman hidden in CA backyard for 18 years

Published: Monday | August 31, 2009



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PLACERVILLE, California(AP):

A girl snatched on her way to school was hidden for nearly two decades behind a series of fences, sheds and tents, even giving birth to her suspected abductor's children in the suburban backyard compound less than 200 miles from her childhood home.

Jaycee Lee Dugard, who was 11 when she was abducted from a South Lake Tahoe street in 1991, was taken directly to the house and sheltered from the world in a secret, leafy backyard, investigators said last Thursday.

Her abductor, investigators said, raped her and fathered two children with her, the first when Jaycee was about 14. Those girls, now 11 and 15, were also kept hidden away in the backyard compound behind the Antioch home.

"None of the children has ever been to school, they've never been to a doctor," El Dorado County Undersheriff Fred Kollar said. "They were kept in complete isolation in this compound."

Even a parole agent who visited 58-year-old Phillip Garrido's home didn't have an inkling about the hidden compound, Kollar said. Garrido is a registered sex offender on federal parole for rape and kidnapping convictions.

Clues

"The way the house is set up, the way the backyard is set up, you could walk through the backyard, walk through the house, and never know," Kollar said.

"He's had her for 18 years. Now, it's our turn. I have no compassion for this guy," he said last Friday morning on ABC's 'Good Morning America'.

But neighbours said there were clues even before a parole agent last Wednesday noticed Dugard, now 29, who accompanied Garrido, his wife and the children to a parole office.

Neighbour Diane Doty said she could see the tents and often heard children playing in the backyard, the corner of which abuts her own backyard. She said she even suspected the children lived in the tents, but her husband said she should leave the family alone.

"I asked my husband, 'Why is he living in tents?'" she said. "And he said, 'Maybe that is how they like to live'."

Dugard's stepfather, who witnessed her abduction and was a long-time suspect in the case, said he was overwhelmed by the news after doing everything he could to help find her.

Happy

"It broke my marriage up. I've gone through hell, I mean I'm a suspect up until yesterday," a tearful Carl Probyn, 60, told The Associated Press at his home in Orange, California.

Carl Probyn told CBS' 'Early Show' last Friday morning that he spoke to his wife late Thursday after she reunited with Dugard and everyone was "doing great".

"I think they're pretty happy," he said, noting six people were together at the reunion - Jaycee Dugard, her two daughters, her sister, mother and another relative.

In interviews on NBC, ABC and CBS Friday morning, Probyn said the most surprising thing to his wife was that Jaycee looks very young, almost like she did when she was taken.

Probyn also said Dugard felt terribly guilty for bonding with her captor, and her family felt troubled by learning the facts of how she was forced to live for 18 years.

Various charges

Garrido, 58, is being held for investigation of various kidnapping and sex charges. Authorities said his 54-year-old wife, Nancy Garrido, was with him during the kidnapping in South Lake Tahoe and she also has been arrested.

The case broke after Garrido was spotted last Tuesday with two children as he tried to enter the University of California, Berkeley, campus to hand out religious literature. Officers said he was acting suspiciously towards the children. They questioned him and did a background check, determined that he was a parolee and informed his parole officer.

Admitted

Garrido was ordered to appear for a parole meeting and arrived last Wednesday with Dugard, who identified herself as 'Allissa', his wife, and two children. During questioning, corrections officials said he admitted to kidnapping Dugard.

Investigators said he did not yet have an attorney.

Dugard was reunited last Thursday with her mother as her family learned that their blue-eyed, blonde ponytailed little girl had spent most of her life in captivity. Police said they had no evidence that she had ever reached out to anyone beyond the compound walls.

"She was in good health, but living in a backyard for the last 18 years does take its toll," Kollar said.

The backyard compound had electricity from extension cords and a rudimentary outhouse and shower, "as if you were camping", Kollar said.

Authorities said they do not know if Garrido also abused his daughters, but they are investigating.


Carl Probyn, 60, stepfather of Jaycee Lee Dugard who went missing in 1991, holds a photo of her at his home in Orange, California, last Thursday.