The secret compound was so concealed from view that law enforcement did not find it during searches of the property in and Phillip and Nancy owned a small printing business during this time. Cheyvonne Molino, a client of the Garridos' printing business, spoke to Inside Edition in and said that things were unusual with the family.
Molino said he recalled asking one of the Garridos' daughters what church they went to. Unbeknownst to him, the girl was actually Jaycee's daughter, not Nancy's. On Aug. Lisa Campbell, one of the members of the campus staff, told him to return the following day but felt suspicious about him. Campbell asked Berkeley police officer Ally Jacobs to conduct a background check on Garrido. At the parole office, Dugard told the officer that she was the girl who had disappeared in No kidnap victim in modern American history had been found alive after being missing that long.
Phillip Garrido was arrested, and Nancy, his wife and co-conspirator, was taken into custody soon after. I reassured her that her daughters were okay and being taken care of. Outside the police station, media outlets from around the country and the world were descending on the city, and it quickly became clear that Dugard and her daughters needed to be taken somewhere private and safe.
Stroud and other officers snuck them out the back of the station in an unmarked car and took them to the local Hilton. The girls, 14 and 11 at the time, and their mother came to their hotel room with only the clothes on their backs. It was at the hotel later that day that Dugard saw her mother, Terry Probyn, for the first time since the Garridos had shocked her with a stun gun and drove her away in their car.
Probyn had rushed to Concord from Southern California after getting the news she had been hoping to get for nearly two decades. Today, Dugard and her nonprofit, the JAYC Foundation, help facilitate that same kind of family reunification for other trauma victims. When we were rescued, and I started therapy, it was a combo of past, present and future that I thought about. Nancy Garrido is serving a sentence of 36 years to life at the California Institution for Women in Southern California.
Dugard now addresses that experience with a resilience that has come to define her since she emerged from captivity. When Dugard emerged in public, the impacts were far-reaching. He had even been designated a model parolee. When at last, after? But Dugard is wired to be out, helping people. Her childhood resolve to serve was cemented when she and her two daughters came to Sonoma Valley shortly after their rescue for assistance in their recovery from the trauma they suffered as captives of Phillip and Nancy Garrido of Antioch.
She said also that soon after the rescue prompted by two observant UC Berkeley police officers, she and her girls benefited hugely from the protective kindness shown by others in the valley. When the Garridos found Dugard in labor, she said they gave her codeine. Dugard said Phillip Garrido told her he had watched videos about giving birth and knew how to deliver a baby. Dugard said she was in labor for another 12 hours. As she and her daughters grew older, Dugard said she planted a flower in front of the shed and set up a little school to teach them as much as she could with only her fifth-grade education.
Dugard has protected her daughters' privacy and said some of their friends don't even know of their past. She said the three of them are able to talk about what happened with each other. Both Dugard and her mother, Terry Probyn, said they would not want the two girls to see their father in person, but that they would respect their decision if they wanted to meet him.
0コメント