Idaho AMBER Alert

The AMBER Alert System began in 1996 when Dallas-Fort Worth broadcasters teamed with local police to develop an early warning system to help find abducted children. AMBER stands for America's Missing: Broadcast Emergency Response and was created as a legacy to 9-year-old Amber Hagerman, who was kidnaped while riding her bicycle in Arlington, Texas, and then brutally murdered. Other states and communities soon set up their own AMBER plans as the idea was adopted across the nation.
User avatar
minks
Posts: 26281
Joined: Mon Dec 13, 2004 1:58 pm

Idaho AMBER Alert

Post by minks »

Peg wrote: God only knows what this girl has seen and been through. I wonder even with the best therapy in the world, how she will be able to live a normal life. :-1


Yet another tortured young innocent. It really is terrible out there. Her life is going to be an endless battle if someone does not take her in and love her and help her and guide her along.
�You only live once, but if you do it right, once is enough.�

― Mae West
User avatar
Peg
Posts: 8673
Joined: Tue Aug 24, 2004 12:00 pm

Idaho AMBER Alert

Post by Peg »

Document: Suspect bragged to child about killing her family

COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho (AP) -- During six weeks on the run with an 8-year-old girl, convicted sex offender Joseph Edward Duncan III told his young victim that he had driven around her neighborhood, scouting for children, new court documents say.

He told Shasta Groene that he spotted her playing in a bathing suit with her 9-year-old brother, Dylan, and that he stalked their home for days, using night-vision goggles to learn the layout of the house.

The disturbing new details of what investigators say was a carefully planned attack on a random family appear in records of a closed-door probable-cause hearing Tuesday.

Duncan was also charged Tuesday with first-degree murder and first-degree kidnapping in the bludgeoning deaths of the children's mother, Brenda Groene, her 13-year-old son Slade and her boyfriend Mark McKenzie. If convicted, Duncan could face the death penalty. (Full story)

"[Duncan] told her he watched her two or three days, and at night would peer inside the home," Detective Brad Maskell told the judge Tuesday.

Shasta told detectives her ordeal began when she heard her mother call her into the living room early on the morning of May 16. There, she said, she saw Duncan wearing dark gloves and holding a shotgun.

Her brother Slade, her mother and her mother's boyfriend were bound with zip-ties and duct tape.

Duncan then bound her and Dylan and left them on the ground outside, near a swing set. Shasta said she heard McKenzie yell out several times, and at one point saw Slade stagger, bloody and incoherent, out of the home.

Shasta was insistent that Duncan was the only perpetrator, Maskell said. She said Duncan bragged to her about killing her family with a hammer and showed it to her.

Duncan was a known sex offender who had spent time in prison and was wanted in Minnesota for jumping bail on a molestation charge, but he didn't become a suspect in the Idaho slayings until six weeks later when he walked into a restaurant with Shasta a few miles from her home. A waitress recognized the little girl and called police.

Shasta has since been reunited with her father. Investigators who interviewed her located Dylan's body in a remote Montana campsite where authorities believe Duncan took the two children.

Duncan had also been charged with kidnapping Shasta and Dylan, but those state charges will be dismissed and instead handled by the federal court system because the youngsters were taken across a state line, Douglas said.

Officials have alleged that the children were repeatedly sexually molested during their ordeal, and sheriff Rocky Watson has said he believes the motive for the killings was to acquire the children for sex.

Duncan had spent more than a decade in prison for sexually assaulting a 14-year-old boy at gunpoint when Duncan was a teenager in Tacoma, Washington.

After his release he moved to Fargo, North Dakota. Then, last summer, he was charged with molesting a 6-year-old boy on a school playground in Minnesota. He was released on $15,000 bail. Fargo police had been looking for him since he failed to check in with a probation agent in May.

http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/07/12/idaho ... index.html
User avatar
minks
Posts: 26281
Joined: Mon Dec 13, 2004 1:58 pm

Idaho AMBER Alert

Post by minks »

This makes me wonder who made the Grand decision to let this savage out of prison in the first place.

That poor poor young girl, she may never recover. I sure hope her and her father go on to live as normal of a life as possible.
�You only live once, but if you do it right, once is enough.�

― Mae West
Post Reply

Return to “Amber Alert Forum”