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Anorak News | Amanda Berry, Michelle Knight and Gina DeJesus news round-up: sex, popsicles and experts

Amanda Berry, Michelle Knight and Gina DeJesus news round-up: sex, popsicles and experts

by | 8th, May 2013

castro kidnappers 1

AMANDA Berry, Michelle Knight and Gina DeJesus news round-up.

The three women from Cleveland, Ohio, are back with their families.  Ariel Castro (52), a former bus driver, and his two brothers, Pedro (54) and Onil (50) have been arrested.

The Child:

Amanda Berry emerged form the hosue with a six-year-old child.

ABC News: “Cleveland Girl Born in Captivity ‘Smiling,’ Eating Popsicles”

The Dungeon:

Daily Star (front page): “Sex Slaves Chained For 10 Years in Dungeon”

“They had five babies in shackles”

Daily Mirror (front page): “Five Babies Born in Brothers Grim Dungeon”

NYDaily News: “Three kidnapping victims were repeatedly raped, resulting in 5 pregnancies: sources

What sources? We’re not told. It’s just sources. Still, sex sells…

ZEE NEWS:

Police would not say how the women were taken captive or how they were hidden in the neighborhood where they had vanished. Investigators also would not say whether they were kept in restraints inside the house or sexually assaulted.

The Women:

The Times (front page): “Police praises the courage of women who survived ten years of captivity”

The Castros:

Irish Times: “The son of a Cleveland man suspected of abducting three women interviewed the mother of one of the kidnapped women months after her disappearance, while working as a student journalist.”

In a bizarre twist in the remarkable story of three women freed on Monday after a decade in captivity, it emerged yesterday that the son of Ariel Castro, one of the suspected kidnappers, interviewed the mother of Gina DeJesus, a 14-year-old who went missing in April 2004.

Castro’s son, writing at the time as Ariel Castro but now known as Anthony Castro, interviewed the mother Nancy Ruiz for an article in a local newspaper in 2004, seemingly unaware of his father’s alleged role in the teenager’s disappearance.

Asked by a local news station about his 2004 interview and the events of recent days, Anthony Castro, now 31, said: “This is beyond comprehension . . . I’m truly stunned right now.” The older Ariel Castro (52), a former bus driver, and his two brothers, Pedro (54) and Onil (50) were arrested on Monday after one of the women, Amanda Berry, escaped with help from a neighbour and alerted police.

“Help me, I am Amanda Berry,” the 27-year-old woman told police in a hysterical call to 911 emergency services from a neighbour’s house. “I’ve been kidnapped and I’ve been missing for 10 years. And I’m . . . I’m here, I’m free now.”

The Police:

Four years ago, in another poverty-stricken part of town, police were heavily criticized following the discovery of 11 women’s bodies in the home and backyard of Anthony Sowell, who was later convicted of murder and sentenced to death.

The families of Sowell’s victims accused police of failing to properly investigate the disappearances because most of the women were addicted to drugs and poor. For months, the stench of death hung over the house, but it was blamed on a sausage factory next door…

This time, two neighbors said they called police to the Castro house on separate occasions.

Elsie Cintron, who lives three houses away, said her daughter saw a naked woman crawling in the backyard several years ago and called police. “But they didn’t take it seriously,” she said.

Another neighbor, Israel Lugo, said he heard pounding on some of the doors of the house in November 2011. Lugo said officers knocked on the front door, but no one answered. “They walked to side of the house and then left,” he said.

“Everyone in the neighborhood did what they had to do,” said Lupe Collins, who is close to relatives of the women. “The police didn’t do their job.”

WashingtonPost:

There had been signs that something was amiss inside the two-story house with faded paint, which sits on a street packed with small homes with open porches just steps away from a gas station and a Caribbean grocery. Neighbors said that several years ago, a naked woman was seen crawling on her hands and knees in the back yard, and pounding was heard on the doors in 2011. Police showed up each time but stayed outside, the neighbors said.

The home in a heavily Latino neighborhood was owned by Ariel Castro, 52, a former school bus driver who was arrested along with his brothers, Pedro Castro, 54, and Onil Castro, 50.

City officials said children and family services investigators had gone to the home in January 2004, when two of the girls were missing, because Ariel Castro had left a child on a school bus.

Investigators “knocked on the door but were unsuccessful in connection with making any contact with anyone inside that home,” Cleveland Mayor Frank G. Jackson said at a news conference, adding that officials “have no indication that any of the neighbors, bystanders, witnesses or anyone else has ever called regarding any information regarding activity that occurred at that house on Seymour Avenue.’’

That’s not what Charles Ramsey said. The hero of the hour said the Castros were normal guys.

Atlantic Wire: “Charles Ramsey Is an Internet Hero for All the Wrong Reasons”

No one is saying that Charles Ramsey isn’t worthy of the “hero” mantle. He helped save three women who were held captive — brutally — in his Cleveland neighborhood for over a decade. But the Internet’s instant meme-ification of this man — a lower-income black man talking about a horrible crime, played on repeat at the expense of stereotypes and with the blinders fully up about the truth — it’s all a little gross, no?

The Loved Ones:

Gina’s aunt Sandra Ruiz:  “If you don’t believe in miracles, I suggest you think again.”

The Experts:

The Telegraph:  “Kidnap experts say it is possible the three women held prisoner in a Cleveland house may have developed a bond with their kidnappers, reports Colin Freeman”

What might seem the most obvious theory, that the house was some kind of cleverly-disguised jail, is not the necessarily the most likely. While police said on Tuesday that they thought the three girls had been tied up, kidnap specialists point out that holding them prisoners against their will would be difficult to do without neighbours becoming suspicious, especially over a long period of time.

ABC: Psychic Who Said Amanda Berry Was Dead Silent After Berry Is Found Alive

Sylvia Browne has gone oddly quiet.

 



Posted: 8th, May 2013 | In: Reviews Comment (1) | TrackBack | Permalink