Shattered Innocence

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Shattered Innocence Page 34

by Robert Scott


  “And when the girl’s father appeared in the scene, Nancy casually draped a jacket over the camera so the dad wouldn’t see the camera recording his daughter. In another scene, Phil and Nancy went to a park and found a spot where children were playing in the background in a play structure. Phil gave Nancy some instructions on how to use the videotape camera and how to pretend to film him while, in fact, filming the children in the background. The scene continues, Phil plays the guitar, sings a couple of songs, while Nancy is shooting past him on high zoom at the young children playing in the park.”

  Referencing another tape, Pesce noted, he had shown it to Jaycee and asked her about what sounded like another man’s voice on the audio portion—in other words, different from Phil’s voice. Jaycee told Pesce, “That’s the way he talked. He used multiple voices and things like that.” When asked by a grand juror if Phil Garrido had ever sold any of these tapes or passed them around, Pesce said they never found any evidence of that.

  And then Pierson got to the point of the events of August 26, 2009, and asked Jaycee to tell about what had occurred. She said, “His parole officer came to the house. I was scared. I didn’t know what was going to happen. Phil said everything was going to be okay. He said he just needed to set the record straight. He never thought he was doing anything wrong.

  “I said to him, ‘Well, what do you want me to say?’” (Jaycee meant when she met with the parole officer at the station.) “He said, ‘Just stick to the plan. And if they ask you any questions, just say you need an attorney. You just need to tell them that you’re the girls’ mother and you give me permission to take them around.’ He was trying to get his church going, God’s Desire.”

  Jaycee basically reiterated what already had been written about in the parole officer’s report, but with a few major differences. One was that the parole officer came out to the car when she had been sent there by him after the initial meeting in the parole office, and Jaycee said that he called her “a liar.”

  She related, “He said I wasn’t their mother. They were his (Phil’s) brother’s kids. They were going to call Child Protective Services, and I said, ‘You can’t take them away!’”

  And then there was a key point about how and when Jaycee finally let an officer know that she was not Alyssa. This also differed from the parole officer’s report. Jaycee testified, “An officer came in. Melanie. A female officer. The males were really scary. They thought I was a runaway. And they said they were going to arrest me, take me downtown, and find out who I really was.

  “And Melanie came in and said that Phillip confessed and said that he had taken [me], and I started crying. She said, ‘You need to tell me your name.’ And I said that I can’t, because I hadn’t said my name in eighteen years. And—”

  Pierson interrupted her and asked, “Did she have you write it down?”

  Jaycee replied, “I wrote it down. And then I wrote down my mom’s name (Terry Probyn).”

  It was those few written words that were the keys to unlocking Jaycee Lee Dugard’s prison doors at last.

  END NOTE

  Even after the sentencing against Phillip and Nancy Garrido, for many the damage had already been done. When Phil Garrido kidnapped Jaycee Lee Dugard on June 10, 1991, it was like a large rock being thrown into a still pond. The shock waves spread out in all directions. Jaycee, her family, South Lake Tahoe, law enforcement officers, judicial officials and ordinary citizens were all affected to some degree. None more so than Jaycee and her daughters.

  And all of it could be traced back to one individual: Phillip Garrido. In a very real sense, it was because he refused to keep the worst of his nature in check. Drug use only fueled his refusal to take responsibility for his actions. The use of LSD along with his erratic and narcissistic nature was a lethal combination. He readily admitted to being a spoiled child, and from the late 1960s onward, he acted upon his worst impulses.

  Only when he was caught did Garrido pretend to mend his ways. Phil was good at that—convincing authorities in the judicial system and parole boards that he was a good candidate for release. Always a model prisoner, Phil bided his time until he was released. And then, once again, he placed no restrictions upon himself when it came to doing what he desired, which included kidnapping and rape.

  In many ways, Jaycee’s case was not unlike a Thomas Hardy novel, where incidents that began as such small factors turned into a major tragedy. If there had been a roadblock on the highways out of the Tahoe Basin within the first crucial minutes after the kidnapping, none of the years of agony would have taken place. If Phillip Garrido’s 1976 kidnapping and rape case had been looked at more closely by law enforcement in the summer of 1991, there may have been an inspection of his Walnut Avenue residence that year. If the Nevada parole board had factored in Phil’s major drug bust of 1972, they may not have voted 3–2 to release him from the Nevada prison when they did. If Nancy Garrido had released Jaycee in 1993, when Phil went back to prison for six weeks, sixteen more years of captivity for Jaycee would have been avoided.

  But as in Churchill’s words, “the terrible ifs” accumulated, and freedom for Jaycee and her daughters had to wait until two vigilant women at UC Berkeley felt that something was wrong with Phil Garrido and the two girls who accompanied him to Sproul Hall on August 25, 2009. At least then, there was a chance for a new beginning for Jaycee, Angel, and Starlit.

  There was one silver lining to all of this. Because of changes and improvements in the way sex offenders were monitored after all the news about Jaycee came out, a fourteen-year-old Concord girl was saved from a similar fate. In a very real sense, that girl owed her life and freedom to Jaycee. Without Jaycee, that girl most likely would have ended up raped and confined, or more likely dead.

  Jaycee had endured what no one should have had to endure. And yet she did it with such unbelievable dignity and grace, as to become the remarkable young woman that she is. Filled with compassion, strength, and an indomitable will—Jaycee became the daughter that any mother would be proud to call her own. She became the mother who any daughter would look up to and announce with pride that Jaycee was her Mom.

  Jaycee Lee Dugard

  spent the first nine

  years of her life with

  her mother, Terry, a

  single mom. When

  Terry married Carl

  Probyn, the family

  moved to South Lake

  Tahoe, California.

  (Yearbook photo)

  Jaycee eventually liked

  the move and enjoyed

  her classmates at

  Meyers Elementary

  School. (Yearbook photo)

  Jaycee Dugard had been missing

  for eighteen years when, on

  August 25, 2009, University of

  California, Berkeley policewomen

  Ally Jacobs (left) and Lisa

  Campbell (right) became

  suspicious about a man with two

  girls on campus. (Cathy Cockrell/

  UC Berkeley NewsCenter)

  For her work in breaking open the

  case, Officer Ally Jacobs received

  a thank-you from the entire city

  council in her hometown of

  Brentwood, California, where she

  lived with her two young sons.

  (Author photo)

  Jaycee Dugard announced her

  true identity at the Concord,

  California Parole Office.

  Reporters showed up at the

  nearby Concord Police

  Department soon after the

  news broke. (Author photo)

  After the revelation that “Alyssa” was actually

  Jaycee Lee Dugard, law enforcement investigators

  descended upon the home of Phillip and Nancy

  Garrido near Antioch, California, where Jaycee

  and her two daughters, fathered by Phil, had

  been kept in seclusion. (Author photo)

  Ju
st two of the many officers and

  investigators, after a long, hot day

  of work at the Garrido home.

  Temperatures in the area that

  August reached over 100 degrees.

  (Author photo)

  The Garridos’ green van was

  hauled away as evidence to a

  police yard for further investigation

  of its interior. (Author photo)

  Reporters from around the world

  descended upon Walnut Avenue

  once the incredible story broke

  about Jaycee Dugard, her

  daughters, and the kidnappers.

  (Author photo)

  While reporters were interested in all the police activity, the police were just as interested in the reporters. Most officers had never seen a media frenzy like this before and captured it on camera. (Author photo)

  Young Phil Garrido attended

  classes in the small town of

  Brentwood, California, about fifty

  miles east of San Francisco.

  (Yearbook photo)

  Phil was bright and popular with

  girls in school, but he made only

  average grades and didn’t join

  any clubs. He was much more

  interested in playing bass guitar

  in his rock and roll band.

  (Yearbook photo)

  Many people who knew him said

  that Phil Garrido was different after

  he had a motorcycle accident and

  started taking illegal drugs. He

  turned from being a “nice, clean-cut

  kid” into a “dope-smoking stoner.”

  Soon he was using LSD almost on a

  daily basis. (Mug shot)

  Despite Phil’s yen for illegal drugs and sometimes bizarre behavior, his high school sweetheart, Christine Perreira, eloped with him to Reno in 1973. (Yearbook photo)

  Phil got into very serious trouble in 1976 when he kidnapped Katie Callaway in South Lake Tahoe, California. He took her across state lines into Nevada to a warehouse in Reno and raped her for hours. Only the lucky arrival of a police officer at the warehouse saved Katie. (Mug shot)

  Phil got an early release from

  federal prison and served his

  probation near Antioch in a house

  his mother owned. In 1993, while

  living there with Nancy, Phil broke

  the rules of his probation and was

  sent back to prison for a short time.

  (Mug shot)

  Phil’s mug shot was taken again

  when he was arrested for Jaycee

  Dugard’s kidnapping in 2009.

  At the time, he had a distinctive

  growth near his nose. (Mug shot)

  At the time of her arrest, Nancy

  Garrido looked care-worn and

  dazed. (Mug shot)

  There were concerns that

  other missing Bay Area

  children might have been

  kidnapped by Phil and

  Nancy Garrido.

  Blond-haired Michaela

  Garecht was one of them.

  She was kidnapped in

  broad daylight in

  Hayward, California, in

  1988. Phil was residing

  in a halfway house nearby

  at the time. (Yearbook

  photo)

  Michaela’s mother, Sharon (second from left), went to Walnut Avenue when all the police activity was going on there in August and September 2009. Sharon had hopes that Michaela might still be alive, as Jaycee was. (Author photo)

  A house next door to the Garrido home came under police investigation when they learned that Phil had been caretaker of that property for a period of time when no one lived there. (Author photo)

  Police scent dogs were used by investigators on the neighbor’s and Garrido’s properties, searching for signs of human remains. (Author photo)

  Hayward Police Department Lieutenant Christine Orrey gave progress reports to journalists about digging for remains in the properties’ backyards. (Author photo)

  Forensic bone

  specialist Bill Silva

  told reporters that

  even though human

  bone fragments were

  found on both

  properties, the bones

  were very old and

  might have come

  from a Native

  American burial site.

  (Author photo)

  Phil and Nancy Garrido were arrested on multiple charges in El Dorado County, where the initial kidnapping of Jaycee Lee Dugard had taken place. Their court appearances were in Placerville, California, an old Gold Rush mining town originally known as Hangtown. (Author photo)

  The DA’s office in El Dorado County put together a team that compiled literally thousands of pages of documents on the case against Phil and Nancy Garrido. (Author photo)

  Phil often stared off into space during court proceedings. (Author photo)

  While Phil came into court with no emotion showing on his face, Nancy generally looked distraught or embarrassed about being there. (Author photo)

  Nancy Garrido liked

  her first attorney,

  Gilbert Maines, but

  he got into trouble for

  allegedly making

  remarks about how

  he was going to

  make money from a

  film deal on the case.

  (Author photo)

  Judge Phimister threw

  Maines off the case and

  appointed Stephen Tapson

  as Nancy’s lawyer. Nancy

  was initially not pleased

  by this development.

  (Author photo)

  Phil Garrido’s lawyer,

  Susan Gellman,

  commiserated with

  Maines about this

  development. (Author

  photo)

  When it snowed

  outside the

  courthouse, Phil

  Garrido’s lawyer,

  Susan Gellman,

  bundled up and

  wore a cowboy hat.

  (Author photo)

  Veteran courtroom sketch artist Vicki Behringer took binoculars to court to capture every detail in exacting precision. (Author photo)

  Katie Callaway Hall

  (first woman from left)

  was the woman Phil

  had raped in 1976.

  Katie came to all the

  court hearings in the

  Garrido case. She

  wanted him to know

  that she was there and

  sticking up for Jaycee

  and her daughters.

  Katie called Phil a

  monster. (Author photo)

  Represented by famed lawyer Gloria Allred (photo above, third from left), Jaycee’s biological father, Ken Slayton (also above, fourth from left), often went to court hearings. He sat next to Katie Callaway Hall in the gallery. (Author photo)

  Judge Douglas Phimister had to rule on numerous decisions about points of law and media requests during pretrial hearings for Phil and Nancy Garrido. (Author photo)

  Not unlike Walnut Avenue near Antioch, the Placerville courthouse became a beehive of reporters’ activity after every major court hearing in the Garrido case. (Author photo)

  PINNACLE BOOKS are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  119 West 40th Street

  New York, NY 10018

  Copyright © 2011 by Robert Scott

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

  If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the Publisher and neither the Author nor the Publisher has received any payment f
or this “stripped book.”

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  ISBN: 978-0-7860-2920-4

 

 

 


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