2011年6月2日星期四

Marc Jacobs Hobo not knowing how she could make money

For 18 years, Jaycee Dugard never said her own name. And, she said, she never tried to flee from Phillip Garrido, the Marc Jacobs Hobo predator who used a stun gun to abduct her from her South Lake Tahoe bus stop at age 11.
At first, Dugard told an El Dorado County grand jury, the threat of being shocked again kept her in line - that and the lock on the shed where she was stashed.
Garrido had a temper, and he would fire up the Marc Jacobs Hobo Taser so Dugard could hear the "zappy noise." There were dogs, too, in her backyard prison outside Garrido's home near Antioch.
Years later, she felt trapped, not knowing how she could make money to support two young daughters - now teenagers - fathered by Garrido. Ultimately, she convinced herself she was performing a greater good, Marc Jacobs Hobo feeding the compulsions of a fiend who might not need to steal another child.
"He said he needed help with his sexual problem, that he had a real problem, and that, you know, I was helping him," Dugard, now 31, said in her testimony, portions of which were released after Garrido and his wife, Nancy Garrido, were sentenced Thursday in Placerville.

 

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