home. this guy comes up, turns out to be ariel, she says, and at that time she didn t know him, and he offers her a ride, says my son works at that burger king. she felt some comfort there, she got in with him. then gina dejesus, the story she tells police goes she was walking home, ariel castro pulls up with his daughter, they speak for a minute, this guy takes his daughter home, he comes back by himself and gets gina into the car, saying we re all going to meet up and they never did. in fact, this is one of the things that i still carry around in my bag of reports, for ten years i carried this report around. this is the original missing persons report of the gina dejesus case. ten years old, coffee stained, tattered, and i always thought that some day this case might break. now, i don t want to hear anybody say we always knew it would end like this. no, people always thought this case might end. nobody predicted it would end like this. ed, extraordinary reporting. thank you very mu
her and care about her. 15,000 tips later and a police room dedicated to her case still nothing. her sisters and brother now adults, the yellow ribbons marking the place where she was taken, her mother replacing the tattered and faded ones with each passing year. it s like a big hole in the center of my life. and it s impossible to get away from it. when you heard the news out of cleveland, what was your first reaction? this was like inflating the balloon so it would carry me along for a while. i put all the news on my blog because i hope that my daughter would see it. i would would hope she would see it s possible to get free.
king so one day she s walking home. this guy comes up, turns out to be ariel, she says, and at that time she didn t know him, and he offers her a ride, says my son works at that burger king. she felt some comfort there, she got in with him. then gina dejesus, the story she tells police goes she was walking home, ariel castro pulls up with his daughter, they speak for a minute, this guy takes his daughter home, he comes back by himself and gets gina into the car, saying we re all going to meet up and they never did. in fact, this is one of the things that i still carry around in my bag of reports, for ten years i carried this report around. this is the original missing persons report of the gina dejesus case. ten years old, coffee stained, tattered, and i always thought that some day this case might break. now, i don t want to hear anybody say we always knew it would end like this. no, people always thought this case might end. nobody predicted it would end like this. ed, extraordinar
of her or her abductor. a nation mobilized posting flyers, canvassing communities looking for this man. witnesses saw him grab her screaming as he shoved her into a car. her mother pleading for him to return her first born child. if she hasn t seen the effort to get her back she will see and she will know how much we love her and care about her. 15,000 tips later and a police room dedicated to her case still nothing. her sisters and brother now adults, the yellow ribbons marking the place where she was taken, her mother replacing the tattered and faded ones with each passing year. it s like a big hole in the center of my life. and it s impossible to get away from it. when you heard the news out of cleveland, what was your first reaction? this was like inflating the balloon so it would carry me along for a while. i put all the news on my blog
that s correct. amanda berry s case, for example, she worked at a burger king so one day she s walking home. this guy comes up, turns out to be ariel, she says, and at that time she didn t know him, and he offers her a ride, says my son works at that burger king. she felt some comfort there, she got in with him. then gina dejesus, the story she tells police goes she was walking home, ariel castro pulls up with his daughter, they speak for a minute, this guy takes his daughter home, he comes back by himself and gets gina into the car, saying we re all going to meet up and they never did. in fact, this is one of the things that i still carry around in my bag of reports, for ten years i carried this report around. this is the original missing persons report of the gina dejesus case. ten years old, coffee stained, tattered, and i always thought that some day this case might break. now, i don t want to hear anybody say we always knew it would end like this. no, people always thought this