Saturday, June 4, 2011

JAYCEE DUGGARD'S KIDNAPPER 'IMPOSSIBLE TO DEFEND'

DUGARD AGED 11
CREEPY PHIL
THE EVIL kidnapper, who took Jaycee Duggard and turned her into his personal sex slave for nearly two decades was "impossible to defend" his lawyer has revealed. Crazy Phillip Garrido's public defender Susan Gellman had no choice but to take the case, adding her virtually impossible task was made more difficult due to his belief that a trial would revolve around what he called "the gift from God."
She told KOVR: "He would say he acknowledged his guilt from the very beginning and he never wanted a trial. He really thought the whole case
was about his 'gift'.
"There was no defense possible."
She added that she has received hate mail and death threats since she was assigned to defend him.

Back in June 1991 Garrido and his wife Nancy plucked the 11-year-old Duggard from the street as she headed for the school bus in South Lake Tahoe.
Smothering her in a blanket they tasered her and took her to their grotty him in Antioch, CA and   
Garrido sexually assaulted her on arrival.
For the first three years, until the birth of her first daughter in August, 1994, Garrido would force himself on Jaycee once a week or more.
After that they slowed and once she'd given birth to her second child in 1997 he stopped completely.
She said, she stayed out of fear for both herself and her children, then because she had no place to go. During 18 years in captivity, she never tried to escape.
Garrido was eventually caught after an attempt to hold events on the UC Berkeley campus to promote his revelations about mental illness and what he believed were his supernatural abilities.
Suspicious authorities to uncover Dugard's identity, 18 years after she was abducted.
What shocked Gellman most about the case was the story of how Phillip and Nancy Garrido formed a relationship with Jaycee over time.
She said: "There was a kindness that emerged between the people that were involved. Probably for Ms. Dugard; it was the way she had of coping."
She added that he appeared to be distant and distracted from the very beginning.
"It was like he really wasn't there," she explained.
Even now, nearly two years after his arrest  Gellman said Garrido still isn't interested in speaking out about the case, believing that anything he would say now wouldn't be "received."
Garrido received a sentence of 431 years to life and his wife Nancy was sentenced to 36 years to life as a plea deal that spared Dugard having to testify.

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