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- <text id=93TT0957>
- <title>
- Jan. 25, 1993: A Little Girl Buried Alive
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 25, 1993 Stand and Deliver: Bill Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CRIME, Page 59
- A Little Girl Buried Alive
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Is this a suburban childhood? Even before Katie Beers was held
- captive in a homemade dungeon, the 10-year-old led a hard life
- of neglect.
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD LACAYO - With reporting by Sophfronia Scott Gregory/
- New York
- </p>
- <p> A lot of people sensed there was something wrong in the
- life of 10-year-old Katie Beers. No one seemed in a position to
- do much about it. To the neighbors in West Islip, a Long Island
- suburb, she was the wide-eyed little girl who roamed the
- streets at all hours, sometimes coatless in the winter.
- Child-protection authorities had built up a fat dossier on her
- makeshift family. They knew that sometimes Katie stayed with her
- unmarried mother in a filthy, roach-infested house where rusted
- cars and an old refrigerator decorated the lawn. But sometimes
- she was in the charge of her godmother, who summoned the girl
- to run errands by pounding on the floor of the bedroom where she
- spent much of the day.
- </p>
- <p> Then there was John Esposito, a 43-year-old family friend,
- who lavished gifts on Katie and her teenage half-brother. On
- Dec. 28, Esposito reported that Katie had vanished from a
- video-game arcade where they had gone together. He didn't say
- he was the one who abducted her. Last week the girl was rescued
- from a small underground chamber where Esposito had kept her
- hidden for 16 days. Most of that time, Katie was kept in a
- coffinlike loft, 2 ft. by 3 ft., that contained a mattress,
- pillows and a television; often, she was chained by the neck.
- Every day Esposito brought his prisoner meals. Police suspect
- that sometimes he stayed to fondle her.
- </p>
- <p> After weeks under a close police watch, a frightened
- Esposito finally directed investigators to the soundproof
- bunker. Authorities who later questioned the girl said she told
- them she was forced into the room after refusing sexual advances
- from Esposito. Katie "told us she was screaming when she was
- thrust into this," said Detective Lieut. Dominick Varrone.
- </p>
- <p> An independent contractor, Esposito quietly built the
- chamber 18 months ago beneath his home, a converted garage
- behind the house where he grew up. So well concealed that police
- posted on the property did not suspect it was there, the room
- could be reached only by using a block and tackle to lift a
- 200-lb. concrete trapdoor hidden beneath a carpet. Then it was
- necessary to climb down a 7-ft. ladder to a narrow passage that
- led to the mini-dungeon. Though it had only a camp toilet, the
- room was equipped with ventilation and a closed-circuit TV that
- enabled Esposito to keep an eye on his living quarters upstairs.
- </p>
- <p> While a suburban childhood was never so idyllic as
- baby-boomer folklore would have it, it was never supposed to be
- anything like Katie's, in a fractured family with sexual
- predators circling at the edges. Her mother Marilyn Beers, 43,
- wasn't married to the girl's father and says she is not even
- sure who he is. When Katie was two months old, Beers handed her
- off to Linda Inghilleri, 39, a godmother who became a surrogate
- parent, though by some reports not much of one. From first grade
- on, Katie was absent from school much of the time. She spent
- many days instead doing laundry and shopping. Inghilleri sent
- her out regularly for candy, takeout food and cigarettes.
- </p>
- <p> In recent years the two women squabbled over custody of
- the girl. Last year Marilyn Beers took her back for some time
- after accusing Inghilleri's husband Sal, 39, of sexually
- molesting the child. With his trial pending, Sal Inghilleri says
- the allegation is a ploy to prevent his now estranged wife from
- gaining custody.
- </p>
- <p> Last year Katie's mother also lodged a complaint with
- police against John Esposito, saying that she suspected him of
- molesting her son John, 16, a claim that he now supports. During
- the investigation into Katie's disappearance, it emerged that
- in the late 1970s Esposito pleaded guilty to the attempted
- abduction of a seven-year-old boy from a shopping mall. In 1988
- he applied to join the Big Brothers/Big Sisters organization,
- which offers role models to children from single-parent homes.
- When suspicious officials turned him down, he used a supermarket
- bulletin board to offer himself as a freelance mentor.
- </p>
- <p> Last week Esposito pleaded not guilty to second-degree
- kidnapping in Katie's case. Police are searching the area around
- his home for signs that he may have used his dungeon to imprison
- other children. After Katie's rescue, child-welfare authorities
- went to court seeking an order to keep the girl from returning
- to her mother, who has promised to fight to regain custody. "I
- love her and can't wait for her to get back home," said Beers.
- To dramatize her own custody claim, Linda Inghilleri hung
- yellow ribbons on her house.
- </p>
- <p> Suddenly, the girl whom no one seemed to take
- responsibility for is much in demand. Listen carefully, and you
- can hear the clicking of car phones as agents rush to sign up
- TV-movie rights. The scriptwriters will have a field day with
- Katie's worst moment, on New Year's Eve, when she sat chained
- in her dungeon, watching on the closed-circuit television as
- police searched for her upstairs. "I yelled for them," she
- reportedly told police after her release. "But they couldn't
- hear me." That's been her problem all her life.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-