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- <text id=93TT2275>
- <title>
- Dec. 27, 1993: Robbing The Innocents
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 27, 1993 The New Age of Angels
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CRIME, Page 31
- Robbing The Innocents
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A spate of murder-kidnappings raises alarm among parents. What
- can be done?
- </p>
- <p>By David Van Biema--Reported by Greg Aunapu/Miami, Sharon E. Epperson/New York,
- Staci D. Kramer/St.Louis, Elaine Lafferty/Petaluma and Kristen
- Lippert-Martin/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The little girl didn't like garbage, which is why her mother
- doesn't believe the story of her death. Andrea Parsons of Port
- Salerno, Florida, disappeared last July on her way home from
- the corner store with some candy. Claude Davis, a roadworker
- living across the street from the Parsons home, claimed that
- he saw her being forced into a car by four Hispanic men. Then
- last month he changed his story: Andrea had been helping him
- look for aluminum cans in a Dumpster. She fell, hit her head
- and died, he said. Yet no body has turned up, and Andrea's mother
- Linda doesn't believe Davis: "Andrea would rather be grounded
- than take out the trash." Linda and the local authorities think
- somebody made away with her daughter--and with her life's
- joy. "It's like we're stuck in a vacuum, with no beginning and
- no ending," she says.
- </p>
- <p> If that state of limbo seems grimly familiar, it is because
- as winter falls, the country seems seized by a spate of child
- abductions. The FBI is investigating nine cases of kidnapping
- in which homicide is known or suspected. A stalker haunting
- the Los Angeles suburb of Van Nuys raped a girl and fondled
- about 20 other schoolchildren. In St. Louis, Missouri, two young
- girls fell prey to a kidnapper-killer, and police have just
- arrested a suspect in the would-be abduction of a third. The
- second girl, Cassidy Senter, 10, was the object of a massive
- helicopter-and-roadblock search. Her body was found in an alley,
- her head beaten, several fingers missing, her pants pulled down.
- </p>
- <p> The public reaction has been outrage. In St. Louis callers swamped
- radio talk shows demanding the death penalty and, in one case,
- disembowelment for the killer. At the Adam Walsh Center, a missing-children
- organization in West Palm Beach, Florida, calls for advice are
- up 50%. Its director, Nancy McBride, echoes a popular sentiment:
- "Don't let your children go anywhere alone. Our society is breaking
- down, and you can't expect kids to watch themselves anymore."
- </p>
- <p> Social scientists, however, advise against hysteria. "While
- this kind of incident is every parent's worst nightmare, like
- most nightmares it's not likely to happen," says Steven Nagler
- of the Yale Child Studies Center. Adds Ernie Allen, president
- of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC):
- "There are going to be outrageous acts that even the most cautious
- of families will not be able to prevent." The specialists stress
- two things: there is little protection against kidnapper-murderers,
- but fortunately there are few of them. The vast majority (several
- hundred thousand a year) of child snatchings are perpetrated
- by family members in custody disputes. According to the well-respected
- 1990 Justice Department report National Incidence Studies on
- Missing, Abducted and Thrown-Away Children in America, far fewer--3,200 to 4,600 minors a year--are seized by strangers.
- Most victims are teenagers; contrary to media coverage, a disproportionate
- number are black or Hispanic. Only 300 of the abductions are
- classic kidnappings involving overnight captivity, transport
- of more than 50 miles, and ransom or murder. The number of kidnap-murders
- has fluctuated between 50 and 150 a year for at least 17 years.
- Allen estimates that 1993 will be on the low end.
- </p>
- <p> Allen's group, founded in the early '80s, culls data from 30
- federal agencies, 44 state-level missing-children clearinghouses
- and more than 60 private organizations. When a minor is confirmed
- missing, NCMEC transmits a photo and a biography to 17,000 law-enforcement
- groups. "The reality is that most missing kids are going to
- be recovered," says Allen.
- </p>
- <p> FBI experts hope to complete a psychological profile of the
- typical snatch-and-slay perpetrator next year. In the one recent
- case where the murderer was caught, however--the killing of
- 12-year-old Polly Klaas of Petaluma, California, by Richard
- Allen Davis, 39--there was less interest in Davis' psyche
- than in his rap sheet. First booked at age 12 for stealing checks,
- he escaped charges in the shotgun death of a girlfriend seven
- years later but served a total of eight years for a burglary
- and two assaults on other women, one involving kidnapping. Free
- again in 1985, he abducted a female acquaintance and forced
- her at knifepoint to withdraw $6,000 from the bank. He got 16
- years for that, but thanks to California's rules mandating early
- release for good behavior, Davis served only half; emerging
- just in time, if his confession is to be believed, to relax
- at a bucolic, vine-decorated "transitional living" facility
- in San Mateo County before arriving in Polly Klaas' bedroom
- with his knife.
- </p>
- <p> The details of his second parole, which became widely known
- after Davis was charged with Klaas' murder two weeks ago, have
- helped fuel the petition campaign for a measure titled "Three
- Strikes and You're Out." The California initiative, whose language
- is similar to a bill recently adopted in Washington State, triples
- the sentence of a violent felon convicted for the third time,
- effectively jailing him for a minimum of 25 years. Says its
- coordinator, Chuck Cavalier: "We had tremendous support before
- the Klaas case, but [since Davis was captured] our 800 number
- has got so many calls we blew out the voice-mail systems." (Not
- everybody is signing up, however. State assemblyman John Burton
- notes, "I don't think it's a good idea to load up the wagon
- with criminals that are felons...but who are not grave threats
- to individual safety.")
- </p>
- <p> Kenneth Lanning, special supervisory agent at the FBI Academy's
- Behavioral Science Unit in Quantico, Virginia, stresses that
- parents should not obsess on murder-kidnappers. Concentrating
- too hard on "stranger-danger," he says, "is like putting a lightning
- rod on your home and canceling your homeowner's insurance. You're
- prepared for one terrible but highly unlikely event and unprepared
- for a host of things that are far more likely." Although Lanning
- understands the horror that a Klaas case generates, he points
- out that family violence exacts a much higher toll. "In the
- two months that you put all this energy and these resources
- into one child who's been abducted," he says, "200 kids are
- murdered by their mother or father."
- </p>
- <p> Neither Allen nor Lanning is hinting that parents should abandon
- the common-sense rules of parental vigilance. For the especially
- worried, New York State clearinghouse on missing children manager
- James Stanco suggests knowing exactly, rather than approximately,
- what your children are wearing in the event you must describe
- them, and introducing a family password to prevent their walking
- away with a bogus relative. But, cautions James Fox, dean of
- Northeastern University's College of Criminal Justice, "we should
- not make them panicky and make them lose their childhood. You
- don't want them to think that everyone they meet is a potential
- serial killer."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-