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Details Edit. Release date July 10, United States. United States. June 8, -- In a landmark television event, Diane Sawyer will conduct the first interview with Jaycee Dugard. Dugard was kidnapped at age 11 on her way to school by Phillip and Nancy Garrido, and held captive for the next 18 years during which time she was repeatedly abused and gave birth to two daughters. Phillip and Nancy Garrido have both recently been sentenced to life in prison. Jaycee first captivated the world's attention twenty years ago when she disappeared as a child, and then again as a year-old woman with two daughters when they were remarkably discovered and freed.
The two women, clinching hands and with their bodies turned toward one another, share a remarkable bond. But…when you're a kid and you think you're easily forgettable and you're not important. But she kept…her hope. I don't know how she did that. You know? How did I keep my hope? How did she keep her hope," Dugard said. He can't have me.
I hate that he took her life away and that makes me sad…I hate that he stole her from me. He ripped out a piece of my heart and he stole my baby," Probyn said. She goes on, "He stole your adolescence. He stole high school proms and had pictures and memories…". When she was first kidnapped, Phillip Garrido kept a stun gun present whenever he raped her, a way to remind her of his power.
After abusing Dugard, sometimes for hours in drug fueled sex binges called "runs," he would sob and apologize. While Philip Garrido was her main tormentor, his wife Nancy was equally adept at playing with Dugard's emotions. She would bring Dugard things like a purple bear, a Barbie, chocolate milk, a Nintendo.
She'd even keep Dugard locked in the compound when Phillip Garrido was away serving time for a parole violation. I wish he would have got a headache that morning he took you,'" Dugard recalled. The Garridos manipulated Dugard until the presence of a stun gun and the use of handcuffs were no longer needed to keep her from fleeing. Phillip Garrido's power over Dugard grew by being "responsible for everything from time to food to human companionship to your clothes to your identity," Bailey said.
When Dugard had her daughters, she didn't flee because Phillip Garrido had convinced her the world outside their compound was unsafe, ironically full of pedophiles and rapists.
I know there was no leaving. The mind manipulation plus the physical abuse I suffered in the beginning, there was no leaving…. I don't know what it would have took. Maybe if one of the girls were being hurt," Dugard said. Dugard coped with the manipulation by keeping journals, writing stories and dreams that allowed her to imagine herself in a life outside of the compound.
She would come up with stories about the tree outside the window, she named the spider in her room, she wrote in her journals about falling in love one day, riding in a hot air balloon, being a veterinarian. She remembered how she used to play school as a little girl, but now she was responsible for actually educating two little girls. Even with access to the computer, Dugard said she never searched for her mother or for news accounts of her kidnapping.
Dugard and her daughters would be rescued in August after an increasingly paranoid and delusional Phillip Garrido alarmed two campus police officers, Ally Jacobs and Lisa Campbell.
He'd shown up on the University of California, Berkeley, campus with the two daughters he'd fathered with Dugard. When they called his parole officer to ask about his two daughters, the parole officer didn't even know that Phillip Garrido had children.
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