Wednesday, May 8, 2013

What Happened In That House?



"I barbecue with this dude - we eating ribs and what not. . ." - Charles Ramsey...

Oh well if you was eatin ribs with a dude, he must be solid right?   I kid....I kid...These were the words of the hero neighbor, Charles Ramsey who rescued the three women who vanished ten years ago and were being held captive by his neighbor...

If my mother was alive today...She'd ask..."Why..Why...Why when they interview one of us  is it always the toothless and most ignorant sounding type...?"

Seeing and hearing Charles Ramsey brought memories of my mother back to me and a smile....

That is the only thing that was funny about the horrific events that occurred in a house in Cleveland...


The rescue of three Cleveland women from a house about a decade after they were apparently abducted has authorities and neighbors trying to piece together how they could have gone undetected for so long.
Police said Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight had apparently been held captive in the house since their teens or early 20s.


 They were found just a few miles from where they disappeared. "If you don't believe in miracles, I suggest you think again," DeJesus' aunt, Sandra Ruiz, told reporters on Tuesday.


Authorities arrested three brothers, ages 50 to 54. One of them, former school bus driver Ariel Castro, owned the home where the women were found, situated in a poor, rundown neighborhood dotted with boarded-up houses. No immediate charges were filed.

A 6-year-old girl also was found in the home, and Deputy Police Chief Ed Tomba said the child is believed to be Berry's daughter. He declined to say who the father was.

Authorities would not say how the women were taken captive, whether they were restrained inside the house or if they had been sexually assaulted. Police said they were trying to be delicate in their questioning of the women, given their ordeal.
Agents searched the home Tuesday afternoon, collecting evidence.

''I'M FREE NOW''

It was the screams for help from Amanda Berry, now 27, that alerted a neighbor and led to their release following her frantic 911 call on Monday evening.

"Help me! I'm Amanda Berry. ... I've been kidnapped and I've been missing for 10 years and I'm here. I'm free now," Berry can be heard telling a 911 operator in a recording of the call released by police.


Police arrived to find Amanda Berry along with DeJesus, now 23, who vanished in 2004, and Knight, now 32, who went missing in 2002. They also discovered the child, who would have been conceived and born during Ms.Berry's captivity.

Amanda Berry had last been seen leaving her job at a fast-food restaurant the day before her 17th birthday in April 2003, and DeJesus was last seen walking home from school.

Cleveland authorities and residents grappled with how the young women went unnoticed for so long in a neighborhood where houses sit close together, typically separated only by a driveway.

Children and Family Services authorities went to the house in January 2004 after Castro had left a child on a school bus, Mayor Frank Jackson said at a Tuesday news conference.

They "knocked on the door but were unsuccessful in connection with making any contact with anyone inside that home," he said.

Tomba said that Castro was "interviewed extensively" during that investigation and no criminal intent was found regarding the bus incident.

That visit to the house was more than a year after Knight disappeared and a few months after Berry went missing.

"We have no indication that any of the neighbors, bystanders, witnesses or anyone else has ever called regarding any information, regarding activity that occurred at that house on Seymour Avenue," the mayor said.

Before the disappearances, in March 2000, police said they responded to a call from Ariel Castro reporting a fight in the street, but no arrests were made, Public Safety Director Martin Flask said.

Investigators said Tuesday that they had no record of any tips or calls about criminal activity at the house in the years after the victims vanished, but that they were still checking their files.
However, two neighbors said they were alarmed enough by what they saw at the house to call police on two occasions.

Elsie Cintron, who lives three houses away, said her daughter once saw a naked woman crawling on her hands and knees in the backyard several years ago and called police. "But they didn't take it seriously," she said.

In the words of Ricky Ricardo...."Lucy, you've got a lot of plaining to do."

Another neighbor, Israel Lugo, said he heard pounding on some of the doors of Castro's house, which had plastic bags on the windows, in November 2011. Lugo said officers knocked on the front door, but no one answered. "They walked to side of the house and then left," he said.
"Everyone in the neighborhood did what they had to do," said Lupe Collins, who is close to relatives of the women. "The police didn't do their job."

Ariel Castro was well known in the mainly Puerto Rican neighborhood. He played bass guitar in salsa and merengue bands. He gave children rides on his motorcycle and joined others at a candlelight vigil to remember two of the missing girls, neighbors said.

Neighbors also said they would see Castro sometimes walking a little girl to a neighborhood playground. And Cintron said she once saw a little girl looking out of the attic window of the house.

Four years ago, Cleveland police came under heavy criticism following the discovery of 11 bodies in the home and backyard of a man who was later sentenced to death. The home was in a poor part of town several miles away from where the missing women were rescued this week.
In the wake of public outrage over the killings, a panel formed by the mayor recommended an overhaul of the city's handling of missing-person and sex crime investigations.

It seems as though they still do.

1 comment:

Big Mark 243 said...

On my Facebook, I responded to commentary about Mr. Ramsey, who despite his looks and patois, was coherent, frank, and sensible... so me and your Mom would had a disagreement on that point...

Whether it is the social system or just plain ignorance, the police were derelict in their duty... I don't know what more the neighbors could have done... many neighborhood's have strange or peculiar people, so that they had plastic bags and what ever going on during the traumatic incident, was not enough for neighbors to do anything about it...

You can't underestimate what monsters lurk and how they slip through and around the rules of society...




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