Trending Topics

Audio: Women missing 10 years in Ohio call 911

3 brothers have been arrested for kidnapping the women over 10 years ago and holding them captive

3missing-285x245.jpg

In this Friday, March 3, 2004 file photos shows Felix DeJesus, holding a banner showing his daughter’s photograph, standing by a memorial in his living room in Cleveland.

AP Image

By Thomas J. Sheeran and John Coyne
Associated Press

CLEVELAND — Three women who went missing separately about a decade ago were found in a home in the Midwestern U.S. city of Cleveland and likely had been tied up during years of captivity, the city’s police chief said Tuesday. Authorities arrested three brothers.

The women appeared to be in good health and were taken to a hospital to be evaluated and to reunite with relatives. Police said a 6-year-old girl, the daughter of one of the women, was found in the home.

One of the women, Amanda Berry, made a frantic telephone call to emergency services and told an emergency dispatcher that she had been abducted.

“I’ve been kidnapped, and I’ve been missing for 10 years,” she said. “And I’m here. I’m free now.”

Authorities later arrested three brothers, ages 50 to 54. A relative said one of them is the homeowner, his nephew Ariel Castro.

Police Chief Michael McGrath said he thinks Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight were tied up at the house and held there since they were in their teens or early 20s.

Police Deputy Chief Ed Tomba declined to say who the father of the girl believed to be Berry’s daughter is.

Neighbor Juan Perez told NBC’s “Today” show that he rarely saw Castro or anyone else at the house.

“I thought the home was vacant. I thought he probably had another property and he would just come and check and see if everything is OK.” Perez said. “I didn’t even know anybody lived there.”

The women’s escape and rescue began with a frenzied cry for help.

A neighbor, Charles Ramsey, told WEWS-TV he heard screaming Monday and saw Berry, whom he didn’t recognize, at a door that would open only enough to fit a hand through. He said she was trying desperately to get outside and pleaded for help to reach police.

“I heard screaming,” he said. “I’m eating my McDonald’s. I come outside. I see this girl going nuts trying to get out of a house.”

Neighbor Anna Tejeda was sitting on her porch with friends when they heard someone across the street kicking a door and yelling.

Tejeda, 50, said one of her friends went over and told Berry how to kick the screen out of the bottom of the door, which allowed her to get out.

Speaking Spanish, which was translated by one of her friends, Tejeda said Berry was nervous and crying. She was dressed in pajamas and old sandals.

At first Tejeda said she didn’t want to believe who the young woman was. “You’re not Amanda Berry,” she insisted. “Amanda Berry is dead.”

But when Berry told her she’d been kidnapped and held captive, Tejeda said she gave her the telephone to call police, who arrived within minutes and then took the other women from the house.

On a recorded emergency services call Monday, Berry said she had been taken by someone and begged for police officers to come to the home on Cleveland’s west side before the man returned.

Police said Knight disappeared in 2002 at age 20 and is 32 now. Berry disappeared at age 16 on April 21, 2003, when she called her sister to say she was getting a ride home from her job at a Burger King. About a year later, DeJesus vanished at age 14 on her way home from school.

Berry is now 27, according to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. Authorities didn’t provide a current age for DeJesus. They were found just a few miles from where they had vanished.

Police identified the three suspects as Ariel Castro, 52; Pedro Castro, 54; and Onil Castro, 50.

Julio Castro, who runs a grocery store half a block from where the women were found, said Ariel Castro is the homeowner and his nephew.

Attempts to reach Ariel Castro in jail were unsuccessful Monday. There was no public phone listing for the home, which was being searched by dozens of police officers and sheriff’s deputies.

Officials said Tuesday they had no records of anyone calling about criminal activity at the house where three kidnapped women were kept for years before being found. They also had no records of code violations or fire department calls.

Police did go to the house twice in the past 15 years, officials said.

In 2000, before the women vanished, Ariel Castro reported a fight in the street, but no arrests were made, Public Safety Director Martin Flask said. In 2004, officers went to the home after child welfare officials alerted them that Ariel Castro, a school bus driver, apparently left a child unattended on a bus, Flask said. No one answered the door at Castro’s house, and police later determined there was no criminal intent, he said.

The women’s loved ones said they hadn’t given up hope of seeing them again. Berry’s cousin Tasheena Mitchell told the Plain Dealer newspaper she couldn’t wait to have Berry in her arms.

“I’m going to hold her, and I’m going to squeeze her and I probably won’t let her go,” she said.

Berry’s mother, Louwana Miller, who had been hospitalized for months with pancreatitis and other ailments, died in March 2006. She had spent the previous three years looking for her daughter, whose disappearance took a toll as her health steadily deteriorated, family and friends said.

Councilwoman Dona Brady said she had spent many hours with Miller, who never gave up hope that her daughter was alive.

“She literally died of a broken heart,” Brady said.

Copyright 2013 Associated Press