rd
Joined: 13 Sep 2002 Posts: 9275 Location: Jacksonville, FL
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Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 12:05 am Post subject: Tanya Kach, 24, held captive for 10 years by school guard |
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Finally the hopes of parents of a missing girl came true. While seemingly initially more of a runaway than kidnapped, a school guard locked her in a bedroom for four years, which coincidentally is when she turned 18 and was no longer a minor that would get him with statuatory rape, then kept her in his house for another six years under an assumed name. She was terrified to even tell anyone her real name.
They're pursuing statuatory rape now anyway, ten years later. But whether they're able to convict him or not, everybody has to be glad Tanya is alive.
rd
from www.msnbc.com (fair use)
Missing woman found after a decade
Police: Teen first thought to be a runaway was confined to captor’s house
AP
March 22, 2006
McKEESPORT, Pa. - A woman who disappeared as a teen 10 years ago had been living with a middle school security guard who didn’t allow her to leave his home for several years, police said Wednesday.
Tanya Nicole Kach, now 24, was reunited with her family this week. She had been living at the man’s home, located about two miles from her father’s house in the Pittsburgh suburb of McKeesport, police said.
The two met when Thomas Hose, 48, worked as a security guard at a school where Kach was a student. It was not immediately clear how she ended up at the home.
She was discovered Tuesday when she approached a convenience store owner and told him that she wasn’t Nikki Evans, the name the owner knew her by. She said she was being kept locked in a bedroom, said the owner, Joseph Sparico.
When she told him her real name, he said, she was upset and shaking.
“I was so scared that nobody would believe me,” Kach told WTAE-TV from her father’s home Wednesday.
Sparico’s son, a retired McKeesport police officer, recognized Kach’s name, and Sparico contacted authorities.
Allegheny County Police Superintendent Charles Moffatt said Kach had been staying at the home Hose shared with his parents since 1996, and was not allowed to leave for the first four years she was there.
No contact allowed
When others came over, Kach had to stay in a bedroom, Moffatt said. “She had no contact with people, other than the people that were in the home,” he said.
Moffatt said Hose would tell her what to eat and what to wear, but there was no indication that Kach had been physically restrained. He said charges were pending but would not elaborate.
James Ecker, Hose’s attorney, said police planned to charge his client with sex crimes involving a minor. The attorney said there was no indication that Kach had been abducted or kidnapped.
“As far as I know no one has ever said she was held against her will,” Ecker said.
Kach disappeared Feb. 10, 1996, said Police Chief Joseph Pero. She was initially listed as a runaway, but her status was changed to a missing person. He wouldn’t say why.
The woman’s father, Jerry Kach, was grateful for her return: “I just say thank you. There is a God and he brought my little girl back home.”
© 2006 The Associated Press |
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