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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>