Brett Anderson

Brett Anderson

Healing will be slow for Hannah Anderson, ‘victim in every sense of the word.’ (Sidebar story: Kidnapper mirrored father’s actions.)

  • Peninsula Daily News news services
  • Tuesday, August 13, 2013 3:54am
  • News

Peninsula Daily News news services

UPDATE:

SAN DIEGO — A 16-year-old girl who was rescued during an FBI shootout with her captor in the Idaho wilderness is resting at home with family and friends to begin what her father says will be a slow recovery.

“She has been through a tremendous, horrific ordeal,” said Brett Anderson, who declined to answer questions after reading a brief statement Monday.

He pleaded for privacy.

Christopher Saincome, Hannah’s grandfather, said his son-in-law wanted to take Hannah with him to Tennessee, where he recently moved.

Saincome urged him to have her stay in the San Diego area, where she grew up and has a large circle of friends.

“I think she needs to be here with friends,” Saincome said. “I know she’s taking it very tough. One of her best friends is with her, talking to her.”

Anderson is a gymnast at El Capitan High School in Lakeside, an east San Diego suburb of 54,000 people, where she also participated in an advanced dance class.

The incoming junior recently celebrated a birthday with about two dozen friends at a San Diego cabaret bar.

HANNAH ANDERSON DIDN’T know kidnapper killed family; kidnapper’s motive may never be known, authorities say.

SAN DIEGO — For six days, Hannah Anderson was at the mercy of her kidnapper, a family friend who spirited her away to the Idaho backcountry in a blue Nissan Versa.

He carried a rifle.

He made threats.

But he never told her about the gruesome scene he left in San Diego County.

Not until FBI agents gunned down James DiMaggio and began to interview Hannah did she learn the fate of her mother and younger brother, authorities said.

DiMaggio, they said, killed them on his sprawling property near the Mexican border before setting off with Hannah, 16, and his gray cat.

Although authorities have released few details of Hannah’s ordeal, they said Monday that she played no part in the killings.

Earlier in the search, they had been uncertain whether she went with DiMaggio willingly.

“I want to emphasize that during our law enforcement interviews with Hannah, it became very clear to us that she is a victim in every sense of the word in this horrific crime. She was not a willing participant,” San Diego County Sheriff Bill Gore told reporters.

Although the investigation is ongoing, he said, authorities may never be able to piece together the reason for DiMaggio’s rampage.

“When you get a completely irrational act like we’ve seen here with two murders and a kidnapping, sometimes you might not be able to come up with a rational explanation,” Gore said, adding that when FBI agents cornered DiMaggio, he fired at least one shot.

Hannah has returned to San Diego County, where she will receive counseling, Gore said.

Her father, Brett Anderson, who lives in Tennessee, told reporters that his daughter needed privacy to deal with her grief.

“The healing process will be slow,” he said, wearing a T-shirt with a photo of his blond, blue-eyed daughter. “She has been through a tremendous, horrific ordeal.”

DiMaggio, a 40-year-old telecommunications technician atScripps Research Institute, was close enough with the Andersons that the children called him Uncle Jim.

At least one of Hannah’s friends said DiMaggio told the teenager he had a crush on her, which made her uneasy.

On the night of Aug. 4, investigators said, he asked the family to come to his home in Boulevard, about 50 miles east of San Diego, so he could say goodbye before he moved to Texas.

It was a ruse, authorities said.

DiMaggio killed Christina Anderson, 44, possibly by striking her with a crowbar; authorities discovered her body in his detached garage.

They also found DiMaggio’s two-story log home engulfed in flames with the body of 8-year-old Ethan Anderson inside.

Apparently, Hannah had been elsewhere on the large, weed-choked property.

“There was just no way that she would have been aware that her mother and little brother were dead,” Gore said in an interview.

Late on Aug. 5, the case became the first in California to trigger an Amber Alert of a suspected child abduction through the state’s cellphone network. Within days, the hunt for DiMaggio’s Nissan spread to much of the West.

An avid outdoorsman who had recently purchased backpacking equipment, DiMaggio sought refuge in Idaho’s Frank Church — River of No Return Wilderness, a daunting stretch of rocky, pine-dotted terrain.

Two couples on horseback stumbled across DiMaggio and Hannah near Morehead Lake on Wednesday and rode away thinking something was amiss.

The girl was wearing what looked like pajama bottoms.

The man was petting a cat.

“They just didn’t fit,” said Mark John, one of the horseback riders, who called authorities after returning home and seeing the girl’s photo on TV.

“I seen a lot of fear in her eyes and I didn’t like what I seen in his eyes,” John said on “Good Morning America.”

Authorities scoured that patch of wilderness, and on Friday, they unearthed DiMaggio’s Nissan from a tangle of logs and branches near a remote trail head.

The car’s license plates had been removed, but authorities linked it to him via its vehicle identification number.

The next day, about six miles away, U.S. marshals circling the area in a plane saw DiMaggio’s tent. Two FBI hostage rescue teams hiked to the campsite and waited.

When DiMaggio and the girl separated, they moved in.

When DiMaggio saw the FBI agents, he fired once, possibly twice, with his rifle. They returned fire, killing him.

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