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"If he chose those ideas, then he can certainly choose to conform his conduct to the demands of the law," she said. "He can certainly choose not to rip a child away from her home and family, to rape and abuse her, to keep her bound like an animal, to rob her of her identity, her dignity and her childhood." Steele disputed that Mitchell could shape his behavior to conform, since he had the delusional belief that he was above everyone else. It was a delusion that drove him to break laws starting at age 16, when he was convicted of exposing himself to an 8-year-old girl. "It's easy to say that he's just making it up," Steele said during his hourlong closing argument. "But this is sustained, a long-term drive. He thinks he is special. This is not an overnight thing." Outside the courthouse Steele said Mitchell was waiting for the verdict in the holding cell where he watches court proceedings each day. "He's pretty indifferent to what is going on," Steele said. Now 23, Smart has testified that she was forced into a polygamous marriage with Mitchell after the abduction, held prisoner on a tether and forced to endure nearly daily rapes. She also said Mitchell forced her to wear hand-sewn, religious-looking robes, to use drugs and alcohol, view pornography and to go to California against her will. Mitchell's estranged wife, Wanda Barzee, pleaded guilty to Smart's kidnapping last year and is serving 15 years in federal prison.
[Associated
Press;
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