| 
		Woman kidnapped, held for 18 years cannot 
		sue U.S. over parole failures: court 
		 Send a link to a friend 
		
		 [August 27, 2016] 
		By Dan Whitcomb 
 LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A woman who was 
		kidnapped near her California home at the age of 11 and held captive for 
		18 years by a convicted sex offender cannot sue the U.S. government for 
		failing to properly supervise him on parole, a federal appeals court 
		ruled on Friday.
 
		A three-member panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San 
		Francisco decided 2-1 that while the crimes against Jaycee Dugard were 
		horrific, the interaction of state and federal statutes did not hold the 
		government liable for the incompetence of parole officers in such cases.
 "While our hearts are with Ms. Dugard, the law is not," Judge John Owens 
		wrote in a 14-page ruling upholding a lower court that dismissed the 
		lawsuit.
 
 Judge William Smith dissented from that opinion, arguing that his 
		colleagues in the majority had improperly applied the so-called Federal 
		Claims Tort Act.
 
		
		 
		The 2009 reappearance of Dugard, who had given birth to two daughters 
		during her captivity in a warren of sheds and tents behind Phillip 
		Garrido's home in the Northern California community of Antioch, made 
		international headlines.
 Dugard was discovered after Garrido brought her and her daughters to a 
		parole office that had been contacted by police at the University of 
		California, Berkeley, who had become suspicious of him.
 
 Authorities later apologized for missing numerous chances to find him in 
		violation of his parole and rescue Dugard and her children.
 
 Dugard was abducted in June 1991 as she walked home from school near 
		South Lake Tahoe. She received a $20 million settlement from the state 
		of California.
 
 She separately sued the federal government, which oversaw Garrido's 
		parole beginning in 1988, on the grounds that if its agents had done 
		their job adequately he would not have been free to kidnap her three 
		years later. That lawsuit was dismissed by a federal judge, prompting 
		Dugard's appeal to the 9th Circuit.
 
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			 
            
			An officer prepares to escort Phillip Garrido (R) out of the 
			courtroom after receiving his sentence in Placerville, California 
			June 2, 2011. REUTERS/Randy Pench/POOL/File Photo 
            
             
			Garrido was twice arrested for kidnapping and sexual assault in the 
			1970s before he was convicted in 1977 of abducting a woman in South 
			Lake Tahoe and driving her to Nevada, where he hid her in a shed and 
			raped her.
 He was released from federal prison on parole in 1988, with his 
			supervision to be taken over by the state of California in 1999.
 
 According to the appeals ruling parole officers failed to report 
			some 70 drug-related parole violations by Garrido to their 
			superiors.
 
 (Reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Toni Reinhold)
 
			[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			
			 
			
			 |