Posted on 06/07/2002 10:24:11 PM PDT by stlnative
I wanted to post this more current picture of Elizabeth Smart at age 14
Someone has started a domain in Elizabeth's name. You can visit site to see more pictures of her and to find more out more information. www.elizabethsmart.com
You direct your energy/force against the thumb and keep moving so the force keeps directing against the thumb and that will break the grip.
I didn't know till I was grown that Daddy was always fearful for me because I was such a pretty, bright and fearless little girl. I always thought it was unfair that he was so much stricter with me about going out and doing things alone.
What happened to the perp?
I don't think that is exactly accurate. It isn't a matter of some being elevated to "celebrity status" , but rather the circumstances of the abduction that captures the public's imagination and generates a greater or more intense level of nationwide media coverage.
Worth repeating!
Another trick: While lieing in bed, turn on your side. Practice swivelling around on your side kicking your legs as fast and hard as you can. Good if a perp surprises you while you're in bed.
GOD protect this little soul
I overheard something on Fox News today that addresses this issue. I'm not sure who was being interviewed, but the woman stated that immediate media attention is only granted in cases that meet 4 specific criteria. I didn't catch all of the criteria, but apparently such things as runaways do not qualify. In this case, it would appear that the 9 year old's story of the alleged gunman was a significant determining factor in obtaining nationwide publicity for this family.
However, as I go through the posts, I see a lot of animosity targeted towards a fellow newbie Ashley Todd. Give the girl a break. She's new to FR, and simply trying o sort through the chatter, and one has the right to agree or disagree.
Love you all!
Reminds me, once again, how unbelievable it is, that someone other than a family member killed JonBenet Ramsey.
She probably would have. My feeling is that she was aware that her little sister was in the room and the man had a gun. She was probably protecting her sister. They seem like a very close family.
Case in point, where I've added something to my mental security files: a couple of days ago on Fox, I heard a commentator mention an interview they had done earlier with a profiler. The profiler had mentioned that the abductor might have been an orderly, due to the combination of the light/white jacket (unusual attire for middle of the might kidnappers) and the odd detail that he had made a point of having the girl get her shoes -- something that a hospital orderly does so instinctively that he might well do it in a situation where it really didn't make sense to risk a few seconds delay inside the house. This comment reminded me of the reports that the girl's grandfather had died the previous week.
Was the family at the hospital, having conversations with and/or in front of hospital staff, that could have provided personal and household information, and given a lowlife staffer a sense of connection with this beautiful little girl's personality and emotions? This was the first time I'd thought about this particular risk, which most of us will encounter. When a family is at a hospital either in an emergency or very emotional terminal situation, their guard is down, they are discussing a lot of very personal things, and they are likely to interpret staffers' interest in "listening" as thoughtful rather than suspicious. Much of the low level staff at hospitals, especially in big cities, come from shaky backgrounds where they and/or their friends and relatives have criminal records, and the staff has access to a lot of patient information including home addresses. In short, a hospital is a dangerous place to let down your guard re personal security, and at the same time a place where your emotional state is likely to interfere with your thinking about personal security. My personal security is now better for having been prompted to think about this. Hope yours is too.
Kids, especially young ones and well-behaved older ones, are naturally inclined to give adults the benefit of the doubt. When somebody tells them "your mom told me to pick you up", they'll stop to think about whether it might be true, and whether they might get in trouble for not going with "mom's friend". Let your kids know they will NOT be in trouble if they kick somebody claiming to be "mom's friend" in the groin, even it turns out that it really WAS mom's friend that she sent to pick you up in an emergency. Let them know that you and any adults you associate with would back off after one good kick, punch, or scream, and will understand that the child wasn't sure and felt threatened, and fought hard as he/she had been taught to. Burn it into their brains that it's bad NOT to fight hard and immediately.
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