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Advertisement | Marines Arrest 4 In Carroll KidnappingTroops Tracked Down Locations Where Journalist May Have Been Held CaptiveBAGHDAD, Aug. 9, 2006 ![]() ![]() 4 Arrested In Iraq KidnappingU.S. Marines said they've captured the gang that kidnapped American journalist Jill Carroll in Iraq. Mark Strassmann has more. | Share/Embed (CBS/AP) U.S. Marines who arrested a man accused in the kidnapping of American journalist Jill Carroll said she was held in a home within sight of a sprawling U.S. military base in western Iraq. Marines said a May 19 operation about 2 miles outside the Taqqadum logistics hub netted the first of four Iraqis accused of kidnapping Carroll. U.S. officials believe she was held in the suspects's residence and other homes. Carroll, a freelance journalist for the Christian Science Monitor, was released March 30 in Baghdad after 82 days in captivity. The U.S. military said Wednesday four Iraqi men had been arrested in the kidnapping but had not decided what legal action to take against them. Her kidnappers, a previously unknown group that called themselves the Revenge Brigade, had threatened to kill Carroll if all female detainees in Iraq were not freed. U.S. officials did release some women detainees before her release but said the decision was unrelated to the demands. After the breakthrough raid, U.S. forces captured three more suspects and freed two kidnapped Iraqis in hideouts where Carroll was thought to have been held. One of the homes was booby trapped and full of explosives. Marines from the 3rd Battalion, 5th Regiment said independent tips led them to a cluster of homes near an abandoned train station just outside the Taqqadum base about 50 miles west of Baghdad. A one-story home in a relatively peaceful neighborhood that Marines often drove by matched their intelligence reports. "Where it's at, there's a mosque, a school. It blends into the neighborhood. It's like any other house," said 1st. Sgt. Chris Reed, 32, of Kirkland, Wash., who helped arrest the first suspect. In other developments from Iraq: Continued 1 |
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