BOSTON, Aug. 15, 2006

Jill Carroll: They Thought I Was A Spy

As Hostage, Journalist Relied On Her Wits, As Her Mom Said She'd Do

  • Play CBS Video Video Jill Carroll Recounts 82 Days

    American journalist Jill Carroll is talking publicly for the first time about being held hostage for 82 days. Julie Chen reports on the Christian Science Monitor interview.

  • Video Jill Carroll On Kidnapping

    CBS News RAW: In her first public account of her 82-day ordeal as a hostage, Christian Science Monitor reporter Jill Carroll said she thought she was going to be killed.

  • Video 4 Arrested In Iraq Kidnapping

    U.S. Marines said they've captured the gang that kidnapped American journalist Jill Carroll in Iraq. Mark Strassmann has more.

    • Jill Carroll, at age 4 on a beach in Michigan, shortly before an incident her mother believes was an attempted kidnapping of the girl who grew up to become a reporter abducted and released in Iraq.

      Jill Carroll, at age 4 on a beach in Michigan, shortly before an incident her mother believes was an attempted kidnapping of the girl who grew up to become a reporter abducted and released in Iraq.  (Christian Science Monitor)

    • Held captive for 82 days in a Baghdad home, Christian Science Monitor freelance writer Jill Carroll now tells her story.

      Held captive for 82 days in a Baghdad home, Christian Science Monitor freelance writer Jill Carroll now tells her story.  (AP/Christian Science Monitor)

    • Jill Carroll discusses her release on Arab TV.

      Jill Carroll discusses her release on Arab TV.  (AP /APTN)

    • Carroll in a videotape made by her captors.

      Carroll in a videotape made by her captors. "Oh my God, oh my God, they're going to kill me, this is going to be it," Carroll thought.  (CBS)

    Previous slide Next slide
  • Interactive Reporter's Ordeal

    Track events surrounding the kidnapping of Jill Carroll, the journalist who spent 82 days in captivity in Iraq.

  • Photo Essay Kidnapped Journalist

    American Jill Carroll is set free after being held in Iraq for almost three months.

  • Interactive Covering The Story

    Journalists covering the war in Iraq are sometimes part of the story as more are injured, killed or taken hostage.

(Christian Science Monitor)  Christian Science Monitor reporter Jill Carroll was held hostage in Iraq for 82 days. This is her first person account, with contextual narrative by Peter Grier.


When Jill Carroll was nearly 4 years old, her family held a picnic at Kensington Park, a beach and lake recreation area outside Detroit. At one point, her mother, Mary Beth Carroll, realized that Jill had disappeared.

Mary Beth turned around and saw a strange man walking away, his arms extended as if he were a forklift. His cargo was Jill, who was lying on her back, screaming and punching.

When Mary Beth caught up to him, the man said he thought the little girl was lost. Only later, after the shock had worn off, did she realize he might have been trying to abduct her daughter.

At least she fought, her mother thought.

Mary Beth Carroll took some comfort from this memory after her daughter was seized in Baghdad. Jill would be terrified, Mary Beth believed. But she would not cower.

Mary Beth, a retired high school teacher, lives in Evanston, Ill. On the morning of Jan. 7, she was in Minneapolis visiting her parents.

Her cell phone rang at 5:30 a.m., rousing her from sleep. A woman from the State Department was on the line. She was sympathetic but direct. "Steel yourself, Mrs. Carroll," she said. "Your daughter has been abducted and her translator killed."

Mary Beth called Jill's twin sister, Katie, and other family members, then quickly showered and dressed.

An hour or so later, Marshall Ingwerson, managing editor of the Monitor, reached her. Calmly, Mary Beth told him that Jill could think on her feet and was probably smarter (with an IQ of 140) than her kidnappers.

Mr. Ingwerson thought Jill's mother was incredibly strong and was trying to comfort him. But she was really trying to comfort herself.

The first day, she thought she'd never sleep again. But she was so on edge that her body became exhausted. Jim Carroll, Jill's father who lives in North Carolina, experienced the same phenomenon. The whole ordeal was grueling, but even on the worst days, sleep came quickly for most of the family.

- P.G.

* * *

I spent my first full day of captivity sitting in a plastic chair in the second-floor bedroom of a house in Baghdad, while the sound of gunfire echoed around me.

I kept thinking, it's just Baghdad, that's the way it is. But the shooting, which had begun the night before, went on all day. Some of it was close.

Around dusk Abu Rasha, the No. 2 in charge and owner of the house, came into the room. He looked exhausted.

"I'm very, very tired, all day I'm fighting with the soldiers," he said. Then he made a ggggg-ggg sound, in imitation of an automatic weapon.

He sat down on the bed and sighed.

"They're right here. They're very near," he said. "Why, Jill? Why are the soldiers here? Why are the soldiers so near here?"

The question was an accusation.

Continued



© 2006 The Christian Science Monitor. All rights reserved.



The Christian Science Monitor is an independent daily newspaper, with news from around the world to help you understand this changing world.

Exclusive Webshow

Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie." Watch Now

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: