Kidnapped
Exclusive: Shawn Hornbeck's Incredible Story
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Play CBS Video Video Kidnapped In Full: They were each kidnapped at age 11 and held captive for years. How did Jaycee Lee Dugard survive? Shawn Hornbeck knows and shares his incredible story.
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Video More From Shawn Hornbeck Hear more of Troy Roberts' interview with Shawn Hornbeck, the boy who was kidnapped in 2002 and held captive for four and a half years.
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Video More From Dr. Cloitre Dr. Marylene Cloitre of the NYU Child Study Center talks about the Shawn Hornbeck case, and how such cases psychologically impact victims.
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Interactive Out Of Sight: Missing Kids Get the facts on kidnappings, learn predator profiles and check out resources for locating missing children.
"It's just there was sometimes when it wasn't looking so bright, but then I just knew that they were still out there, so I should just hold on," he adds.
But as bad as it had been for Shawn, a new terrifying reality hit him when his captor decided to kidnap another boy, 13-year-old Ben Ownby.
Asked if he thought his days were numbered at that point, Shawn tells Roberts, "The days got slimmer. 'Cause it's a replacement. When you get a new car, what do you do with the old one? You usually get rid of it, right?"
Shawn's "replacement" disappeared on Jan. 8, 2007, after getting off the school bus in Beaufort, Mo.
By 4 p.m., Ben's parents, Don and Doris, were panicking.
Excerpts of Don Ownby's 911 Call
Fifteen-year-old neighbor Mitch Hults remembered seeing Ben get off the bus at 3:30, but he also remembered seeing something odd a few moments later. "He said there was this strange pickup. And then it peeled out real fast. I thought right away, I need to call the sheriff," Don recalls.
Franklin County Sheriff Gary Toelke immediately contacted the FBI and dispatched deputies to search for Ben. Then, Mitch was brought in for questioning.
"He just starts going down the line, 'Well, you know, I remember seeing a Nissan on the tailgate in dark letters. Uh, a camper top with an elongated window down the side with the knobs on the side. It had a two-inch trailer hitch on the back. Rust or dirt over the fender.' And the FBI agents kinda looking at him, you know, 'right!' because you never get a description like that, even from an adult," Toelke remembers.
The agents didn't believe Mitch at first because he gave them so much detail. But Mitch, it turned out, was a truck fanatic, recalling every minute detail of the vehicle. Ironically, the only detail Mitch didn't remember was the license plate.
Police took casts of the tire treads and an APB for the white truck was broadcast across the state.
Meanwhile, just 45 minutes away in Kirkwood, Mo., a description of the truck caught the eye of Imo's pizzeria owner Mike Prosperi. By coincidence, his long-time manager, 41-year-old Mike Devlin, had a white truck that matched that description.
Prosperi says he did see Devlin on the day Ben disappeared. "I saw Mike and he did not look well at all, he was pale."
Devlin had gone home sick that day - something that was highly unusual for the man he'd known since high school.
The next day, on a hunch, Prosperi decided to drive by Devlin's apartment. Right away, he noticed something suspicious on Devlin's truck. "I noticed that there was the red road dust like that you can get from driving on a gravel road out in the country, you can't get it in the city here. If he was as ill as he looked, I was wondering how he would have gotten that road dust," Prosperi explains.
When Devlin called in sick for the next two days, Prosperi contacted police. Their first question to him was whether Devlin had been at work on that Monday. Prosperi told them Devlin had left at 12:50 p.m.
The next day, FBI agent Lynn Willett and her partner arrived at Imo's pizzeria to check out Devlin and his truck.
The first thing Willett noticed when she entered Imo's was that Devlin wouldn't catch her eye, which made her suspicious. "And he was facing towards us and he wouldn't look up at us," she remembers.
They stepped out to the back parking lot, and Devlin consented to having his truck searched. Willett says Devlin's demeanor at the time was calm and normal.
Willett began making casual conversation with Devlin, inviting him to sit in the backseat of an unmarked car. That's when she began what she calls a "circular interviewing" technique, asking simple questions over and over.
Willett says she was looking for deviations in Devlin's behavior pattern.
The agent was trying to determine if Devlin had abducted Ben, but almost immediately, she noticed that Devlin kept coming back to one subject - a godson named "Shawn."
"And every time we would start to talk about Shawn I could see his pulse increase on the carotid on his neck," Willett remembers. "Probably about an hour into the interview the hair on the back of my neck stood up and I realized he’s talking about Shawn Hornbeck."
That's when Willett played her trump card: she told Devlin they had forensic evidence - casts of tire treads - that would be as accurate as fingerprints linking him to Ben's kidnapping. "And it was at that point that he lowered his head. And he said that he was a bad person. And he told us 'Shawn's not my godson. Shawn is Shawn Hornbeck,'" she remembers.
Willett says Devlin also acknowledged he had kidnapped Ben.
Produced by Katherine Davis, Clare Friedland, Mead Stone, and Chris O'Connell
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See all 37 CommentsMaybe billo should've changed places with him, sounds like he's jealous...
It's probably totally exacerbating Shawn's recovery to feel like he has to address some sort of elephant in the room that really shouldn't be there. Like it's not a question he should be feeling like he needs to answer for people - people should have the strength to feel compassionate enough to understand and know the answer on their own. The question's already been asked and answered - if people still don't understand, that's on you not Shawn.
Go Shawn! We're all rooting for you!
Unless we have been a victim in the circumstance of captivity since age 10, we would never know what we would do or believe to survive. I can only imagine the pure joy Shawn must have felt to be away from his captor when he was allowed to spend the night. One night away from torture.
As for God, hopefully there is a spiritual being a greater power, that gives our life meaning and purpose.
I pity those without compassion and the need to blame a child of 10 for being a victim.
I am not making excuses for him as much as I am pointing out that pornography fuels deviant sexual behavior and devalues human beings. Something common to *** offenders is pornography. It is not just a coincidence that graphic pornography and child sexual abuse have both risen since the 1960s.
Posted by grantview at 12:55 PM : Sep 30, 2008
You have your opinion, I have mine. I completely disagree. He is a monster, redemption for someone like him shouldn''t even be an option. He deserves to rot in hell for what he did to those poor children. Saying he did what he did because of "rampant pornography" is just like giving him an excuse and saying if he wasn''t (supposedly) given the option to have access to porn that he wouldnt have done this. People are sick and disgusting and he just happens to be one of them. You''re not helping anyone by making excuses for MONSTERS like him...
Most of the time these offenders were screwed over when they were young. I don''t believe monsters are born; they are created. Watching the TV show Most Evil provides insight.
From what I''ve read about Michael Devlin, he had a pretty typical uneventful childhood. Though, I admit, I do not all the details. In which case, what led Michael Devlin to do what he did? I believe the answer is rampant pornography. We need to put the brakes on today''s over-sexualized culture for sake of children and families.
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