Cops Hunt Erica's Kidnappers
Authorities continued their search Wednesday for two men considered suspects in the abduction of a 7-year-old girl who gnawed through duct tape and made her way to freedom, ending the latest in a series of high-profile abductions around the nation.
Police said James Burns, 29, and Edward Johnson, 23, were known to the girl's family and that their names had been provided by two witnesses. They confirmed Wednesday that the search continued, but would not provide details.
A day after police returned Erica Pratt to her grandmother, the 7-year-old smiled and fidgeted as relatives described their relief at her safe return.
"She's just been playing, painting, making bead necklaces and enjoying her family," her uncle Joseph Moore Jr. said at a brief Wednesday news conference.
Dressed in bright pink, with barrettes in her hair, Erica, fidgeting in the arms of another uncle, buried her face in a stuffed animal when asked to talk.
"She seems totally normal," Moore said. "She's forgotten about what happened. I'd just as soon [hope] it would stay forgotten."
Erica Pratt was playing Monday with her 5-year-old sister in front of their grandmother's rowhouse in southwest Philadelphia when two men drove up, called her by name and dragged her into their car as she screamed and resisted, witnesses told police.
Bound and blindfolded, the girl had been left on a mattress in the basement of a building 10 miles from her home. Duct tape was wrapped around her eyes, arms and legs and she only had a can of water for nearly 24 hours, police said.
She was eventually able to free herself from the tape, break through the basement door and go up to the first floor. Unable to escape, she smashed a window and called out for help to some children playing in front of the house.
The children pulled Erica out of the window, and one of them rode their bike from the abandoned building to where police officers were on patrol, Lt. Michael Chitwood said.
Erica was taken to a hospital, where doctors evaluated her and removed the duct tape stuck in her hair. Police said she had a corneal abrasion on one eye, possibly from the tape.
"She's an amazing little girl," Chief Inspector Robert M. Davis said. On Wednesday, Erica remained inside the family's home, where a police officer was standing guard at the door.
While being held in a police officer's arms, Erica Pratt waved to TV cameras and beamed as she was returned to her grandmother's home late Tuesday. Police said she suffered only minor injuries.
News of her return sparked cheers of jubilation from family and friends outside the home of Erica's grandmother in southwest Philadelphia.
"We're happy. Everybody's happy," said Erica's mother, Serina Gillis. "I've very happy that my daughter's home."
The news of Erica's escape comes a day after a factory worker was charged with murder in the abduction and slaying of 5-year-old Samantha Runnion from Santa Ana, Calif.
Her slaying followed the high-profile abductions of 14-year-old Elizabeth Smart in Salt Lake City, 7-year-old Danielle van Dam in San Diego and 2-year-old Jahi Turner, also in San Diego.
Danielle' body was found and a neighbor is on trial. Elizabeth and Jahi remain missing.
Critics say media attention to recent abductions has created the false impression that America's 60 million children are facing an epidemic of kidnappings.
FBI statistics depict a decline in child abductions during recent years, with the number of federal investigations involving kidnappers from outside the family declining to 93 in 2001 from 115 cases in 1998.
Less than 20 minutes after Erica was abducted, the girl's grandmother and primary caregiver, Barbara Pratt, received the first of at least six calls from a man who threatened to kill the girl unless he received a $150,000 ransom, police said.
During one call, police said the kidnappers allowed Erica to speak briefly with her grandmother.
Residents said many adults in the neighborhood were down the street at a block party at the time of the abduction. The area is pockmarked with abandoned buildings and roamed at night by drug dealers.
The abduction is the second tragedy to strike the family this year. One of Barbara Pratt's adult sons was murdered in March, neighbors said.
Police were investigating whether a neighborhood rumor that the family had gotten a large insurance payment after the murder may have motivated the ransom demand. The family told police that the rumor was untrue.